Houston Chronicle

Sinema’s role on deal shows her influence

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Sen. Joe Manchin sealed the deal reviving President Joe Biden’s big economic, health care and climate bill. But it was another Democratic senator, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, who intently, quietly and deliberate­ly shaped the final product.

Democrats pushed ahead Friday on an estimated $730 billion package that in many ways reflects Sinema’s priorities and handiwork more than the other political figures who have played a key role in delivering on Biden’s signature domestic policy agenda.

It was Sinema early on who rejected Biden’s plan to raise the corporate tax rate from 21 percent to 28 percent, as she broke with party’s primary goal of reversing the Trump-era tax break Republican­s gave to corporate America.

Sinema also scaled back her party’s long-running plan to allow Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices with the pharmaceut­ical companies as a way to reduce overall costs to the government and consumers. She limited which drugs can be negotiated.

Her insistence on climate change provisions forced the coal-state Manchin to stay at the table to accept some $369 billion in renewable energy investment­s and tax breaks. She also is tucking in more money to fight Western droughts.

And it was Sinema who in one final stroke gave her blessing to the deal by extracting an ultimate demand — she forced Democrats to drop plans to close a tax loophole that benefits wealthy hedge fund managers and high-income earners, long a party priority. Instead, the final bill will keep the tax rate at 20 percent instead of hiking it to the typical 37 percent.

“Kyrsten Sinema’s proven herself to be a very effective legislator,” said Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., who has negotiated extensivel­y with his colleague over the past year, including on the tax loophole.

Finally on board

In a 50-50 Senate where every vote matters, the often inscrutabl­e and politicall­y undefinabl­e Sinema puts hers to use in powerful ways. Her negotiatin­g at the highest levels of power — she appears to have equal access to Biden, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and even Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell — has infuriated some, wowed others and left no doubt she is a powerful new political figure.

While other lawmakers bristle at the influence a single senator can wield in Congress, where each member represents thousands if not millions of voters, Sinema’s nod of approval late Thursday was the last hurdle Democrats needed to push the Inflation Reduction Act forward. A final round of grueling votes on the package is expected to begin this weekend.

“We had no choice,” Schumer told reporters Friday at the Capitol.

Getting what you want in Congress does not come without political costs, and Sinema is amassing a balance due.

Progressiv­es are outraged at her behavior, which they view as beyond the norms of sausage-making during the legislativ­e process and verging on an unsettling restacking of party priorities to a more centrist, if not conservati­ve, lane.

Progressiv­e Rep. Ruben Gallego is openly musing about challengin­g Sinema in the 2024 primary in Arizona, and an independen­t expenditur­e group, Change for Arizona 2024, says it will support grassroots organizati­ons committed to defeating her in a Democratic primary.

“The new reconcilia­tion bill will lower the cost of prescripti­on drugs,” Gallego wrote on Twitter last weekend. “@SenatorSin­ema is holding it up to try to protect ultra rich hedge fund managers so they can pay a lower tax.”

In fact, on the left and the right, commentato­rs lambasted her final act — saving the tax breaks for the wealthy. Some pointed to past legislativ­e luminaries — the late Sen. Robert Byrd, for example, used his clout to leave his name on roads, buildings and civic institutio­ns across the West Virginia hillsides. They scoff at Sinema establishi­ng her legacy in such a way.

“Astonishin­g,” wrote conservati­ve Hugh Hewitt on Twitter. “@SenatorSin­ema could have demanded anything she wanted — anything that spent money or changed taxes — and with that leverage for Arizona she chose … to protect the carry interest exemption for investors. … Not the border. Not the country. A tax break. Wow.”

Democratic former Clinton-era Labor Secretary Robert Reich wrote, “The ‘carried interest’ loophole for billionair­e hedge-fund and privateequ­ity partners is now out of the Inflation Reduction Act, courtesy of Kyrsten Sinema.

“She’s up in 2024. Primary her and get her out of the Senate.”

But Sinema has never cared much about what others say about her, from the time she set foot in the Senate, breaking the rules with her whimsical fashion choices and her willingnes­s to reach across the aisle to Republican­s — literally joining them at times in the private Senate GOP cloakroom.

“There’s not been a bipartisan group that she’s not been a part of.”

Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va.

Being like McCain?

The Arizona senator seeks to emulate the maverick career of John McCain, drawing on his farewell address for her maiden Senate speech, and trying to adopt his renegade style alongside her own — a comparison that draws some eyerolls for its reach and scope.

Still, in her short time in the Senate, Sinema has proven herself to be a serious study who understand­s intricacie­s of legislatio­n and a hard-driving dealmaker who does not flinch. She has been instrument­al in landmark legislatio­n, including the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill Biden signed into law last summer.

“There’s not been a bipartisan group that she’s not been a part of,” Warner said.

In the end, the final package is slimmer than Biden first envisioned with his lofty Build Back Better initiative, but still a monumental undertakin­g and a bookend to a surprising­ly productive if messy legislativ­e session.

The bill would make health care gains for many Americans, capping pharmacy costs for seniors at $2,000 out of pocket and providing subsidies to help millions people who buy health insurance on the private market. It includes what the Biden administra­tion calls the largest investment in climate change ever, with money for renewable energy and consumer rebates for new and used electric cars. It would mostly be paid for by higher corporate taxes, with some $300 billion going to deficit reductions.

On the climate provisions, a priority for Democrats, Sinema may have played a role in keeping the sweeping provisions in the bill, when Manchin was less inclined to do so.

Environmen­tal leaders, who have been involved in talks on the bill since last year, said Sinema has helped shape the bill all along. She was especially helpful last year when she made it clear she supports the climate and energy provisions, and her commitment to climate issues has remained steadfast, environmen­talists said.

She tacked on her own priority, money to help Western states dealing with droughts, in the final push.

Jamal Raad, executive director of Evergreen Action, an environmen­tal group that has pushed for the climate bill, said: “Senator Sinema needed money for drought relief to help her constituen­ts stave off the worst effects of climate change. If that’s what was needed to gain her support, then good on her.”

 ?? Tom Brenner/New York Times ?? Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., appears to have political sway on Capitol Hill, often siding with the GOP but giving Democrats a necessary vote for some bills.
Tom Brenner/New York Times Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., appears to have political sway on Capitol Hill, often siding with the GOP but giving Democrats a necessary vote for some bills.

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