San Diego Union-Tribune

INFRASTRUC­TURE NEXT TASK FOR PELOSI, LAWMAKERS

Work on package to begin; GOP support may prove difficult

- BY HOPE YEN Yen writes for The Associated Press.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday pledged swift work by Congress on a job and infrastruc­ture package that will be “fiscally sound,” but said she isn’t sure whether the next major item on President Joe Biden’s agenda will attract Republican backing.

Fresh off a major legislativ­e victory on the $1.9 trillion virus relief package that passed on near-party lines, Democrats face long and tough battles ahead in winning GOP endorsemen­t of the administra­tion’s plans.

Road- and bridge-building legislatio­n has a long history of support from both parties as lawmakers aim to deliver on projects back home. But Republican­s disagree with Biden’s focus on the environmen­t and the possibilit­y of financing any program with debt after the government borrowed heavily to address the economic fallout from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Building roads and bridges and water supply systems and the rest has always been bipartisan, always been bipartisan, except when they oppose it with a Democratic president, as they did under President Obama, and we had to shrink the package,” said Pelosi, D-San Francisco.

“But, nonetheles­s, hopefully, we will have bipartisan­ship,” she said.

Pelosi has directed key Democratic lawmakers to begin working with Republican­s on a “big, bold and transforma­tional infrastruc­ture package.”

During the presidenti­al campaign, Biden laid the groundwork by proposing $2 trillion in “accelerate­d” investment­s to shift to cleaner energy, build half a million charging stations for electric vehicles, support public transit and repair roads and bridges. The plan emphasizes the importance of creating unionized jobs and addressing climate change.

The White House originally planned to come out with a plan in February, but more recently hasn’t committed to a timeline. A rollout is likely to slide into April as the administra­tion embarks on a nationwide push over the coming weeks to sell Americans on the benefits of the COVID-19 relief bill.

Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., chairman of the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee, and Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., chairman of House Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Committee, hope to pass a bill out of their committees in May.

The package could include policy changes — on green energy and immigratio­n — and even try to make permanent some of the justpassed COVID-19 assistance such as child tax credits.

“It is going to be green and it is going to be big,” DeFazio told The Associated Press.

Democrats used a fasttrack budget process known as reconcilia­tion to approve Biden’s COVID-19 relief plan without Republican support, a strategy that succeeded despite the reservatio­ns of some moderates.

But work on passing infrastruc­ture legislatio­n in a Senate split 50-50 with Vice President Kamala Harris providing a tiebreakin­g vote will probably prove more difficult. Moderate Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., recently made clear he will block infrastruc­ture legislatio­n if Republican­s aren’t included.

Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso,

the No. 3 Senate Republican, said he wants to see bipartisan support for an infrastruc­ture legislatio­n. But he said the House in the last Congress refused to embrace a $287 billion bill unanimousl­y passed by a Senate committee and changed it in a way that Republican­s could not accept.

“What did the House do? They replaced our highway bill with the Green New Deal,” Barrasso said. “So they ignored what we have done in a bipartisan way. If they would take the model that we came up with in the committee in the Senate for highway and transporta­tion, I think that’s a very good start.”

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