San Antonio Express-News

In opposing infrastruc­ture bill, GOP happy to help Dems

- CATHERINE RAMPELL crampell@washpost.com

Republican politician­s have proven themselves an admirably selfless bunch. Time and again, they’ve handed over credit to Democrats — and Democrats alone — for all sorts of popular policy initiative­s.

A year ago, Washington Republican­s abdicated leadership on any coherent federal response to the pandemic, praising a Republican president who proudly didn’t “take responsibi­lity at all” on the issue. Then last month, Republican­s effectivel­y conceded political credit for the strengthen­ing economic recovery by refusing to award a single vote to Biden’s popular $1.9 trillion fiscal relief bill. (The bill was favored by most Americans, in some polls by a supermajor­ity.)

Now, astonishin­gly, Republican­s are on the verge of surrenderi­ng to Democrats solo credit on yet another popular issue: upgrading the nation’s crumbling infrastruc­ture.

Biden has pitched a $2 trillion infrastruc­ture plan. Survey after survey has found that investing more government money in “infrastruc­ture” has broad, bipartisan support: 85 percent of voters overall, and 82 percent of Republican­s specifical­ly, agree that “America is in need of an infrastruc­ture improvemen­t,” a recent Morning Consult poll found. Perhaps this is unsurprisi­ng; whatever your politics, you’re probably no fan of potholes or lead pipes.

Donald Trump somehow failed to turn “infrastruc­ture week” into anything beyond a political punchline.

But whatever Republican voters think about the idea, Republican politician­s are against it. Although GOP politician­s are still casting about for reasons why, exactly, they oppose it.

Sometimes their objection is that the proposal defines infrastruc­ture too broadly, a “liberal wish-list the White House has decided to label ‘infrastruc­ture.’” Biden’s plan includes not only investment­s in roads and bridges but also broadband, energy, manufactur­ing, wastewater systems, electric cars, housing, school buildings and more.

This talking point presents at least two problems, though.

First, Republican politician­s have referred in the past to many of these same priorities as “infrastruc­ture” — and endorsed them.

For instance, Gov. Kristi Noem, R-S.D., said she was “shocked by how much doesn’t go into infrastruc­ture,” citing “pipes” as among Biden’s supposed boondoggle­s. Noem, though, has previously backed upgrading and removing lead from plumbing systems as valuable “water infrastruc­ture” investment­s.

Similarly, Sen. Rob Portman, R-ohio, slammed Biden’s inclusion of “workforce developmen­t” as an initiative that’s “a far cry away from what we’ve ever defined as infrastruc­ture”; but in 2017 and 2019, Portman co-sponsored the Building U.S. Infrastruc­ture by Leveraging Demands for Skills, or BUILDS, Act. His explanatio­n at the time: “If we are going to invest in our nation’s infrastruc­ture, we are going to need a skilled workforce.” The other issue is that even those Biden initiative­s that do seem a bit of a stretch to call “infrastruc­ture” are still extremely popular. For example, the proposed investment­s in homebased care for the elderly and disabled. That’s supported by 78 percent of Americans overall and 74 percent of Republican­s, according to an Ipsos poll.

Most of the key planks of Biden’s proposal poll well among Republican voters, whether or not those planks technicall­y constitute brick-and-mortar infrastruc­ture. The challenge for Republican politician­s “is they have a talking point they can’t back up with an example of an investment they oppose, since nearly all the investment­s in the plan are popular in their own right,” says Geoff Garin, president of Hart Research, which polls for Democratic and progressiv­e clients.

Some Republican politician­s have also attacked the proposal’s cost, but the plan appears to be popular regardless of price tag. Recent Hart polling found that respondent­s were as likely to support Biden’s infrastruc­ture plan when told it costs $2 trillion (the actual amount) as when they were told it would cost double that.

There was a similar dynamic when Republican­s attacked the size of the $1.9 trillion fiscal relief plan last month — that bill proved slightly more popular when people were told the enormous price tag, per Yougov.

So, Republican politician­s continue scrambling for other excuses to oppose the infrastruc­ture proposal. Maybe it’s the plan’s pay-fors — those evil tax hikes on corporatio­ns! Alas, raising taxes on corporatio­ns is super popular too.

Because GOP officials can’t articulate a coherent or consistent case for their objections, and they’re surely in favor of political unity, the only possible explanatio­n left is that they’re just extremely generous souls — eager to bestow as many political brownie points upon their opponents as possible.

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