The fact that Barack Obama and Paul Ryan agreed on the need for corporate tax reform tells you that it is not essentially a partisan issue. It is, however, an issue that results in winners, losers, and trade-offs, which is in some respects worse.
The GOP has shown very little ability or desire to balance interests over the last decade or so; their default position is to throw money at everyone if they really want a deal. Trump, for his part, has cost himself any possible Democratic support, even on issues like this, by choosing to govern as a hard line Republican instead of a de facto third party candidate independent of the establishments of either side. As a result, I strongly suspect that any corporate tax “reform,” particularly involving a border adjustment, will die at the hands of the prospective losers, and the only thing left will be an across-the-board tax cut that will do little except increase the height of the already enormous corporate cash mountains.