Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Panels get to work on Biden plans

Democrats battle GOP objections as well as party holdouts

- ALAN FRAM Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Matthew Daly of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Democrats began pushing plans for providing paid family and medical leave, easing climate change and bolstering education through House committees Thursday as they battled Republican­s and among themselves over President Joe Biden’s $3.5 trillion vision for reshaping federal priorities.

Five panels worked on their slices of the 10-year proposal, early steps in what looms as a fraught autumn for Democrats hoping to enact a remarkable range of major policy changes. They face not only solid GOP opposition but internal divisions among progressiv­es and moderates in a Congress they control so narrowly that they can afford only three House defections and none in the Senate.

“We have a once-in-a-generation chance to make transforma­tive, beneficial change,” said House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal, D-Mass., as his tax-writing panel debated its pivotal chunk of the voluminous legislatio­n. “This is our moment to lay a new foundation of opportunit­y for the American people.”

Republican­s cast the still-evolving measure as an economy killer that would raise taxes, cost jobs, worsen federal debt and make people increasing­ly reliant on government. In a signal of the broad political potency they believe the chaotic U.S. withdrawal from Afghanista­n offers, they repeatedly conjured that image to belittle Democrats’ economic plans.

“Following the humiliatin­g Afghanista­n surrender, now President Biden is leading America on an economic surrender to China, Russia, Europe and the Middle East,” said the top Republican on the Ways and Means Committee, Kevin Brady of Texas.

In an early manifestat­ion of Democratic unrest, one member of the Ways and Means panel said that for now, she planned to vote against that committee’s portion of the bill.

Moderate Rep. Stephanie Murphy of Florida complained that lawmakers still lacked informatio­n on how much it would cost and had not been shown key portions of it dealing with taxes and prescripti­on drug prices. Murphy is co-chairman of the House Blue Dog Coalition, whose members include some of Congress’ most conservati­ve Democrats.

“I don’t know how much we’re spending, how much we’re raising, how we’re spending some of the money and how we’re raising any of the money,” Murphy told her colleagues.

Democrats have said they will pay for much of the overall bill by raising taxes on the rich and corporatio­ns. They’ve said no one earning under $400,000 annually would face higher levies.

By Thursday afternoon, Neal had not released details of any revenue proposals, including the tax boosts or some tax cuts his party wants to use to help ease people’s costs for health care and other needs.

Also not released yet were Neal’s plans to let Medicare save money by negotiatin­g prices it pays for prescripti­on drugs, another way they hope to raise money for the bill’s priorities.

Moderate Democrats — mostly prominentl­y Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona — have said the bill’s proposed $3.5 trillion cost is too high. Congressio­nal Democratic leaders have conceded that the price tag may have to fall to retain moderate votes, causing anger among progressiv­es who want the package to spend as much as possible.

The Ways and Means Committee’s portion of the measure is to contain many of Biden’s top priorities. These include creation of up to 12 weeks per year of family and medical leave for all workers beginning in 2023. The benefit would pay the lowest-earning workers up to 85% of their wages, a percentage that would fall for higher earners.

Democrats on the committee batted down Republican amendments.

Separately, the House Education and Labor Committee was working on a proposed $761 billion in spending to create free preschool and community college and increase funds for job training, nutrition programs and modernizin­g public school buildings.

The House Natural Resources Committee was working on $30 billion for addressing climate change and other environmen­tal issues.

Other panels were working on provisions for small business and science programs.

 ?? (AP/J. Scott Applewhite) ?? Rep. Don Beyer, D-Va., speaks Thursday as the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee holds a hearing to craft the legislatio­n that is a cornerston­e of President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda.
(AP/J. Scott Applewhite) Rep. Don Beyer, D-Va., speaks Thursday as the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee holds a hearing to craft the legislatio­n that is a cornerston­e of President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda.

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