WASHINGTON—For years, President Barack Obama and newly-elected House Speaker Paul Ryan have been political foes and occasional policy allies.
Obama has long admired Ryan’s seriousness on fiscal issues, but pilloried the Wisconsin lawmaker and GOP vice presidential nominee during the 2012 campaign as the architect of “radical” budget proposals. Ryan helped champion Obama’s trade agenda this year, but also has been among the sharpest critics of the president’s health care law.
Now, with Ryan at the helm of the fractious House Republican caucus, the two men face an uncertain 14-month stretch before the end of Obama’s presidency. Ryan is eager to unify his party, but even if he can, there’s no guarantee the House would make progress on Obama’s priorities, including infrastructure spending and tax reform.
“While it is certainly our hope that we can work together on areas of agreement, right now it’s an unknown,” White House communications director Jennifer Psaki said. “That has less to do with the individual and everything to do with the politics in the Republican caucus.”
Still, there’s no doubt that Ryan was the White House’s favored choice for speaker after John Boehner resigned and No. 2 Republican Kevin McCarthy withdrew from the race to succeed him. Aides say the president views Ryan as a policy wonk driven more by legislative results than appeasing GOP hardliners.
As Ryan addressed Congress Thursday, he said, “Let’s be frank: The House is broken. We are not solving problems. We are adding to them.”
Obama and Ryan enter this new phase of their relationship with few personal ties. They’re close in age (Obama is 54, Ryan is 45), are fathers to school age children (two for Obama and three for Ryan), and are avid sports fans (though Obama’s Chicago Bears and Ryan’s Green Bay Packers are archrivals). But aides to both men say they’ve never spent much one-on-one time together.
Obama and Ryan have spoken by phone occasionally, including during a key trade vote in Congress earlier this year. The president called Ryan Wednesday to wish him well in his new post, but the White House said they did not make plans to get together for a more extensive conversation.
The president has long bristled at the notion he would have had more success dealing with Republicans had he spent more time cultivating personal relationships. He and Boehner were cordial, though hardly close during the Ohio lawmaker’s nearly five years as speaker. They made an attempt at forging deeper ties—and a grand budget bargain—with a well-publicized golf outing in 2011, but the budget talks fell apart and the two men were never again seen on the links.
White House aides hope Ryan can figure out what Boehner never seemed able to do: bring the small, but vocal, conservative wing of the House caucus along on major issues—or moving on without them if they hold firm.





