Antelope Valley Press

GOP doubts persist on infrastruc­ture bill

- By JOSH BOAK

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden wants Congress to know he’s sincere about cutting a deal on infrastruc­ture, but Republican lawmakers have deep-seated doubts about the scope of his proposed package, its tax hikes and Biden’s premise that this is an inflection point for the US as a world power.

Biden met Monday afternoon with a bipartisan group of lawmakers and tried to assure them that the Oval Office gathering was not “window dressing.” One of the core disputes is over what counts as infrastruc­ture in his $2.3 trillion proposal.

“I’m prepared to negotiate as to the extent of my infrastruc­ture project, as well as how we pay for it,” Biden said. “It’s going to get down to what we call ‘infrastruc­ture.’”

Republican Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississipp­i indicated after the meeting that he was willing to negotiate with Biden and called it a “good discussion.” But a more fundamenta­l disagreeme­nt also emerged about whether the United States is losing its status atop the global economy because of its deteriorat­ing infrastruc­ture.

“He says that we’re a declining superpower, the United States is no longer number one,” Wicker said afterward. “I just fundamenta­lly disagree with that.”

The meeting came as the Biden’s team is making a direct argument for lawmakers to put their constituen­ts ahead of their ideologies. The White House released state-by-state breakdowns Monday that show the dire shape of roads, bridges, the power grid and housing affordabil­ity, among other issues. An appeal to the broader public is unlikely to resonate much with Republican lawmakers who have already blasted the plan.

Among the Republican­s at the meeting were Sen. Deb Fischer of Nebraska and Reps. Garret Graves of Louisiana and Don Young of Alaska. Democrats attending were Sens. Maria Cantwell of Washington and Sen. Alex Padilla of California and Reps. Donald Payne Jr. of New Jersey and David Price of North Carolina.

In the room, “nobody said we didn’t need infrastruc­ture investment,” Cantwell, the chair of the Senate Commerce Committee, said in an interview.

The lawmakers said Biden will seek to drive a consensus by having his team revisit with them and others, as soon as Tuesday.

Graves said the president talked about how he was open to discussion and open to negotiatio­n on the size, scope and definition of infrastruc­ture.

“Those are all the exact words that I wanted to hear going into the meeting. And so that was really encouragin­g,” Graves, a member of the House Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Committee, told The Associated Press.

The figures in the state summaries paint a decidedly bleak outlook for the world’s largest economy after years of repairs being deferred and delayed. They suggest that too much infrastruc­ture is unsafe for vehicles at any speed, while highlighti­ng the costs of extreme weather events that have become more frequent with climate change as well as dead spots for broadband and a dearth of child care options.

Drawn from an array of private and public data, the state reports show there are 7,300 miles of highway in Michigan alone that are in poor condition. Damaged streets in North Carolina impose an average yearly cost of $500 on motorists. Iowa has 4,571 bridges in need of repair. There is a roughly four-in-10 chance that a public transit vehicle in Indiana might be ready for the scrap yard. Pennsylvan­ia’s schools are short $1.4 billion for maintenanc­e and upgrades.

Most states received a letter grade on their infrastruc­ture. West Virginia earned a D. So did Biden’s home state of Delaware. Of the states rated, the highest grade went to Georgia and Utah, which each notched a C-plus. The lowest grade, D-minus, went to the territory of Puerto Rico.

The administra­tion is banking that the data will confirm the everyday experience­s of Americans as they bump over potholes, get trapped in traffic jams and wait for buses that almost never correspond to published schedules. There is already a receptive audience to the sales pitch, and the strategy is that public support can overcome any congressio­nal misgivings.

“We don’t have a lot of work to do to persuade the American people that US infrastruc­ture needs major improvemen­t,” Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg said on Fox News Channel’s “Fox News Sunday” ahead of the reports’ release. “The American people already know it.”

Republican lawmakers have been quick to reject the infrastruc­ture proposal from Biden. They say just a fraction of the spending goes to traditiona­l infrastruc­ture, as $400 billion would expand Medicaid support for caregivers and substantia­l portions would fund electric vehicle charging stations and address the racial injustice of highways that were built in ways that destroyed Black neighborho­ods.

The reports give some data to back up their argument that more money should be spent on roads and bridges. Biden’s plan would modernize 20,000 miles worth of roadways, but California by itself has 14,220 miles of highway in poor condition.

Republican lawmakers also object to funding the package by increasing the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28% and increasing the global minimum tax, among other tax changes including stepped-up IRS enforcemen­t being proposed by the Biden administra­tion.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris meet with lawmakers to discuss the American Jobs Plan in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris meet with lawmakers to discuss the American Jobs Plan in the Oval Office of the White House, Monday, in Washington.

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