Los Angeles Times

Bipartisan­ship shows life with COVID bill

Centrist senators took the lead in getting legislatio­n passed, and it could bode well for Biden

- DOYLE McMANUS McManus’ column appears Sunday and Wednesday.

There was plenty not to like in the pandemic relief bill Congress passed this week. It was too small, even at $ 900 billion. It cuts off supplement­al unemployme­nt payments after only 11 weeks. It includes a grab bag of unnecessar­y items, including a restored tax break for business meals popularly known as the “three- martini lunch,” a favorite of President Trump.

But the bill had one important virtue: It was a genuine compromise, a species rarely seen in Washington. Even more intriguing, it was based partly on the work of a bipartisan cabal of centrist senators who bolted from their parties’ dug- in positions and took matters into their own hands to get something done.

Those maverick senators could be useful allies for President- elect Joe Biden as he tries to revive the lost art of bipartisan legislatio­n. “This is a model for the challengin­g work ahead for our nation,” Biden said Monday, praising the senators’ work. “In November, the American people spoke clearly that now is a time for action and compromise. I am heartened to see members of Congress heed that message, reach across the aisle, and work together.”

Translatio­n: Maybe, just maybe, I can make this bipartisan­ship thing work.

In a moment of optimism during his presidenti­al campaign, Biden predicted that Republican­s would experience “an epiphany” after Trump departed and return to the comity he remembered from his early days in the Senate.

But few signs of incipient epiphany have appeared.

For weeks, many Republican­s have refused to acknowledg­e that Biden won.

Meanwhile, as the deadline for COVID- 19 benefits neared, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell refused to budge from his bare- bones offer of $ 550 billion in new aid, a number lower than even Trump wanted.

Enter the renegade senators.

The morning after election day, Joe Manchin III, a centrist Democrat from West Virginia, telephoned his friend Susan Collins, a moderate Republican from Maine who won reelection over tough Democratic opposition.

“I called Susan to congratula­te her, and it turned into a conversati­on about the COVID bill,” Manchin told me. “We agreed that this was an emergency, that we had to do something, because they” — meaning the two parties’ leaders — “weren’t doing anything.”

A few nights later, a hastily recruited group met for an Italian takeout dinner at the Capitol Hill home of Sen. Lisa Murkowski ( R- Alaska). (“Indoors but well- spaced,” one senator said. “And the windows were open.”)

In addition to Manchin, Collins and Murkowski, participan­ts included Mitt Romney ( R- Utah), Richard J. Durbin ( D- Ill.) and Mark R. Warner ( D- Va.).

They agreed to draft a COVID relief bill of their own, sticking to elements senators on both sides could agree to. To make the job easier, they adopted a suggestion from Durbin to make it a short- term emergency package, which would help keep the price down. More senators, including Bill Cassidy ( R- La.), Angus King ( I- Maine) and Jeanne Shaheen ( D- N. H.), soon joined.

On Dec. 1, the new bipartisan group unveiled a $ 908billion bill with nine sponsors: four Republican­s, four Democrats, one independen­t. Biden quickly blessed it. And suddenly, after months of paralysis, the party leaders — especially McConnell, the most obdurate — were on the defensive, trying to explain why they hadn’t struck a deal.

The most important thing wasn’t in the details of the bill. The important thing was demonstrat­ing that a bipartisan deal was possible — and that to make one, a significan­t number of senators were ready to act independen­tly of their party leaders.

In the end, McConnell, Senate Democratic Leader Charles E. Schumer ( D- N. Y.), and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ( DSan Francisco) worked out the details. But the $ 900billion deal they produced was close enough to the bipartisan proposal that Manchin brought West Virginia moonshine to the group’s last meeting.

Manchin told me he’s ready to try more bipartisan legislatin­g next year.

“We’re going to inject ourselves anywhere we think is useful,” he said. “I would hope it’s infrastruc­ture, because infrastruc­ture can pull our country together,” he added.

They will have an opportunit­y to work again on pandemic relief, too. The $ 900- billion deal runs out in the spring.

If Democrats don’t win both of the two Senate elections in Georgia on Jan. 5, McConnell will remain majority leader. Biden’s chances of hiking taxes on the wealthy, expanding Obamacare and passing broad immigratio­n reform will shrink from slim to none.

And even if Democrats win both Georgia races, that will produce a 50- 50 Senate — a situation in which any one senator can tip the balance.

Skeptics will continue to say Biden’s sunny talk of bipartisan­ship sounds naive — and most of the time, they’ll be right.

But in the struggle over pandemic relief, Collins, Romney, Murkowski and their colleagues showed that at least some Republican­s are willing to give bipartisan­ship a try.

If politics is the art of the possible, they succeeded in expanding, even if only slightly, the definition of what’s possible.

 ?? Caroline Brehman CQ Roll Call ?? DEMOCRATIC Sen. Joe Manchin III, center, and a bipartisan group of lawmakers meet in Washington this month to unveil a COVID- 19 relief bill. President- elect Joe Biden praised their work as a model for the nation.
Caroline Brehman CQ Roll Call DEMOCRATIC Sen. Joe Manchin III, center, and a bipartisan group of lawmakers meet in Washington this month to unveil a COVID- 19 relief bill. President- elect Joe Biden praised their work as a model for the nation.
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