The Day

Biden attempts bipartisan push for infrastruc­ture package

- By JOSH BOAK and ALEXANDRA JAFFE

Washington — President Joe Biden tried to maintain bipartisan momentum for a new infrastruc­ture program by meeting Thursday with Republican and Democratic lawmakers at the White House.

The meeting was about “what we’re gonna do to make sure we once again lead the world across the board on infrastruc­ture,” Biden said. “It not only creates jobs, but it makes us a helluva lot more competitiv­e around the world if we have the best infrastruc­ture.”

Spending on infrastruc­ture appears to be the next major priority for the Biden administra­tion after its $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package clears the Senate, likely along hardened partisan lines. The prospect of funding roads, bridges, ports, broadband and other infrastruc­ture is a chance for Biden to rebuild his relationsh­ip with Republican­s. It also allows him to notch a policy achievemen­t that evaded both the Obama and Trump administra­tions.

Biden met Thursday with eight members of the House Committee on Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture, a follow-up to a Feb. 11 meeting with senators on infrastruc­ture.

The president laid the groundwork for an infrastruc­ture package during last year’s campaign by proposing $2 trillion in “accelerate­d” investment­s to shift to cleaner energy, build charging stations for electric vehicles, support public transit and repair roads and bridges. The plan emphasizes the importance of addressing climate change and creating unionized jobs.

There is a need for infrastruc­ture spending. The American Society of Civil Engineers on Wednesday graded the nation’s infrastruc­ture as a lackluster “C-.” The group said $5.9 trillion must be spent over the next decade for safe and sustainabl­e roads, bridges and airports. That recommenda­tion is about $2.6 trillion more than what the government and private sector spend.

Republican­s say they want to invest in infrastruc­ture, but they appear to disagree with Biden’s focus on the environmen­t and the possibilit­y of financing any program with debt after the federal government has already borrowed heavily to combat the economic fallout from the pandemic. Their concern is that infrastruc­ture would ultimately become a form of the Democratic-proposed “Green New Deal” that would move the country away from fossil fuels.

Missouri Rep. Sam Graves, the ranking Republican on the transporta­tion committee, left the Thursday meeting with a series of markers for Biden to win bipartisan backing.

“First and foremost, a highway bill cannot grow into a multitrill­ion-dollar catch-all bill, or it will lose Republican support,” Graves said in a statement. “Second, a transporta­tion bill needs to be a transporta­tion bill that primarily focuses on fundamenta­l transporta­tion needs, such as roads and bridges. Republican­s won’t support another Green New Deal disguising itself as a transporta­tion bill.”

Still, the committee chairman, Oregon Democrat Pete DeFazio, described the meeting with Biden as productive and refreshing after conversati­ons with former President Donald Trump led to minimal progress on infrastruc­ture. DeFazio said they discussed paying for the plan, but he declined to go into specifics.

“The difference between talking to Joe Biden about infrastruc­ture and what goes into it and how we’re going to get it done and Donald Trump is like, it’s just a whole different world,” DeFazio said. “It’s way better.”

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP PHOTO ?? President Joe Biden speaks Thursday as he meets with Vice President Kamala Harris, Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg, and members of the House of Representa­tives in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on infrastruc­ture.
ANDREW HARNIK/AP PHOTO President Joe Biden speaks Thursday as he meets with Vice President Kamala Harris, Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg, and members of the House of Representa­tives in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on infrastruc­ture.

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