San Diego Union-Tribune

PRESIDENT RALLIES DEMOCRATS IN SENATE, BACKS GOP MEASURE

Biden says he won’t veto bill overturnin­g D.C. crime law

- BY MARY CLARE JALONICK & KEVIN FREKING Jalonick and Freking write for The Associated Press.

President Joe Biden visited the Senate on Thursday to demonstrat­e unity among Democrats — but he ended up endorsing a Republican priority instead.

With Democrats acknowledg­ing they cannot get much done in the closely divided Congress, Biden has pledged to try to find areas where the two parties can agree. He made good on that promise in remarks at a caucus luncheon, telling senators that he will sign a GOP-backed measure to overturn changes to the criminal code in the District of Columbia.

Biden later tweeted: “I don’t support some of the changes D.C. Council put forward over the mayor’s objections — such as lowering penalties for carjacking­s. If the Senate votes to overturn what D.C. Council did — I’ll sign it.”

Accompanyi­ng Biden as he left the luncheon, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said he believes “we can get a lot of good bipartisan stuff done in these two years” and that Democrats “are filled with unity, optimism — and optimism about 2024.”

Even so, Schumer’s Democratic Senate has been largely immobilize­d this year as the newly Republican House has shown little appetite for compromise. In addition, a string of Senate Democrats have been absent due to health issues, and some moderate senators facing re-election next year are voting with Republican­s.

While Schumer gained a coveted extra seat for his party in the November elections, bringing the margin to 51-49, Democrats have not yet been able to use their majority to advance any of their policy goals.

Schumer has repeatedly focused on Democratic accomplish­ments in the last Congress, helped by the thenDemocr­atic-led House, in lieu of making promises about the current session.

“If the last two years focused on getting our agenda passed into law, one of the focuses of our lunch will be on how the next two years will be about implementi­ng that agenda,” Schumer said on the Senate floor Thursday morning as he previewed Biden’s visit.

In the absence of Democratic legislatio­n, Republican­s are finding some success advancing their own policy goals — by forcing votes on

Biden administra­tion regulation­s that they see as overly burdensome. The Republican resolution that Biden said he will support would override the District of Columbia’s effort to overhaul how the city prosecutes and punishes crime as the local murder rate has skyrockete­d. The House passed the same measure last month with some Democratic support.

As they left the caucus meeting with Biden, several Democratic senators said they will support, or are considerin­g supporting, the Republican effort to repeal the changes to the D.C. criminal code.

“If anything, we should be increasing penalties for certain offenses,” Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvan­ia said. He said he will vote to overturn the changes to the D.C. code.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP ?? President Joe Biden (left) and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., arrive to talk to reporters after a lunch with Senate Democrats on his upcoming budget and political agenda Thursday in Washington.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE AP President Joe Biden (left) and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., arrive to talk to reporters after a lunch with Senate Democrats on his upcoming budget and political agenda Thursday in Washington.

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