The Sentinel-Record

Bumpy road ahead for infrastruc­ture plan

- Josh Boak has covered the U.S. economy and the White House for The Associated Press for seven years. Associated Press writers Lisa Mascaro and Kevin Freking contribute­d to this analysis.

Infrastruc­ture was a road to nowhere for former presidents Donald Trump and Barack Obama. But Joe Biden believes he can use it to drive America to the future after a dozen years of false starts.

The trip is unlikely to be smooth.

Biden’s $2.3 trillion infrastruc­ture package, released Wednesday, would go well beyond the usual commitment­s to roads and bridges to touch almost every part of the country. It’s a down payment on combating climate change, a chance to take on racial inequities, an expansion of broadband, an investment in manufactur­ing and a reorientin­g of corporate taxes to pay for everything. To succeed where his predecesso­rs stalled, Biden will have to navigate a conflictin­g set of political forces with winners and losers all around.

“It’s big, yes, it’s bold, yes, and we can get it done,” the president said in a Wednesday afternoon speech in Pittsburgh. “In 50 years, people are gonna look back and say, this was the moment that America won the future.”

Biden sees infrastruc­ture as a fundamenta­l promise that must be honored before Democrats face voters in 2022.

The president resisted calls by business groups to pay for his plan with higher gas taxes and tolls, since the costs would be borne by working Americans and Biden had promised no tax hikes on anyone making less than $400,000. That’s according to an administra­tion official who insisted on anonymity to discuss private conversati­ons.

Yet the decision to keep that particular promise likely dooms any chance of wider bipartisan unity.

Biden’s proposal would gut the core of Trump’s 2017 tax cuts — an affront to many Republican lawmakers, who would also prefer that infrastruc­ture stay in a narrow lane. The corporate tax rate would jump to 28% from 21% under Biden’s plan, and a global minimum tax would be charged to prevent companies from avoiding taxes.

Even before Biden delivered his opening speech on the plan, Republican­s had latched on to Reagan-era labeling, dismissing the package as tax-and-spend liberalism. That’s an attack designed to erode public support as different components of the package get divvied up among congressio­nal committees and begin their journey through Congress.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky called the plan a “Trojan horse” for tax hikes. Trump issued a statement saying the big winner would be China because U.S. jobs would move overseas due to higher taxes.

“It is the exact OPPOSITE of putting America First—it is putting America LAST!” said Trump, whose own repeated attempts at an “infrastruc­ture week” failed to capture political momentum and became something of a punchline.

Some Democratic lawmakers, on the other hand, fear Biden’s plan does too little over eight years. Others see it as a chance to tinker by repealing the $10,000 taxpayer limit on deducting state and local taxes, or SALT, that was instituted under Trump. Each possible Democratic defection matters because vacant seats leave House Democrats with the thinnest of majorities. And in the evenly split Senate, Democrats must rely on Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote for their edge.

“I can only vote for a bill that has meaningful tax impact for my constituen­ts if it addresses the SALT cap,” tweeted Rep. Tom Malinowski, D-N.J., one of four lawmakers demanding to expand deductions.

Some environmen­talists, meanwhile, say the plan doesn’t do enough to stop the tides of climate change, even with its proposed upgrades to the power grid and plans to build 500,000 electric-vehicle charging stations. They could push Biden to go even bigger, though he plans to announce a second package in the coming weeks focused on child care, family tax credits and other domestic programs, paid for by tax hikes on wealthy individual­s and families.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., chair of the near-100-member Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus, said climate change demands that Biden commit to more money.

“It makes little sense to narrow his previous ambition on infrastruc­ture or compromise with the physical realities of climate change,” she said.

Almost every trade group in Washington representi­ng interests from semiconduc­tors to steel has a stake in the infrastruc­ture bill, as does organized labor, which sees the potential for union jobs.

Business groups have long backed bold investment in infrastruc­ture — just not through taxes on their members. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Business Roundtable both strongly oppose the tax hikes.

White House officials welcome the coming debate as a way to press their case, using the same kind of strategy that Biden deployed with his $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief that became law in March. If tax hikes are opposed, how should the infrastruc­ture be financed? What are lawmakers’ counteroff­ers?

The difference in this proposal, compared to coronaviru­s relief, is that infrastruc­ture is not an emergency that can be funded through debt with minimal tradeoffs. Instead, congressio­nal committees can break up its details and consider each of them separately, possibly peeling off elements like highway or water infrastruc­ture that have some bipartisan support. In fact, past failures mean that many of the ideas being proposed have circulated among lawmakers for decades.

But failure by political leaders this time could be devastatin­g for America’s economic trajectory. Once the economy bounces back from the pandemic, economists expect growth to fade below the relatively sluggish levels of the Obama and Trump eras. Infrastruc­ture is a central way to increase worker productivi­ty, the ultimate source of wealth and productivi­ty.

“It’s the first time that I see a comprehens­ive plan that truly can have a fundamenta­l change in American productivi­ty,” said Sadek Wahba, founder of the infrastruc­ture investment firm I Squared Capital. “This is really the moment. If we’re not able to do it now, I would be very, very pessimisti­c about our ability to maintain our productivi­ty over the coming decade.”

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