Hartford Courant

Senate Dems unveil budget

Boosts in $3.5T plan aimed at social programs, climate

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats unveiled a budget resolution Monday that maps $3.5 trillion in spending boosts and tax breaks aimed at strengthen­ing social and environmen­tal programs, setting up an autumn battle over President Joe Biden’s domestic policy ambitions.

The measure lays the groundwork for legislatio­n later this year that over a decade would pour mountains of federal resources into their top priorities. Included would be more money for health care, education, family services and environmen­tal programs and tax breaks for families, with much of it paid for with tax increases on the rich and corporatio­ns.

The budget’s introducti­on marks the start of a long legislativ­e trek through Congress that Democrats hope will result this fall in a progressiv­e reshaping of government. To succeed, they’ll have to overcome likely unanimous Republican opposition and find the sweet spot between the demands of their own often antagonist progressiv­e and moderate factions.

That will be a fraught task in a Congress they control by a hair. They’ll need the support of every Democrat in the 50-50 Senate, with Vice President Kamala Harris casting the tie-breaking vote, and will be able to lose only three Democrats in the House and still prevail — margins that give every Democrat tons of leverage.

“At its core, this legislatio­n is about restoring the middle class in the 21st Century and giving more Americans the opportunit­y to get there,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said in a letter to his colleagues that unveiled the plan.

The resolution calls for creating free pre-kindergart­en for 3- and 4-yearolds and two years of free community college; extending tax breaks for children and some low-income workers; and establishi­ng paid family and sick leave.

Medicare coverage would be expanded to cover dental, hearing and vision benefits. Spending would increase for housing, home health care and job training, and new resources would go to efforts encouragin­g a faster transition to clean energy.

To pay for the plans, taxes would be raised on wealthy people and large corporatio­ns, without any increases on people earning under $400,000 a year, a key Biden campaign pledge. The budget also calls for reducing the prices the federal government pays for pharmaceut­icals it buys for Medicare recipients, a long-time goal of Democrats who want the government to be allowed to negotiate those prices.

The budget also calls for giving legal status to millions of immigrants living in the U.S. illegally, and — in a step aimed at winning support from moderate Democrats — spending money to strengthen border security.

Democrats are expected to approve the resolution over unanimous Republican opposition, perhaps this week. Passage of the budget is crucial because it would allow a subsequent bill — actually enacting Democrats’ 10-year, $3.5 trillion plan for spending and tax changes — to pass the Senate by a simple majority.

Without that protection, the follow-up measure would fall prey to a GOP filibuster, delaying tactics that require 60 votes to end.

“For too many decades, Congress has ignored the needs of the working class, the elderly, the children, the sick and the poor,” said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders,

I-VT. “Now is the time for bold action. Now is the time to restore faith in ordinary Americans that their government can work for them, and not just wealthy campaign contributo­rs.”

Even so, it’s expected to take Democrats well into the fall to complete the follow-up $3.5 trillion bill, as rival progressiv­es and moderates jostle over which of their priorities will survive.

The budget resolution assigns congressio­nal committees specific amounts of money to spend and describes policy changes that party leaders support in the follow-up bill actually enacting those changes. But those committees will have final say on what legislatio­n they will produce, and crafting this fall’s Democratic compromise with virtually no margin of error will be a time-consuming challenge for party leaders.

Senate debate on the budget resolution will begin as soon as the chamber approves a bipartisan $1 trillion package financing highway, water, broadband and other infrastruc­ture projects, which is expected soon.

In contrast to that compromise, Republican­s are solidly against Democrats’ separate $3.5 trillion plan. They see the fight as a politicall­y fertile one in the runup to next year’s elections for House and Senate control, and are planning to force votes on amendments on issues like immigratio­n, crime and inflation that they think will play to their benefit during next year’s campaigns.

Democrats’ $3.5 trillion fiscal outline “will thrust the Senate into an ultra-partisan showdown over the staggering, reckless taxing and spending spree” they want, Senate Minority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., said last week.

With his eyes clearly on the November 2022 voting, Mcconnell said Schumer is making Democrats vote on “nothing less than Chairman Sanders’ dream shopping list. Every American family will know exactly where their senator stands.”

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