The Guardian (USA)

Joe Manchin's stimulus stand exposes dangerous fissures in Democratic ranks

- Martin Pengelly in New York

Seeking to explain his part in dramatical­ly prolonging marathon Senate proceeding­s before the passage of Joe Biden’s $1.9tn coronaviru­s relief bill, Joe Manchin may only have succeeded in exposing a dangerous fissure in Democratic ranks.

In winning controvers­ial modificati­ons to benefits for struggling Americans, the West Virginia senator said, he had tried to “make sure we were targeting where the help was needed” and to do “everything I could to bring us together”.

The latter remark, on Sunday to ABC’s This Week, might have provoked hollow laughter on the left. As Manchin, a powerful centrist in a Senate divided 50-50, toured the talk shows, he also faced up to fierce criticism from Alexandria Ocasio Cortez over his opposition to a $15 minimum wage, a measure dropped from the stimulus bill.

The progressiv­e congresswo­man from New York has attacked Manchin and Senator Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, another opponent of the $15 wage, as “two people in this entire country that are holding back a complete transforma­tion in working people’s lives”.

“The $15 minimum wage never fit in this piece of reconcilia­tion,” Manchin told CNN’s State of the Union. “Those are the rules of the Senate.” He also said he was in favour of raising the wage to $11 – a figure unacceptab­le to progressiv­es and indeed the Republican­s with whom Manchin insists he is willing to work.

On Friday, Manchin mounted a late push to scale back unemployme­nt benefits in the stimulus package, a huge and historic piece of legislatio­n meant to help Americans struggling amid a pandemic which has cratered the US economy. His move prompted hours of negotiatio­ns, followed by a compromise and voting through the night.

But Biden and the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, refused to criticise Manchin, the senator slapping his podium and emphasisin­g the need for “unity, unity, unity”, particular­ly as every Republican present voted agains the relief bill.

Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont attempted to include the minimum wage rise in the stimulus bill under budget reconcilia­tion, requiring a simple majority rather than the 60vote threshold which applies to most major legislatio­n. But the Senate parliament­arian ruled against Sanders – much to progressiv­es’ anger.

“I know they made a big issue about this,” Manchin told CNN, “and I understand. Everyone has their right. I respect where [Ocasio-Cortez] is coming from, I respect her input, we have a little different approach.

“We come from two different areas of the country that have different social and cultural needs. One was that you have to respect everybody.”

The stimulus bill now goes back to the House before heading to Biden’s desk. House leaders have promised smooth passage but five defections would sink the bill. On Sunday Kate Bedingfiel­d, the White House communicat­ions director, was asked if she thought progressiv­es would support it.

She told CNN the “historic and transforma­tional piece of legislatio­n … is going to cut child poverty and half” and said the White House hoped the left would “make that judgment” based on “what their constituen­ts need”.

It seems clear a $15 minimum wage has no hope of clearing 60 votes in the Senate. That super-majority, known as the filibuster, is said by champions including Manchin to protect minority rights – though it came to prominence largely as a way for southern segregatio­nists to oppose civil rights reform.

The House has passed HR1, a sweeping voting rights bill meant to counter efforts by Republican­s in the states to dramatical­ly restrict voting by groups that favour Democrats. But HR1 seems doomed unless Senate Democrats scrap the filibuster.

Even if they did, centrists like Manchin would enjoy immense power. Speaking to NBC’s Meet the Press, the senator cited his own stand on the relief bill.

“If what you saw happen with that 50-vote swing and one vote, no matter who, it maybe can make a big difference in a tied Senate, can you imagine doing day-to-day operations this way? Can you imagine not having to sit down … with your colleagues on both sides and have their input?

“…I’m willing to look at any way we can. But I’m not willing to take away the involvemen­t of the minority.”

He also said he did not favour using reconcilia­tion for voting rights legislatio­n.

“I’m not going to change my mind on the filibuster,” he said, “[and] I’m not going to go [to reconcilia­tion] until my Republican friends have the ability to have their say also.”

On Fox News Sunday, Manchin said he did support making the filibuster “painful” again, meaning a return to the requiremen­t senators physically hold the floor of the Senate in order to block legislatio­n, a process famously depicted in the James Stewart movie Mr Smith Goes To Washington.

Bedingfiel­d confirmed that Biden is also against scrapping the filibuster.

Manchin’s power in the Senate was the talk of Washington even before the drama of Friday and Saturday.

“I didn’t lobby for this position,” he told ABC. “I’ve never changed. I’m the same person I have been all my life and since I’ve been in the public offices. I’ve been voting the same way for the last 10 years. I look for that moderate middle. The common sense that comes with the moderate middle is who I am. That’s what people expect.

“…You’ve got to work a little bit harder when we have this toxic atmosphere and the divisions that we have and the tribal mentality. That’s not to be acceptable. You’ve got to work hard and fight that. Fight against those urges just to cloister in with your group and say, ‘Well, this is where I am.’”

Progressiv­es disagree. On Friday Bonnie Watson Coleman of New Jersey tweeted: “I’m frankly disgusted … and question whether I can support this bill.” She also told USA Today she was “thinking very hard about making a statement” in the House.

“As progressiv­es,” she said, “we’re going to have to figure out where the line in the sand is.”

 ?? Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP ?? Senator Joe Manchin, Democrat of West Virginia.
Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP Senator Joe Manchin, Democrat of West Virginia.

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