Republicans say McConnell, Trump don't deserve full blame for health care failure

Trump and McConnell are in a war of words over health care.

“I like Mitch,” Graham continued, “but for eight years we've been saying we're going to repeal and replace Obamacare. It's not like we made this up overnight.”

While all Senate Republicans had input in the drafting of the health care plan, it was written by a smaller group of Senate leaders, McConnell chief among them.

The dustup began when McConnell said during an event in Kentucky Monday that Trump had set unrealistic deadlines for notching big legislative victories which marred the health care effort.

“Our new president, of course, has not been in this line of work before. And I think he had excessive expectations about how quickly things happen in the democratic process,” McConnell said.

Trump fired back with a litany of tweets turning the blame back on the Kentucky Republican.

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"I think the President's expectations was that we would work together to get these things done and frankly we haven't had a lot of buy-in from the Democrats on this stuff, and that's too bad," he said on Fox News.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., wouldn’t opine on Trump’s words or “tactics,” but said it’s up to lawmakers to come up with health care solutions, with the White House playing a supporting role.

In focusing more on Congress’ responsibility to pick up the dropped ball on health care, Republicans appear to be indirectly dismissing Trump as a major policy player, at least on this issue. Trump repeatedly tweeted directions at Republicans –- often contradictory -– that did not seem to influence the internal debates either way.

“It failed by one vote even on a scaled down repeal,” the source said. “This was a failure of certain members to do what was promised. Senator McConnell brought to the floor whipped and voted for the two clean repeal bills.”

Brooks has sought to differentiate himself from Strange, an appointee who has only served in the Senate six months, by pegging him to the DC establishment.