Boston Herald

Biden vows to ‘get it done’

Prez confident that $3.5T social bill will pass

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Making his case on Congress’ home ground, President Biden pledged Friday at the Capitol to “get it done” as Democrats strained to rescue a scaled-back version of his $3.5 trillion government-overhaul plan and salvage a related public works bill after days of frantic negotiatio­ns resulted in no deal.

Biden huddled with House Democrats in a private meeting that was part instructio­nal, part morale booster for the tattered caucus of lawmakers, telling them he wanted both bills passed regardless of the time it takes. He discussed a compromise topline of $1.9 trillion to $2.3 trillion, according to a person in the room, granted anonymity to discuss the talks.

“It doesn’t matter whether it’s six minutes, six days or six weeks — we’re going to get it done,” Biden told reporters as he left the basement meeting at the Capitol.

Action has ground to a halt in Congress despite Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s insistence there would be a “vote today” on a $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill that is popular but has become snared in the debate over Biden’s broader measure. Voting on Friday appeared increasing­ly unlikely, throwing the president’s big domestic agenda into doubt as negotiatio­ns dragged.

Holdout Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia had sunk hopes for a swift compromise, despite hours of shuttle diplomacy late Thursday with White House aides on Capitol Hill, when he refused to budge on his demands for a smaller overall package, around $1.5 trillion. That’s too meager for progressiv­e lawmakers who are refusing to vote on the public works measure without a commitment to Biden’s broader framework on the bigger bill.

Talks swirled over a compromise in the $2 trillion range. But with Manchin dug in, a quick deal seemed increasing­ly out of reach for the present. Still, Biden’s visit was welcomed by Democrats who have complained about not hearing enough from the president about a path forward.

“It’s his time to stand up,” said Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota.

Because of the ongoing negotiatio­ns, Biden opted to remain in Washington on Friday instead of traveling to his Delaware home as he often does on weekends. His public approval rating has dropped, according to a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center. The White House said the president also plans to travel next week to other cities to make his case that his historic measures would help the American people.

The president and his party are facing a potentiall­y embarrassi­ng setback — and perhaps a politicall­y devastatin­g collapse of the whole enterprise — if they cannot resolve the standoff.

 ?? AP ?? CALLING ON CONGRESS: President Biden speaks Friday while entering the Capitol with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
AP CALLING ON CONGRESS: President Biden speaks Friday while entering the Capitol with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

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