New York Post

PELOSI BLINKS ON $1.2T

May lack votes

- By MARK MOORE mmoore@nypost.com

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday backed off her pledge to bring the bipartisan $1.2 trillion infrastruc­ture bill up for a vote on Monday, saying she won’t do it if the votes aren’t there.

“I’m never bringing to the floor a bill that doesn’t have the votes,” Pelosi said on ABC News’ “This Week.”

“You cannot choose the date. You have to go when you have the votes in a reasonable time, and we will,” she said.

But the California Democrat insisted that “we’re going to pass the bill this week.”

Pelosi on Friday said she would bring the measure up for a floor vote Monday amid pressure from moderate Democrats, who have tied the bill’s fate to the sweeping $3.5 trillion spending plan.

Both are key parts of President Biden’s agenda.

Moderates want the bipartisan measure to pass first, but progressiv­e Democrats are pushing for a vote first on the $3.5 trillion spending legislatio­n that contains funding for the climate, family leave, education and expansion of the social safety net.

“In order to move forward, we have to build consensus,” Pelosi said.

She said it’s “self-evident” that the price tag for the spending plan will come in under $3.5 trillion.

“Yeah, that seems self-evident. That seems self-evident,” she told host George Stephanopo­ulos.

“I think even those who want a smaller number support the vision of the president,” she said. “Obviously, with negotiatio­ns, there will have to be some changes with that, the sooner the better so that we can build our consensus to go forward, and we will do that,” Pelosi said.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), the chair of the Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus, confirmed during an appearance on CNN that the votes aren’t there for the bipartisan deal.

“I don’t believe there will be a vote,” Jayapal said on “State of the Union.” “The speaker is an incredibly good vote counter, and she knows exactly where her caucus stands, and we’ve been really clear on that.”

“This is a preconfere­nce bill, which means everybody, everybody in the Senate, everybody in the House, has to agree to it,” Jayapal said.

She added that the “vast majority of the Democratic caucus” is behind Biden’s Build Back Better proposals, but lawmakers want the Senate to engage with the House.

Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ) called on the Democrats in the House to pass the infrastruc­ture bill first, saying the two pieces of legislatio­n are separate.

”You’ve got the infrastruc­ture, a historic once-in-a-century [bill] . . . There’s no reason why we shouldn’t pass that right away and get those shovels in the ground,” Gottheimer, the co-chair of the Problem Solvers Caucus, said in a separate interview on “State of the Union.”

The $1.2 trillion infrastruc­ture plan passed the Senate in August, 69-30.

The House Budget Committee on Saturday approved advancing the $3.5 trillion plan to a floor vote.

All 16 Republican­s on the panel voted against it.

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