Monterey Herald

House debates Dems’ social, climate bill

- By Alan Fram

A divided House finally launched debate Thursday on Democrats’ expansive social and environmen­t bill, with party leaders hoping that cost estimates expected from Congress’ top fiscal analyst would nail down moderate lawmakers’ votes and allow passage by week’s end.

Two weeks after centrists’ objections forced Democrats to delay the measure, the bill began moving amid optimistic signs from leaders and lawmakers that their divisions were all but resolved — for now. Facing uniform Republican opposition, Democrats can lose no more than three votes to prevail in the House.

The package, a top priority for President Joe Biden, would bolster child care assistance, create free preschool, curb seniors’ prescripti­on drug costs and beef up efforts to slow climate change.

Biden and other Democratic leaders have said the 10-year, $1.85 trillion measure would pay for itself, largely through tax increases on the wealthy, big corporatio­ns and companies doing business abroad.

A cost estimate on the bill, promised by Friday from the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office, was expected to show a modestly higher price tag and deficits near $200 billion over the coming decade. Early signs were that those difference­s were unlikely to derail the legislatio­n, which exceeds 2,100 pages.

“Each of these investment­s on its own will make an extraordin­ary impact on the lives of American families,” said House Budget Committee Chairman John Yarmuth, D-Ky., ticking off the bill’s initiative­s. Noting that savings would come from higher levies on the rich and corporatio­ns, he added, “It’s a helluva deal.”

Republican­s said the legislatio­n would damage an economy already racked by inflation, give tax breaks to some wealthy taxpayers and make government bigger and more intrusive. Missouri Rep. Jason Smith, the Budget Committee’s top Republican, used alliterati­on from Biden’s name for the measure — Build Back Better — to mock it.

“Bankrupts the economy. Benefits the wealthy. And it builds the Washington machine,” Smith said.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said she hoped the chamber would vote on the measure later Thursday, reflecting Democratic plans to approve the measure before leaving for a weeklong holiday break. “This is going to be a wonderful Thanksgivi­ng,” she said.

The debate came with Democrats hoping to move toward delivering a badly needed victory for Biden. For months, the bill has been delayed by infighting between party moderates and progressiv­es over the measure’s cost and the policies it should include.

Biden this week signed a $1 trillion package of highway and other infrastruc­ture projects, which he’s spent recent days promoting around the country. But he’s been battered recently by falling approval numbers in polls, reflecting voters’ concerns over inflation, supply chain delays and the persistent coronaviru­s pandemic.

After months of talks, lawmakers appeared eager to wrap it up, shelving lingering difference­s to begin selling the package back home. House Democrats said they planned 1,000 events across the country by year’s end to pitch the measure’s benefits to voters.

Democrats have struggled to explain the farreachin­g scope of the bill, with its health, child care and other provisions affecting millions of Americans. The internal battling has often overshadow­ed the actual bill, weighing down Democrats as they prepare for potentiall­y difficult midterm elections next year.

House passage of the social and environmen­t bill would send it to the 50-50 Senate, where Democrats have zero votes to spare.

Significan­t changes there are likely due to cost-cutting demands by moderate Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va.

Senate talks could take weeks, and the prospect that Manchin or others will force additional cuts in the measure was making it easier for House moderates to back the legislatio­n Thursday. The altered bill would have to return to the House before going to Biden’s desk.

Even as lawmakers debated the legislatio­n, Democrats were set to change it before the House votes to make sure it doesn’t run afoul of Senate rules.

Democrats are using special rules to let the bill pass the Senate by a simple majority, not the usual 60 votes, but such legislatio­n must follow certain budget constraint­s.

When moderates delayed House passage of the bill two weeks ago, they said they wanted to make sure the CBO’s projection­s for its costs were similar to White House numbers, which showed the measure essentiall­y paid for itself.

Some difference­s, however, were expected between the CBO and White House estimates.

A chief discrepanc­y was expected to be over a White House estimate that giving the IRS an additional $80 billion for stepped-up enforcemen­t would yield $480 billion in new tax collection­s over a decade, a net gain of $400 billion. The CBO, using stricter estimating guidelines, was expected to envision half that amount in new revenue.

The House’s addition of a paid family leave program was also expected to increase the legislatio­n’s cost. That program faces objections from Manchin and seems likely to be dropped by the Senate.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., talks to reporters about plans to pass President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda as the House meets to debate the Build Back Better Act at the Capitol in Washington on Thursday.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., talks to reporters about plans to pass President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda as the House meets to debate the Build Back Better Act at the Capitol in Washington on Thursday.

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