US Midterms Will Not Affect Trump's Foreign Policy Due To Bipartisan Consensus - Lawmaker

US Midterms Will Not Affect Trump's Foreign Policy Due to Bipartisan Consensus - Lawmaker

Results of the US midterm elections are unlikely to change the foreign policy of US President Donald Trump's administration as there is still a general consensus among Democrats and Republicans regarding key foreign policy aspects, Jean-Luc Schaffhauser, a European Parliament member from the French National Rally party (RN), told Sputnik on Wednesday.

MOSCOW (Pakistan Point News / Sputnik - 07th November, 2018) Results of the US midterm elections are unlikely to change the foreign policy of US President Donald Trump's administration as there is still a general consensus among Democrats and Republicans regarding key foreign policy aspects, Jean-Luc Schaffhauser, a European Parliament member from the French National Rally party (RN), told Sputnik on Wednesday.

Following the Tuesday elections, Democrats retook control of the House of Representatives, but Republicans managed to secure their hold on the Senate. According to the latest media reports, Republicans hold a 52-44 seat majority in the Senate. In the lower chamber of Congress, Democrats so far have 219-193 seat majority.

"I do not expect the results of the midterm elections to have much impact on Trump's foreign policy. This is for two reasons. First, there is massive cross-party consensus against important aspects of Trump's foreign policy, for instance on Russia, where Republicans and Democrats share the deep skepticism of the deep state to any rapprochement with Moscow. We have already seen how the deep state (the CIA, the Pentagon, other agencies, and even the Congress itself) have done their best to frustrate Trump's policies on Russia; the Democratic victory will not substantially change this situation," Schaffhauser said.

The EU lawmaker listed the House of Representatives' lack of constitutional power in US foreign policy as the second reason.

"The House of Representatives, which the Democrats now control, has no role in foreign policy, unlike the Senate where the Republicans have made gains. The US constitution requires that the Senate ratify international treaties but is silent on how the country can withdraw from treaties. The consensus is that the House of Representatives cannot prevent the administration from denouncing treaties," he added.

Overall, the voice of the Democratic party will now be better heard in the usual political process in the United States, but will not be able to "rein Trump in," according to Schaffhauser.