New York Post

Pelosi’s Broken Promises

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When will moderate Democrats finally learn they can’t trust House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to negotiate in good faith? She broke yet another promise Thursday by holding hostage the $1.5 trillion infrastruc­ture bill the second time this week in a further cave to party progressiv­es. They insist they won’t vote for the plan before reaching a Dem-only deal on a massive spending spree out of Sen. Bernie Sanders’ wildest dreams. They’re trying to push the two reluctant moderate senators, Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema, into signing on to $3.5 trillion in new entitlemen­ts and green-energy boondoggle­s — or something close to it.

“Respectful­ly, as I have said for months, I can’t support $3.5 trillion more in spending when we have already spent $5.4 trillion since last March,” Manchin reiterated Wednesday. The next day, it came out Manchin told Sen. Chuck Schumer in July he’d agree to no more than $1.5 trillion. That’s not enough for the left, which seeks no less than to turn America into a European-style welfare state. The Squad and its allies threw another hissy fit, and Pelosi folded, canceling the vote.

Democratic strategist­s looking to next year’s midterms winced. “If a bunch of progressiv­es in deep Democratic districts tank this bill, there will be hell to pay,” one told Roll Call.

But Pelosi cares more about the socialist minority than the party at large, let alone the nation’s economic health. “There will be a vote today,” she vowed again as she left the Capitol in Friday’s wee hours, but it’s yet another broken promise: Sources told The Post that Pelosi now has a plan to delay the smaller bill for up to a month.

Manchin said $1.5 trillion was the most “we could do and not jeopardize our economy.” But that’s still a lot of money, and he’s even willing to agree to huge tax hikes that would indeed shatter a still-struggling economy.

In his memo to Schumer, Manchin suggested raising the corporate-tax rate from 21 to 25 percent, not that much lower than President Biden’s proposed 26.5 percent. And he’s fine with the prez’s plan to raise the highest income-tax rate to 39.6 percent. He’ll even support tax credits for green energy, as long as fossil-fuel credits remain.

So no matter who wins, the moderate or progressiv­e Democrats, it’s looking like the country will lose.

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