Imperial Valley Press

Voters already saying yes to Biden’s infrastruc­ture plan

- JOHN MICEK

Here’s a quiz for the Republican politician­s among you. Check as many as apply. Do you support:

- Repairing and rebuilding America’s deteriorat­ing network of roads and bridges, including the interstate highway system brought to life by GOP President Dwight D. Eisenhower?

- Ensuring that every American public student isn’t drinking water out of lead pipes and doesn’t attend class in buildings riddled with toxic chemicals?

- Giving every American access to reliable and affordable broadband internet service?

- Making sure that America’s electric grid is reliable so there’s not a repeat of the debacle in Texas?

- Building up the nation’s electric vehicle infrastruc­ture so that we can continue the pivot away from fossil fuels, all the better to hand a cleaner environmen­t to our children, and to their children after them?

Because, guess what Republican members of Congress? When it comes to all of the above, Americans are way ahead of you.

As The Washington Post’s Jennifer Rubin noted, a Politico-Morning Consult poll finds that six in 10 respondent­s favor President Joe Biden’s sweeping, $2 trillion infrastruc­ture package. And support for individual items within the plan is even higher, with 77 percent favoring modernizin­g highways and roads. Majorities even support items not traditiona­lly thought of as infrastruc­ture issues: 80 percent support refurbishi­ng Veterans Affairs hospitals and improving caregiving (76 percent), Rubin wrote.

And when it comes to Biden’s plan to pay for it all by increasing corporate taxes, yep, Americans are down for that, too, according to the Politico-Morning Consult poll, with “sixty-five percent of registered voters [saying] they strongly or somewhat support funding Biden’s infrastruc­ture plan through 15 years of higher taxes on corporatio­ns, while 21 percent somewhat or strongly oppose it.”

Republican­s on Capitol Hill, meanwhile, have blasted the plan, with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell calling it a “Trojan horse,” that will result in “more borrowed money and massive tax increases on all the productive parts of our economy.”

Putting aside the sheer hilarity of McConnell’s sudden concern about fiscal responsibi­lity after he supported adding up to $2 trillion to the national debt with the Trump tax cut, the Senate Republican leader nonetheles­s added that he thought there was enough room in the horse’s saddlebags for a bridge in his home state.

Another Republican, Rep. Kevin

Brady, of Texas, the ranking GOP member of the powerful House Ways & Means Committee, dismissed Biden’s plan as a “sugar high.”

And Sen. Pat Toomey, of Pennsylvan­ia, the ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee and tax-and-spending hawk, said that while he believes “we can and should do more to rebuild our nation’s physical infrastruc­ture,” Biden’s plan would “[undo] large portions of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. That 2017 tax reform helped create the best American economy of my lifetime.”

So if the GOP is against all the things that the American public so clearly favors, it’s only reasonable to ask what they support.

Some of the more immediate answers appear to be turning the reins of the party over to Trump loyalists who deny the reality of the Capitol insurrecti­on and who propagate the myth of the stolen election. They fight make-believe culture wars over Dr. Seuss books. And they’re doing all they can to push racist voter suppressio­n bills over the goal line.

The White House, knowing the public is with them, is moving on without the GOP, by teeing up the infrastruc­ture bill for approval through the parliament­ary maneuver known as budget reconcilia­tion, which would not require Republican support.

On Wednesday, Biden forcefully rebutted the GOP criticisms, saying “the idea of infrastruc­ture has always evolved to meet the aspiration­s of the American people and their needs. And it is evolving again today” He also left the door open to compromise, even as Republican­s contort themselves to oppose spending and a vision of government they once embraced: An America that thinks and builds big.

So, I’ll try to frame the choice confrontin­g the GOP in the only language they seem to understand:

What would you do if it were 2022? Would you stomp and fidget at the chance to build bridges?

Would you stick a cork in a bottomless container of government pork?

Would you play pointless games of political chess, while your voters say “Yes! Yes! Yes!”?

Would you continue bloviate and obfuscate with speeches of great sonority while slipping further into the minority? What would you DO if it were 2022? American voters already have spoken. So don’t be surprised if they just turn the page on the Party of No.

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