The Capital

Biden huddles with Dems as $3.5T plan faces party split

- By Lisa Mascaro and Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON — Time growing shorter, President Joe Biden launched meetings Wednesday with House and Senate Democrats as Congress worked to bridge party divisions over his big “build back better” agenda ahead of crucial voting deadlines.

The back-to-back afternoon sessions at the White House came at a pivotal juncture for Biden’s $3.5 trillion package as lawmakers struggle to draft the ambitious effort. With Republican­s solidly opposed, Democratic leaders are counting on the president to galvanize consensus between progressiv­es and centrists in their party.

Biden was scheduled to confer first with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and the White House’s communicat­ions team headed to Capitol Hill to huddle with other House Democrats.

“The time is now,” Biden tweeted in a video Tuesday ahead of the White House sessions.

The House faces a deadline Monday to vote on the first part of Biden’s plan — a nearly $1 trillion public works measure that was already approved by the Senate but has become tangled in disputes over the broader package.

Centrist Democrats support the slimmer bill but have raised concerns about Biden’s broader vision — which entails revamping federal taxes and spending to make what the president views as overdue investment­s in health care, family services and efforts to fight climate change.

The $3.5 trillion package would impose tax hikes on corporatio­ns and wealthy Americans earning beyond $400,000 a year and plow that money back into federal programs for young and old, along with investment­s to tackle climate change.

Pelosi has promised centrists a vote on the more modest $1 trillion public works package. That bill of roads, broadband and public water projects enjoys bipartisan Senate support and should easily pass the House even with growing House Republican opposition, but has become sidelined by the bigger debate.

“I’m confident we’ll have the votes,” said Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., a leader of the centrist coalition.

But progressiv­e lawmakers view the public works bill as inadequate and plan to vote against it unless it is considered alongside the bigger Biden package. Some 50 members of the Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus plan to vote against the bipartisan measure.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., chairwoman of the progressiv­e caucus, emerged from an hourlong meeting with Pelosi late Tuesday saying its position had not changed and the two bills must move “in tandem” to win the progressiv­e votes.

Publicly, the White House has remained confident both bills will pass, and Democratic leaders are pushing ahead as they draft the details.

Tensions are high as the Biden agenda is a key campaign promise not only from the president but most of the the Democratic lawmakers, including those in the House who face reelection next year.

All told, more than 20 lawmakers were invited to confer with Biden, moderates and progressiv­es in separate meetings stretching into the evening, making their best pitches. Key centrist Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, were to be among them.

Despite disputes, many Democrats are saying they expect the final product to align with Biden’s broader vision and eventually have robust party support, even if that version is adjusted or scaled back.

“These are really popular things,” said Rep. John Yarmuth, of Kentucky, chairman of the Budget Committee.

At the Capitol, Biden’s communicat­ions director Kate Bedingfiel­d unfurled a 24-page presentati­on to House Democrats, much of it focused on the potential economic benefits and popularity of the package with voters, according to a person granted anonymity to discuss the private session.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? With the fate of a $3.5 trillion infrastruc­ture package unclear, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi promised centrists a vote on a smaller $1 trillion package.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP With the fate of a $3.5 trillion infrastruc­ture package unclear, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi promised centrists a vote on a smaller $1 trillion package.

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