Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Senate finally unveils $1T bill

Bipartisan package took weeks to build

- By Tony Romm

WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats and Republican­s announced on Sunday they had finished crafting a roughly $1 trillion proposal to improve the country’s roads, bridges, pipes, ports and internet connection­s, setting in motion a long-awaited debate in the chamber to enact one of President Joe Biden’s economic policy priorities.

The package arrives after weeks of haggling among a bipartisan bloc of lawmakers, who muscled through late-night fights and near collapses to transform their initial blueprint into a roughly 2,700-page piece of legislatio­n. With the full text slated to be released imminently, the fate of their labor now rests in the Senate, where proponents of infrastruc­ture reform have little margin for error as they race to adopt the sort of bill that has eluded them for years.

Virtually no part of the U.S. economy is untouched by the plan chiefly put together by Sen. Rob Portman, R- Ohio, and Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D- Ariz., a draft of which was obtained early by The Washington Post. Roughly half of its $1 trillion overall price tag constitute­s new federal spending, with the rest coming from existing, planned investment­s in the country’s roads, highways and bridges, according to details released in recent days by lawmakers and the White House, which

the proposal. Those thoroughfa­res are expected to see major expansions and repairs under the bill, along with additional investment­s in the nation’s transit system. The measure is also expected to call for $66 billion targeting passenger railways, which the White House says is the largest such investment since the creation of Amtrak nearly a half-century ago.

Lawmakers plan to set aside $55 billion to improve the country’s drinking water, including a program that seeks to replace every lead pipe in America. There’s expected to be an additional $65 billion to expand broadband internet access nationwide and ensure those who do have connectivi­ty can afford their monthly payments. And Senate lawmakers pursued additional sums to upgrade key commercial hubs, including potentiall­y $25 billion for repairs at major airports.

The proposal, called the Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act, further seeks a significan­t tranche of funding to combat the threat of climate change, aiming to reduce emissions and respond to the deadly consequenc­es of a fast-warming planet. Lawmakers have called for $73 billion to modernize the nation’s energy grid and $21 billion to respond to environmen­tal concerns, including pollution. And they propose allocating new sums to advance clean-energy technologi­es, including a $7.5 billion initiative for a first-ever national network of electric vehicle charging stations.

“It takes our aging and outdated [infrastruc­ture] in this country and modernizes it, and that’s good for everybody,” Mr. Portman said in a late-night Sunday speech.

Democrats and Republican­s say they have covered the full cost of their new spending, one of the thorniest fights among the lawmakers who helped construct the deal. Democrats, led by Mr. Biden, initially sought this spring to fund infrastruc­ture investment­s through tax increases on corporatio­ns and wealthy Americans, unwinding the tax cuts Republican­s adopted under Donald Trump. But GOP lawmakers fiercely rejected the idea, preferring instead to raise some of the money through new fees on those who use infrastruc­ture — an idea Democrats rejected out of a fear it would hurt average Americans.

Their bipartisan compromise, as a result, omits both new taxes, as well as user fees. Instead, it recovers its costs through a pastiche of financing mechanisms — from reclaiming past coronaviru­s aid dollars to collecting unpaid taxes on cryptocurr­encies. But there nonetheles­s remains concern in both parties that some of the math is fuzzy, raising the potential the package still

could add to the federal deficit — and bring about significan­t fighting on the Senate floor.

That debate was supposed to begin this weekend, under the fast-track timeline laid out by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., though last-minute haggling over the specifics in the 2,700-page legislatio­n kept the Senate from acting into Sunday night. From here, though, Senate leaders hope to finish their work by the end of the week. The chamber then plans to begin work on a second, roughly $3.5 trillion economic package sought by Democrats, underscori­ng the significan­t lift awaiting lawmakers in the days before they are set to depart for their planned summer recess.

“I have said for weeks that the Senate is going to move forward on both tracks of infrastruc­ture before the beginning of the August recess,” Mr. Schumer said Saturday, days after he promised to keep the chamber in session during nights and weekends to meet his goal.

“The longer it takes to finish, the longer we’ll be here,” he said, “but we’re going to get the job done.”

Only five days ago did Mr. Portman, Ms. Sinema and other negotiator­s announce they had reached a deal, setting in motion a rocky sprint to turn their roughly $1 trillion blueprint into legislativ­e text. The Senate voted overwhelmi­ngly on Tuesday night to start debate on the measure, even before lawmakers had an actual bill in hand, though the chief backers of infrastruc­ture reform saw the developmen­t as a positive sign of their political prospects.

“I know it has been difficult, and I know it has been long, and what I’m proud to say is that is what our fore-founders intended,” Ms. Sinema said.

From here, the bipartisan group of 10 senators faces a delicate task. The lawmakers must keep together their fragile coalition, avoiding the sort of policy disputes that nearly doomed their efforts multiple times since they first announced their ambitions for new public-works spending in June. And they must remain open to changes while not allowing any that could undermine support for the

legislatio­n because any bill ultimately must garner 60 votes in the Senate, where Democrats possess only a razor-thin majority, with Vice President Kamala Harris holding the tiebreakin­g vote.

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, one of the chief negotiator­s of the infrastruc­ture deal, sounded a note of optimism about the path forward on Sunday. Appearing on CNN’s “State of the Union,” she said it remains “my expectatio­n and my hope” the $1 trillion proposal could pass the Senate this week.

With every Democrat voting for the deal, the party still would need 10 Republican votes to advance infrastruc­ture investment­s through the chamber. Ms. Collins predicted those votes ultimately would be there as senators from both parties realize “the very concrete benefits, no pun intended, of this legislatio­n.”

Sen. Joe Manchin, DW.Va., another negotiator, predicted final passage could come as soon as Thursday — an ambitious timeline that may hinge on lawmakers deftly navigating what might be a difficult amendment process over the days ahead.

Appearing on CNN, Mr. Manchin also stressed the bill’s ubiquitous political appeal, calling the new investment­s “something every state, every area of every state needs.”

Yet serious political schisms still loom large over the bipartisan measure. Chief among them are concerns about its costs, given lingering doubts the $1 trillion in new public-works spending is not actually covered by new revenue — and could add to the deficit.

In an early sign of the bickering to come, Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., took his criticisms to the chamber floor on Friday. He lambasted the “lofty and unrealisti­c revenue estimates” of the package, which he said would result in government spending that increased the risks of inflation.

Liberal Democrats harbor their own fears about the package: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, of New York, told CNN she had some initial doubts about the financing mechanisms essentiall­y being a boon for corporate America.

 ?? Demetrius Freeman/Washington Post ?? Senate Democrats and Republican­s, pictured with President Joe Biden, center, on Sunday night finally announced the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill they have been deliberats­upports
Demetrius Freeman/Washington Post Senate Democrats and Republican­s, pictured with President Joe Biden, center, on Sunday night finally announced the $1 trillion bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill they have been deliberats­upports

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