The Jerusalem Post

Democrat Sinema seen as obstacle to Biden’s economic agenda

- • By JARRETT RENSHAW and TREVOR HUNNICUTT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Kyrsten Sinema is the recent recipient of an honor that US Senate colleagues more loyal to President Joe Biden’s agenda have never received – three invitation­s to the White House in just one day.

The Arizona Democrat’s private huddling this week with Biden and his aides comes as her opposition to the size of a $3.5 trillion social-spending proposal has become a key obstacle to Democratic efforts to lock down support for one of the pillars of the president’s domestic agenda.

The spending bill seeks to reduce inequality by enhancing access to healthcare and education, while taking steps to tackle climate change. Democrats propose paying for it by raising taxes on big corporatio­ns and wealthy Americans.

But Sinema and fellow Democratic Senate moderate Joe Manchin of West Virginia say the bill’s price tag is too high, imperiling its prospects in the evenly split chamber where Democrats are trying to pass it through a “reconcilia­tion” process that would not require Republican support.

A spokespers­on for Sinema did not respond to multiple requests for comment. In a statement in July, Sinema said: “I do not support a bill that costs $3.5 trillion,” promising to “work in good faith to develop this legislatio­n” with her colleagues and the administra­tion.

On Wednesday, the White House would only go so far as to say that “our sense is she does” want a bill to pass.

Asked for more specifics, such as how much Sinema was willing to spend, White House press secretary Jen Psaki declined to detail negotiatio­ns publicly.

Still, Sinema may be the best chance the White House has at striking a deal, administra­tion officials and allies said.

The 45-year-old first-term senator and former social worker was a key figure in reviving talks over Biden’s $1t. bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill. Once presumed dead, that deal passed the Senate last month with 19 Republican­s voting yes.

Its passage in the Democratic-controlled House of Representa­tives is now complicate­d by disputes between moderates and progressiv­es over the larger package.

Sinema’s seat in the Senate is not up for grabs until 2024, the same year Biden might seek reelection. Still, several liberal groups have already suggested they would back a primary challenge against her for not backing their priorities.

The Arizona state Democratic Party overwhelmi­ngly passed a resolution on Saturday that criticized Sinema for her opposition to eliminatin­g the filibuster to more easily pass legislatio­n blocked by Republican­s and for her stance on the Biden spending bill.

Adam Kinsey, a director at Uplift Campaigns, an Arizona-based progressiv­e Democratic consulting firm, said Sinema does not care about the state party reprimandi­ng her.

“She really believes that she can be a dealmaker,” he said.

ANOTHER MAVERICK?

In Arizona, which went for Biden in 2020 after backing Republican former president Donald Trump in 2016, independen­ce is prized, local political operatives said. Its former longtime senator, the late John McCain, was a self-styled maverick Republican.

“She is concerned that if she joins this massive spending bill, she will face serious opposition from a Republican,” said Charles Coughlin, chief executive of the Arizona political-strategy firm Highground. “She actually polls better among Republican­s than Democrats, which is very odd but helps explain her motivation­s.”

Based on a GovTrack analysis of her 2020 voting track record, Sinema is the most conservati­ve-leaning of any Democratic senator and further to the right than independen­t Angus King of Maine, who caucuses with the Democrats.

Sinema has also reaped campaign donations from her pushback on Biden.

In April, the US Chamber of Commerce, the largest business lobby group in the country, said it was donating to Sinema and Manchin because they were working with Republican­s and opposing some of Biden’s policies.

MIDTERM WORRIES

Biden’s legislativ­e difficulti­es may be deeper, however, than any one senator.

A larger group of Democratic caucus members has privately expressed concern to senior Democratic lawmakers and the White House about the 2022 congressio­nal elections in which the party’s control of both chambers is at stake, according to people familiar with the matter.

Many of those members expect it will be hard to sell a spending package back home that is so big and unwieldy, even if its individual components are highly popular.

Nodding to such concerns, Building Back Together, a group started with the White House’s blessing to push Biden’s agenda, released polling on Wednesday reassuring Democrats in 48 battlegrou­nd districts that voters would reward them for backing a “robust” legislativ­e package that lowers the cost of essentials, such as healthcare, while raising taxes on corporatio­ns and the rich.

Democrats who served when Barack Obama was president recall that the 2010 Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obamacare, included components favored by most Americans, but it was initially unpopular in the face of solid Republican opposition.

Later that year, Democrats lost their House majority. Biden was Obama’s vice president.

 ?? ?? KYRSTEN SINEMA (Reuters)
KYRSTEN SINEMA (Reuters)

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