Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

House looks to vote on 2 measures

Timeline taking shape for spending, infrastruc­ture proposals

- TONY ROMM

WASHINGTON — House Democrats are aiming to vote as soon as Tuesday on two spending initiative­s totaling roughly $ 3 trillion as they seek to overcome months of delays that have ensnared President Joe Biden’s broader economic agenda.

The tentative schedule would mark the final vote for a roughly $ 1.2 trillion package to improve the country’s infrastruc­ture, which if approved would then head to the president’s desk for a signature. And it would tee up the Senate to begin debate over a second, roughly $1.75 trillion measure to overhaul the nation’s health care, education, climate, immigratio­n and tax laws.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and other leadership members informed lawmakers about the timeline in recent days, according to three people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the plans.

The schedule could still change, particular­ly as lawmakers put the finishing touches on the $1.75 trillion initiative. They are still crafting the details of the measure days after Biden unveiled it as a potential compromise between his party’s liberal and moderate lawmakers.

The plan as outlined by Biden would set aside new sums to expand Medicare to cover hearing benefits, combat climate change, offer universal and free pre-kindergart­en and proffer a slew of new aid to families, with much of it financed through changes to tax laws targeting the ultrawealt­hy. Biden has described the package as transforma­tional, even though it is significan­tly less than the $3.5 trillion that some Democrats initially envisioned.

House Democrats have tried for weeks to advance their economic priorities, particular­ly the infrastruc­ture bill, which cleared the Senate on a bipartisan basis in August.

But the bill has been bogged down in the House, where liberals have used it as leverage as they continue to negotiate with moderates, including Sens. Joe Manchin III, D-W.Va., and Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., over the rest of Biden’s spending agenda.

Two earlier attempts in the House to bring the bill to a vote ultimately were scrapped, as lawmakers with the left-leaning Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus maintained they would not supply their much-needed support for infrastruc­ture spending unless they could consider in tandem the $1.75 trillion package. That prompted the chamber to adjourn for the week on Thursday, while lawmakers behind the scenes continued finalizing the latter legislatio­n.

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