FILE - In this April 25, 2017, file photo, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky. speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. Alex Brandon AP
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But, he noted, as long as Republican primary voters continue to support Trump, “you’re not going to see these guys say, ‘That’s it, I want a divorce or even a trial separation.’”

Republicans, he said, “long ago made their peace with Trump, and many were explicit, ‘Yes, he’s going to say and do things that we’re not happy about but as long as we can get our agenda passed.’ This is all built on the notion that they can pass legislation and send it to him and he’ll sign it.”

McConnell’s secrecy on the health care legislation – 13 senators are writing the bill and some senators have expressed frustration that they don’t know any of the details – is part of keeping it away from the White House as much as anyone.

“McConnell just wants Trump to sign a bill and he knows he will sign whatever he gives him,” said Al Cross, the director of the Institute for Rural Journalism at the University of Kentucky and a veteran political reporter, of McConnell. The dig at the House version helps McConnell by “making it look like he is riding to the rescue of people who need health care.”

McConnell’s office said Trump’s remarks – if he made them – would be a matter for House members.

Indeed, Trump’s quip that the House bill was “mean” did frustrate House members who said they were concerned the president appeared to be parroting Democratic criticism that the health care bill will cause 23 million Americans to lose health care coverage. And it’s not the first time that Trump has tweaked the House.

March 30, 2017