The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Biden aims for bipartisan­ship but applies stealthy pressure

- By Jonathan Lemire and Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON >> President Joe Biden has begun publicly courting Republican­s to back his sweeping infrastruc­ture plan, but his reach across the aisle is intended just as much to keep Democrats in line as it is his first step in the uphill climb to any bipartisan deal.

Biden’s high-profile Oval Office meeting with a bipartisan group of lawmakers on Monday was just one piece of his effort to win over GOP lawmakers, White House aides said. But even if it doesn’t succeed, it could prove useful: boxing in Republican­s while helping keep the widely disparate Democrats in line. Some moderate Democrats, notably Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, have urged an effort at bipartisan­ship to pass the $2.3 trillion bill.

And while Biden has made clear that he wants Republican support, the White House is also preparing to go it alone, if necessary, to get the bill passed. That would leave the GOP in the politicall­y unpopular position of explaining why it objected to investment­s some Americans want.

“I’m prepared to negotiate as to the extent of my infrastruc­ture project, as well as how we pay for it,” Biden said during Monday’s meeting with lawmakers. “Everyone acknowledg­es we need a significan­t increase in infrastruc­ture.”

Biden dismissed the idea that his outreach to Republican­s is just for show, saying, “I’m not big on window dressing, as you’ve observed.”

Lawmakers left the White House meeting with the understand­ing that Biden was open to discussion, and the president’s team was headed to Capitol Hill to meet with them or other representa­tives as soon as Tuesday.

‘Really encouragin­g’

“Those are all the exact words that I wanted to hear going into the meeting,” Republican Rep. Garret Graves of Louisiana, a member of the Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Committee, said in an interview with The Associated Press. “And so that was really encouragin­g.”

Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., offered, “Nobody stormed out yelling, ‘No.’”

The White House outreach has been significan­t, with Cabinet members and allies meeting with lawmakers and activists, while fanning out across the country to sell the plan to voters. Officials said that Biden would hold more bipartisan gatherings this month, and that top administra­tion officials have meetings planned with congressio­nal committees this week.

But most Republican­s have made clear they have little interest in joining the effort, rejecting the idea of increasing the corporate tax rate to pay for it. And they have lambasted the proposal as big spending, preferring to leave Biden to pursue his priority legislatio­n on his own.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday that Republican­s have zero appetite for dismantlin­g the GOP tax law to pay for it.

“We need to have an infrastruc­ture big bill as big as we’re willing to credibly pay for, without going back and undoing the 2017 tax bill,” McConnell said at his weekly press conference.

‘Almost impossible’

Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississipp­i, the top Republican on the Commerce Committee, who was in Monday’s meeting, said afterward that “clearly there are parts of this program that are nonstarter­s for Republican­s.”

Undoing the 2017 GOP tax breaks “would be an almost impossible sell,” Wicker told reporters on Capitol Hill.

Wicker said he told Biden just that in the meeting, and characteri­zed the president’s response as, “Well, he disagrees.”

But the White House has expressed confidence that voters won’t be sympatheti­c to any objections by corporatio­ns to their tax rates being raised from 21% to 28% at the expense of popular funding for highways, subways, water pipes, broadband internet and more.

Cedric Richmond, the White House director of public engagement, said the outreach to lawmakers and business leaders has benefited from Biden being perceived as an honest broker. Richmond has also stressed to the companies that the 21% rate establishe­d by President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cut was above and beyond what they had requested.

“Not one business in six years ever mentioned 21%,” Richmond said. “What I’m reminding them of is we would be bringing the rate back to the neighborho­od they wanted in the first place. And at the same time, we could fix infrastruc­ture.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Tuesday made clear that hiking the gas tax was not under considerat­ion.

Congress has launched the long slog of legislatin­g, with multiple paths for bringing the package forward for votes.

Democrats hold the slimmest of majorities in Congress: the three-vote margin in the House and the evenly split 50-50 Senate. That leaves no room for error as Biden tries to keep the party aligned. The party’s vice president, Kamala Harris, can provide a tiebreakin­g vote in the Senate.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has set a July 4 goal for action, but even that seems politicall­y ambitious, in the face of the daunting challenges. And for every move the White House makes to win over centrists, including Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, it risks losing liberals like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, DN.Y., who wants an even larger package to meet the nation’s needs.

Bypassing 60 votes

One option Democrats are considerin­g is the budget-reconcilia­tion process, which would allow for passage on a 51-vote majority in the Senate, rather than the 60 votes typically needed to overcome a Republican filibuster.

Manchin, in particular, has expressed some queasiness at using reconcilia­tion without an attempt at bipartisan­ship. He and others have resisted efforts to change the filibuster rules, but West Wing aides believe that he would be inclined to support reconcilia­tion if he saw that Republican­s were stonewalli­ng an attempt at bipartisan­ship.

“This is another moment to showcase that the Republican­s simply want to obstruct all of the Biden agenda,” said Dan Pfeiffer, former senior adviser to President Barack Obama. “And the American people want to see you try to be bipartisan but not at the expense of things you support.”

Citing his four decades in Washington, Biden campaigned as a bipartisan dealmaker. But Republican­s have uniformly rejected his efforts. No GOP lawmaker voted for the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill that Biden signed into law last month, despite polling that suggested the measure was popular among Republican voters.

Psaki said Biden’s outreach was sincere, adding, “You don’t use the president of the United States’ time multiple times over, including two infrastruc­ture meetings, if he did not want to authentica­lly hear from the members attending about their ideas about how to move forward this package in a bipartisan manner.”

The West Wing has also pointed to polling that suggests a bipartisan appetite among voters for infrastruc­ture spending, and Biden plans to unveil his second part of his proposal, focused on health and family care, in the coming weeks. The White House has telegraphe­d that far more of this package is open to negotiatio­n than was the case with the COVID-19 bill, but it also set a Memorial Day deadline for showing progress.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden speaks during a meeting with lawmakers to discuss the American Jobs Plan in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday. He has begun applying pressure to Republican­s to accept his deal, emphasizin­g bipartisan­ship but willing to move it forward without them.
PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden speaks during a meeting with lawmakers to discuss the American Jobs Plan in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday. He has begun applying pressure to Republican­s to accept his deal, emphasizin­g bipartisan­ship but willing to move it forward without them.

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