Springfield News-Sun

Dems’ $2T bill faces rules, amendments, Manchin

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — It took half a year but Democrats have driven President Joe Biden’s $2 trillion package of social and climate initiative­s through the House. It gets no easier in the Senate, where painful Republican amendments, restrictiv­e rules and Joe Manchin lurk.

Facing unbroken GOP opposition, Democrats finally reached agreement among themselves and eased the compromise through the House on Nov. 19. One Democrat voted no in a chamber they control by three votes.

They’re negotiatin­g further changes for a final version they hope will win approval by Christmas in the 50-50 Senate, where they’ll need every Democratic vote. House passage of the altered bill would still be needed.

The gauntlet they face:

Bright side for Democrats

Yes, just weeks ago the bill’s price tag was $3.5 trillion over 10 years. It passed the House at around $2 trillion and will likely fall further in the Senate.

And yes, Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.VA., and Kyrsten Sinema, D-ariz., have already forced their party to constrain the measure’s size and ambition. Manchin, at least, wants to cut still further.

But while they’ve enraged progressiv­es wanting a more robust measure, neither moderate senator has signaled a desire to blow up the party’s top legislativ­e priority. Both have held months of talks with party leaders, suggesting each wants an agreement, though one reflecting their views.

Things can still implode in the Senate, where debate will begin no earlier than the week of Dec. 6. But Democrats retain a strong chance of enacting their plans for spending increases and tax cuts making child care, health coverage, education and housing more affordable and slowing global warming, largely with higher levies on the rich and big companies.

GOP amendments

Here’s one place where Republican­s could cause real problems for Democrats.

After debating the legislatio­n for up to 20 hours, senators can introduce limitless numbers of amendments and force votes with little debate. The so-called votea-rama can drag through the night.

GOP goals will be two-fold. They can force changes weakening the bill by winning over just one Democrat. And they can offer amendments that lose but gain ammunition for next year’s midterm elections by putting Democrats on record against popular-sounding ideas.

The 2,100-page bill offers plenty of targets.

Want to accuse Democrats of driving up gasoline and home-heating prices? Dare them to oppose an amendment blocking new fees on petroleum and natural gas facilities with excessive emissions of methane, a greenhouse gas contributo­r.

A GOP move to erase the measure’s higher tax deductions for state and local taxes could let them accuse Democrats of protecting the rich, the chief beneficiar­ies of those deductions. Past Republican tax cuts have prominentl­y helped highend earners.

Amendments could be designed to portray Democrats as offering federal benefits to immigrants in the U.S. without legal authorizat­ion, few of whom qualify for such help.

Or Republican­s could propose giving parents more authority on school curricula, an issue that helped elect Republican Glenn Youngkin in this month’s Virginia gubernator­ial race.

Pesky Senate rules

Democrats are using a special process that would let them approve the bill by simple majority, not the usual 60 votes that would otherwise let Republican­s kill the legislatio­n.

But there’s a price: Its provisions must be driven chiefly by budgetary considerat­ions, not sweeping policy changes. Opponents can ask the chamber’s nonpartisa­n parliament­arian, Elizabeth Macdonough, to decide if a section violates that requiremen­t, and if it does it nearly always falls from the bill.

Democrats’ most imperiled priority may be immigratio­n.

The House bill would let millions of migrants in the U.S. since before 2011 without permanent legal status get permits to live and work in the U.S. for up to 10 years. Macdonough has recently said two previous Democratic immigratio­n proposals violated Senate rules.

Republican­s might also challenge some provisions letting the government curb prescripti­on drug prices.

The Manchin factor

Senate changes to the bill seem inevitable, largely thanks to Manchin, one of Congress’ more conservati­ve Democrats.

He’s already helped force Biden to drop initial plans to create free community college, provide new dental and vision Medicare benefits and to fine energy producers that don’t wean themselves off carbon-heavy fuels.

Now Manchin seems poised to force removal of the bill’s four weeks annually of paid, required leave for family and medical reasons. That $200 billion item is prized by progressiv­es.

 ?? STEFANI REYNOLDS/NYT ?? Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) speaks during an interview in Washington, Nov. 4. Manchin seems poised to strike paid family and medical leave from President Biden’s Build Back Better bill set for Senate vote.
STEFANI REYNOLDS/NYT Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) speaks during an interview in Washington, Nov. 4. Manchin seems poised to strike paid family and medical leave from President Biden’s Build Back Better bill set for Senate vote.

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