Daily Sabah (Turkey)

US Senate in for ‘hell of a fight’ amid doubts over infrastruc­ture spending

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THE U.S. Senate returned on Monday to one of its most ambitious agendas in years, with Democratic President Joe Biden seeking trillions of dollars in infrastruc­ture spending and Republican­s promising “a hell of a fight” against tax hikes to pay for it.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer opened the Senate following a two-week July Fourth recess, saying progress was being made on both a bipartisan $1.2 trillion infrastruc­ture plan and the first step toward another measure that would pass with only Democratic votes.

But given the 50-50 split in the Senate, it was uncertain whether the Democratic leader could fulfill his goal of passing both measures through the chamber by sometime in August.

“If and when we succeed, the benefits will reverberat­e across the country for generation­s to come,” Schumer said.

Work continued on the bipartisan part of the package, which Biden has touted to voters, but the top Republican on the plan, Sen. Rob Portman, told reporters he did not know when detailed negotiatio­ns would be completed.

Roy Blunt, a member of the Senate Republican leadership, said: “That would be a pretty amazing thing” if a bill winning the support of all Democrats could also capture the 10 Republican­s

necessary to push it to passage.

Last week, Schumer’s Republican counterpar­t, Mitch McConnell, promised a “hell of a fight” over the expected next phase of the process – a partisan, Democratic initiative – while leaving open the possibilit­y of his support for the emerging bipartisan bill.

Negotiator­s were still discussing ways to finance the latter measure’s $1.2 trillion price tag, according to lawmakers and congressio­nal aides.

Adding to the complexity, Congress could get embroiled in a potentiall­y divisive debate over raising the statutory limit on U.S. borrowing authority, which expires at the end of July.

While the Treasury Department is expected to be able to manage for several weeks beyond the July 31 deadline, global financial markets will become increasing­ly jittery about a potential U.S. default on its debt the longer the matter is unresolved.

Democrats control both chambers of Congress by razor-thin margins and can afford to lose only a few votes in the House of Representa­tives and none in the Senate if they are to succeed.

They view the overall infrastruc­ture package as potentiall­y the most important legislatio­n to push through before next year’s elections, which will determine control of Congress for the second half of Biden’s four-year term.

The bipartisan deal would pay for rebuilding roads, bridges and other traditiona­l infrastruc­ture projects and bring broadband internet service to more rural areas. It got a boost last week from the “Problem Solvers Caucus,” a group of Democratic and Republican lawmakers.

McConnell said there was “a decent chance” the bipartisan bill could gain traction, but warned the spending must somehow be financed without adding to the national debt.

‘NOT THE RIGHT THING’

Speaking at public events in his home state of Kentucky last week, McConnell saved his grim assessment­s for tax hikes in the other infrastruc­ture legislatio­n Democrats are expected to produce in addition to the bipartisan bill.

“This is going to be a hell of a fight .... This is not the right thing to do for the country,” McConnell warned as he attacked Biden’s plans for possible tax increases on corporatio­ns and the wealthy to help finance the cost of some infrastruc­ture investment­s.

Corporate lobbyists, in concert with Republican­s, already were laying plans to thwart the initiative, arguing that tax increases would hurt a U.S. economy emerging from the damage of the COVID-19 pandemic.

One measure, to be hammered out before the start of the August recess, would simply provide the technical framework for ramming through the Senate – without Republican support – a second, bigger infrastruc­ture measure.

That Democrats-only plan would require a maneuver called “reconcilia­tion” that skirts Senate rules requiring 60 votes to pass most legislatio­n.

The large package is set to be the final major piece of Biden’s first-year legislativ­e aspiration­s: a partisan “human infrastruc­ture” bill in the fall to invest huge sums to confront climate change, while expanding education opportunit­ies across the United States and home health care for the elderly and others.

McConnell has attacked those initiative­s and is hoping to generate opposition from some moderate Democrats.

Senate Budget Committee Chairperso­n Bernie Sanders, a leading liberal, is looking for up to $6 trillion in new investment­s, while other, more moderate Democrats on his panel want less.

Sanders left a meeting with Biden on Monday telling reporters he would push for “the strongest possible legislatio­n.”

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