Trump, Ryan to meet in search for
Republican unity
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[May 12, 2016]
By Steve Holland and Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Republican
presidential candidate Donald Trump will hold an unusual tete-a-tete on
Thursday with Paul Ryan, the country's top elected Republican, to see if
they can begin healing fissures in the party created by Trump's
insurgent candidacy.
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Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at the end of
a campaign rally in Eugene, Oregon, U.S., May 6, 2016. REUTERS/Jim
Urquhart/File Photo |
Party leaders are normally eager to rally around the presidential
nominee in order to unite forces for the general election battle.
But Ryan, the U.S. House of Representatives speaker, has withheld
his endorsement out of concern over Trump's incendiary tone and
policy ideas that run counter to deeply held Republican doctrine.
Both Trump and Ryan struck a conciliatory tone before their 9 a.m.
(1300 GMT) meeting at the headquarters of the Republican National
Committee, a session that will include RNC Chairman Reince Priebus,
a Ryan friend who wants unity for the party.
"I have a lot of respect for Paul Ryan," Trump said on Wednesday on
Fox News Channel's "Fox and Friends. "We'll see what happens. If we
make a deal, that will be great. And if we don't, we will trudge
forward like I've been doing and winning, you know, all the time."
Trump last week became the party's presumptive nominee for the Nov.
8 election after his last remaining rivals, U.S. Senator Ted Cruz of
Texas, and Ohio Governor John Kasich, dropped out. His likely
general election rival is Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton.
 Ryan told reporters on Wednesday he just wanted to get to know
Trump.
"There is plenty of room for different policy disputes in this
party. We come from different wings of the party. The goal here is
to unify the various wings of the party around common principles so
we can go forward unified," Ryan said.
Ryan was the running mate to 2012 Republican presidential nominee,
Mitt Romney, a harsh Trump critic.
The meeting was not expected to lead to an immediate endorsement by
Ryan, who opposes Trump's proposals to temporarily ban Muslims from
entering the United States, deport 11 million illegal immigrants and
impose protectionist trade policies. Trump has also sent mixed
signals on whether he would raise taxes if elected.
The billionaire New York businessman and former reality TV star has
shown little inclination to change tactics and policy positions that
have carried him to the cusp of the presidential nomination.
Trump will also meet Senate Republican leaders, including Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell, and other House Republican leaders. A chief
concern among congressional Republicans is whether Trump will be a
strong enough candidate in the November election to ensure the party
maintains control of Congress.
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HIGH BAR
U.S. Representative Charlie Dent of Pennsylvania, a Republican
moderate, told reporters that Ryan had struck the right tone so far
in reflecting the sentiment of those Republicans who carry lingering
concerns about Trump.
“A number of us are concerned about the lack of policy positions
that he (Trump) has presented. The few that he has are often
conflicting or contradictory. Combine that with the incendiary
statements on POWs, the disabled, Muslims, Hispanics, women, it's a
cause for concern,” Dent said.
Republican strategist Doug Heye said Trump had a high bar to
convince skeptical party loyalists about his candidacy.
"It's not so much about trade or what his tax plan will be," Heye
said. "It's the broader messaging that for the past eight months has
told women and minority communities throughout the country that the
Republican front-runner doesn't want them, doesn't need them and
doesn’t care about them."
Republican U.S. Representative John Fleming of Louisiana, a favorite
of the conservative Tea Party movement who says he will support
Trump, said the Ryan-Trump meeting would begin the process of
unifying the party, which may last until the July 18-21 Republican
nominating convention in Cleveland.
"I really think everything has to be resolved by the end of the
convention," he said.
(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan and Emily Stephenson; Editing
by Peter Cooney)
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