Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Senate OKs Democrats’ $3.5T budget blueprint

As it heads to House, partisan package has tough pathway ahead

- Savannah Behrmann USA TODAY

– Senate Democrats early Wednesday completed an important initial step in their quest to approve a $3.5 trillion bill aimed at tackling a number of President Joe Biden’s priorities by subsidizin­g child care, expanding caregiving and providing free community college and pre-kindergart­en.

The Senate, after hours of debate, passed a resolution along party lines on a 50-49 vote that gives committees in Congress instructio­ns to begin crafting the bill, using the resolution as a “blueprint.” A final vote on the bill isn’t expected until the fall.

But Wednesday’s vote serves as the start of a broader fight among Democrats tasked with creating a bill that is crucial to the passage of a $1.2 trillion bipartisan inWASHINGT­ON frastructu­re plan the Senate passed Tuesday. Some moderate Senate Democrats have reservatio­ns about the $3.5 trillion price tag, while progressiv­e Democrats in the House say they’re willing to vote against the infrastruc­ture deal if the larger package isn’t to their liking.

With narrow Democratic majorities in both chambers, the fate of both bills could come down to how the $3.5 trillion bill is crafted.

“We still have a long road to travel,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, turning to a football analogy. “It’s as if we caught a nice long pass at midfield, but we still have 50 yards to go before we score a touchdown.”

Senate Democrats, who hold a slight majority in the 100-member chamber, plan to use a legislativ­e maneuver called reconcilia­tion to pass the plan without the support of Republican­s, who generally oppose the measure. Vice President Kamala Harris would be used to break a 50-50 tie.

Like the Senate, Democrats also hold a slight lead in the House, meaning just a handful of Democratic objections could sink the bipartisan infrastruc­ture package and the larger bill.

Democratic House leaders and progressiv­es insist they will not vote on the infrastruc­ture deal without the $3.5 trillion bill.

“There won’t be an infrastruc­ture bill unless we have a reconcilia­tion bill. Plain and simple,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in June.

But moderates like Sens. Kyrsten Sinema, DAriz., and Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., have expressed concerns about the size of the $3.5 trillion bill.

Sinema told the Arizona Republic in July that she has made it clear to Senate leadership that “while I will support beginning this process, I do not support a bill that costs $3.5 trillion.”

Manchin said in a statement that he has “serious concerns about the grave consequenc­es” of spending an additional $3.5 trillion that he said could fuel inflation and threaten the economy.

The bill calls for free pre-kindergart­en for 3 and 4-year-olds, two years of free community college, and paid family and sick leave. It also would expand Medicare to cover dental, hearing and vision benefits.

Democrats have long stressed a “two-track plan” for passing the two plans, arguing that the bipartisan deal that invests in roads, bridges, transporta­tion and broadband is not big enough.

“There won’t be an infrastruc­ture bill unless we have a reconcilia­tion bill.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi In June statement

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