GOP, Dems focus on messages as summer recess, elections near
WASHINGTON — House Democrats have a plan for helping students afford the growing costs of college, in part by creating a partnership with states to provide two years of tuition-free community college. They also want to take $5 billion House Republicans have proposed for President Donald Trump’s long-promised wall with Mexico and divert it to other immigration programs.
One House-passed bill, backed mostly by Republicans, would repeal a tax imposed on some medical devices to help pay for the “Obamacare” health care law, a statute the GOP despises. With another, still a bare-bones outline, Republicans would make last year’s $1.5 trillion tax cut permanent and expand reductions for families, homeschooling and businesses.
Lawmakers promoted each of these efforts this week, though none seems likely to become law soon. Yet while the measures may languish, they perform an age-old campaign-season function for both parties: honing their messages for elections, just over 100 days away, in which the prize is congressional control.
The House starts summer recess at week’s end, and lawmakers need arguments to take home for town halls and for campaign advertising. Democrats need to gain 23 seats in November’s midterms to capture House control, which is widely seen as doable, so both sides are producing measures that may go nowhere but can shore up political weak spots or embarrass the other party.

