Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

• Baldwin votes yes, Johnson votes no.

- Craig Gilbert

WASHINGTON – Wisconsin’s two U.S. senators split over the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill that overwhelmi­ngly passed the Senate Tuesday, with Democrat Tammy Baldwin supporting it and Republican Ron Johnson opposing it.

Every Senate Democrat voted for the legislatio­n. Johnson was one of 30 Republican­s who voted against it, while 19 Republican­s (including GOP Senate Leader Mitch McConnell) voted for it. The final vote in the Senate, which has 50 Democrats and 50 Republican­s, was 69-30 in favor.

The $1.2 trillion infrastruc­ture bill includes about $550 billion in new spending over five years. The measure is the country’s largest infrastruc­ture investment in years and is aimed at shoring up and improving America’s roads, bridges, railways, water systems, and broadband internet.

“It’s time to fix our roads and bridges. And we do so in a responsibl­e way,” said Ohio Republican Rob Portman, part of a bipartisan group of senators that were critical to shaping and passing the bill.

Johnson declared his opposition well before the vote.

“One thing I do know that Washington is really good at, is mortgaging our children’s future in a bipartisan fashion,” said Johnson, who attacked the legislatio­n for not being fully paid for.

According to the Congressio­nal Budget Office, the measure contained $256 billion in deficit spending (meaning it would raise the deficit by that amount).

Johnson complained this week that people “just shrug” at that amount.

Baldwin said on Twitter Monday, “Wisconsin’s roads and bridges need to be fixed. With the bipartisan infrastruc­ture legislatio­n, we will create jobs and put people to work rebuilding.”

The bill must still pass the House. The White House released a document last week on state-by-state impacts of the infrastruc­ture bill. It said that based on funding formulas, Wisconsin would be due to receive $5.2 billion in federal highway aid and $225 million for bridge repair and replacemen­t over five years.

Wisconsin can also compete with other states for $12.5 billion in other bridge spending and a $16 billion fund for other economical­ly important projects.

In a statement after the vote, Baldwin said:

“I voted for this bipartisan legislatio­n because it will create good paying jobs and put Wisconsin to work fixing our roads and bridges, rebuilding our water infrastruc­ture, and expanding access to affordable and reliable high speed broadband for Wisconsin families, students, small businesses, and farmers.”

Johnson said in a statement that, “We need to spend money on infrastruc­ture. We also need to stop further mortgaging our children’s future .... This is just the first step in the Democrats’ plan to pass their $5 trillion-plus radical taxand-spend agenda, and I simply couldn’t help facilitate it.”

 ??  ?? Baldwin
Baldwin
 ??  ?? Johnson
Johnson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States