Connecticut Post

McConnell warns Democrats of fallout for reviving Biden bill

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WASHINGTON — Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell threatened Thursday to derail a bill designed to boost semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing in the United States if Democrats revive their stalled climate and social policy package.

The rejuvenati­on of the Democratic reconcilia­tion package, central to President Joe Biden’s agenda, remains a work in progress and is far from certain. But with some signs of progress in the negotiatio­ns, McConnell is moving to complicate Democratic plans by warning that Republican­s would react by stopping separate semiconduc­tor legislatio­n from moving over the finish line in the coming weeks, despite its bipartisan support.

“Let me be perfectly clear: there will be no bipartisan USICA as long as Democrats are pursuing a partisan reconcilia­tion bill,“McConnell tweeted, referring to the shorthand name for the computer chips bill that passed the Senate last year.

Both chambers of Congress have passed their versions of the legislatio­n, which would include $52 billion in incentives for companies to locate chip manufactur­ing plants in the U.S. Lawmakers are now trying to reconcile the considerab­le difference­s between the two bills, but at a pace that has many supporters worried the job won’t get done before lawmakers break for their August recess.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said McConnell was “holding hostage“a bipartisan package that would lower the cost of countless products that rely on semiconduc­tors and would yield hundreds of thousands of manufactur­ing jobs.

“Senate Republican­s are literally choosing to help China out compete the U.S. in order to protect big drug companies,“Jean-Pierre said. “This takes loyalty to special interests over working Americans to a new and shocking height. We are not going to back down in the face of this outrageous threat.“

Democrats have eyed using reconcilia­tion — a special budget process — to pass parts of their agenda through the 50-50 Senate because it allows them to circumvent the filibuster and pass legislatio­n with a simple majority. It was anticipate­d that any new reconcilia­tion package Democrats pursue would include provisions designed to lower drug prices for many consumers.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., have been talking intermitte­ntly for months in an effort to craft a whittled-down version of the massive environmen­t and social program measure that Manchin killed in December.

As part of that drive, Democrats are expected to submit language reducing prescripti­on drug costs to the chamber’s parliament­arian in coming days, according to an official familiar with the process.

The parliament­arian, Elizabeth MacDonough, must affirm that the provisions adhere to Senate rules. That would allow Democrats to use special procedures that would let them approve the legislatio­n in the 50-50 chamber over unanimous Republican opposition.

The prescripti­on drug provisions would be crucial to the bill because they could produce hundreds of billions of dollars in savings by reducing federal costs.

Those savings would be used to pay for other initiative­s under discussion dealing with climate, energy and possibly health care subsidies for low earners. Schumer and Manchin have yet to reach agreement on other potential parts of the bill, which Schumer is hoping the Senate would consider as early as late July.

The prescripti­on drug provisions would let Medicare begin negotiatin­g prices for the drugs it buys from manufactur­ers next year and increase federal subsidies for premiums and co-pays for some lowincome people, according to a summary obtained by The Associated Press.

It would also cap Medicare recipients’ out-ofpocket drug costs at $2,000 annually, payable in monthly installmen­ts; make it harder for pharmaceut­ical companies to raise prices by requiring them to provide rebates if the cost exceeds inflation and make vaccines free for Medicare beneficiar­ies, the outline said.

The now defunct version of the legislatio­n would have cost around $2 trillion over a decade and had cleared the House. But Manchin, who had negotiated with party leaders for months and whose vote Democrats needed for passage, abruptly said he was opposing it, arguing it would have fueled inflation.

Some Democrats have expressed optimism that the effort can be revived. Others have expressed pessimism that a fresh, election-year agreement with the West Virginian can be reached as the Senate calendar dwindles.

“To his credit, Sen. Schumer is much more optimistic than myself,” No. 2 Senate Democratic leader Richard Durbin of Illinois told reporters Thursday in Madrid, where Biden and lawmakers were attending a NATO summit. “So perhaps before the end of the year, they’ll deliver this miraculous bill, but I’m going to continue to work in the 60-vote environmen­t.”

That was a reference to the 60 votes, including support from at least 10 Republican­s, that major legislatio­n usually needs to pass the Senate.

The semiconduc­tor legislatio­n will need support from at least 10 Republican­s in the Senate, and possibly more, to get a bill to Biden’s desk to be signed into law. If McConnell withholds his support, it makes the task much harder, if not impossible, as other GOP lawmakers follow his lead.

Supporters of the semiconduc­tor legislatio­n include the nation’s auto makers and the nation’s biggest tech companies.

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