The Saline Courier Weekend

Pelosi faces new threat from Dem moderates in budget fight

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WASHINGTON— House Speaker Nancy Pelosi faced a fresh hurdle Friday to passing President Joe Biden’s multitrill­ion dollar domestic policy aspiration­s, as nine moderate Democrats threatened to derail a budget blueprint crucial to opening the door to much of that spending.

In a letter to Pelosi,

D-calif., the nine said they “will not consider voting" for a budget resolution mapping Democrats' ambitious fiscal plans until the House approves a separate, Senatepass­ed package of road, broadband and other infrastruc­ture projects and sends it to Biden.

“We simply can’t afford months of unnecessar­y delays and risk squanderin­g this once-in-a-century, bipartisan infrastruc­ture package,” the centrists wrote.

That's the opposite of Pelosi's current strategy. She's repeatedly said her chamber won't vote on the bipartisan, $1 trillion infrastruc­ture measure that moderates covet until the Senate sends the House a companion, $3.5 trillion bundle of social safety net and environmen­tal initiative­s favored by progressiv­es.

Progressiv­es have applied their own pressure, saying many would vote against the infrastruc­ture measure until the Senate approves the separate $3.5 trillion social and environmen­t bill. That larger measure is unlikely to be ready until autumn.

The moderates’ demands were the latest challenge Biden and Democratic leaders will have to manage as they try pushing the president’s expansive domestic priorities through a Congress their party dominates by just paperthin margins.

Democrats control the House by just three votes, giving virtually all 220 of the party's lawmakers tremendous leverage. They run the 50-50 Senate only with Vice President Kamala Harris' tiebreakin­g vote.

Democrats have too much at stake to let internal turmoil sink their domestic agenda, but it was initially unclear how leaders would resolve the problem. Biden, Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., who faces a similar moderates vs. progressiv­es balancing act in his chamber, may have to present a united front about how to untie their knot and pressure rank-and-file lawmakers into line.

Biden consulted with his legislativ­e affairs team Friday about his economic agenda's pathway in the House, the White House said..

The House returns to Washington from its summer recess on Aug. 23 to vote on the budget resolution and perhaps other legislatio­n, giving Biden, Pelosi and other leaders time to decide their next move.

Together, the infrastruc­ture and social and environmen­t bills make up the heart of Biden’s governing goals, and their enactment would likely stand as one of his legacy achievemen­ts as president. But neither wing of his party in Congress fully trusts the other to back both packages, so leaders want to sequence votes in a way that gives neither faction an edge.

Pelosi, first elected to Congress in 1987 and her party's House leader since 2003, is a seasoned crisis manager and vote counter who Friday was showing no signs of backing down.

Asked about Pelosi’s next move, a senior House Democratic aide said the party doesn’t have enough votes to pass the infrastruc­ture bill this month. The aide contrasted the nine moderates with the dozens of progressiv­e Democrats who would vote against that measure unless it comes after the House gets the Senate’s $3.5 trillion social and environmen­tal bill.

The aide was not authorized to publicly discuss the party’s internal dynamics and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Congressio­nal passage of the budget resolution ultimately seems certain because without it, Senate Republican­s would be able to use a filibuster, or procedural delays, to kill it.

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