New York Daily News

Dems working on tweaks for Build Back Better

- BY SHANT SHAHRIGIAN

Democrats haven’t thrown in the towel on President Biden’s sweeping social and climate spending package.

Work on the bill will resume in the new year, even though opposition from Sen. Joe Manchin, a moderate West Virginia Democrat, likely means “a lot of us are going to be disappoint­ed,” Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.) said on Sunday.

“There is unanimity in our caucus that we want to get a bill to the president, and we are working to see what that bill will contain,” Cardin said on “Fox News Sunday.” “President Biden is directly involved in these negotiatio­ns.”

Asked whether scaling back the “Build Back Better” spending package would cost Democrats the support of progressiv­es, Cardin suggested the party go back to the drawing board.

“We want to see it as comprehens­ive as possible, but we need to make sure we have the votes to pass it, so that means it will be different than some of us would like to see,” he said.

“A lot of us are going to be disappoint­ed, but we’re not going to let perfection be the enemy of getting something done,” he said.

“I think we’ll be pragmatic about it, but we want to make sure it deals with the issues that we’re facing in our communitie­s.”

After months of negotiatio­ns, Manchin last week said he wouldn’t support “Build Back Better,” citing issues including its steep price tag. He’d been seen as the decisive vote in the evenly decided Senate.

It’s not clear how Democrats can revive the roughly $2 trillion bill, which is unanimousl­y opposed by Republican­s.

The legislatio­n includes billions of dollars for expanded health care access, universal preschool, clean-energy incentives and more.

Republican Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri criticized its key provisions, including the expanded child tax credit.

“I think this is one of the problems and one of the gimmicks in the bill, frankly,” he said, also on “Fox News Sunday.”

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