The Jerusalem Post

Biden says he’ll ‘work like hell’ to pass infrastruc­ture, social spending bills

- • By JEFF MASON

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – US President Joe Biden said on Saturday he was going to “work like hell” to get both an infrastruc­ture bill and a multi-trillion-dollar social spending bill passed through Congress and plans to travel more to bolster support with Americans.

Biden visited the Capitol on Friday to try to end a fight between moderates and left-leaning progressiv­es in his Democratic Party that has threatened the two bills that make up the core of his domestic agenda.

The president on Saturday acknowledg­ed criticism that he had not done more to gin up support for the bills by traveling around the country. He noted there were many reasons for that, including his focus on hurricane and storm damage during recent trips, among other things.

Biden said he would be going around the country “making the case why it’s so important” and making it clearer to people what is in the two bills.

He said he wanted to make life more livable for ordinary Americans by making child care affordable, for example.

“There’s nothing in any of these pieces of legislatio­n that’s radical, that is unreasonab­le,” Biden said. “I’m going to try to sell what I think the people, the American people, will buy.”

Biden expressed confidence that both bills would get passed but declined to set a deadline, such as the November Thanksgivi­ng holiday, for when that would happen.

“I believe I can get this done,” Biden said.

Moderate Democratic lawmakers wanted an immediate vote on a $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill in the House that has already passed the Senate, while progressiv­es want to wait until there is agreement on a sweeping $3.5 trillion bill to bolster social spending and fight climate change.

Biden, a former senator who is deeply familiar with how the legislativ­e process works, told his caucus on Friday that they could delay a vote on the smaller bill and sharply scale back the larger one to around $2 trillion.

Meanwhile the president said on Saturday he hoped Republican­s would not use a filibuster in the Senate to block efforts to raise the debt ceiling.

“That would be totally unconscion­able,” he said.

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