Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Biden: Infrastruc­ture vow not intended to be veto threat

-

WASHINGTON — Aiming to preserve a fragile bipartisan deal on infrastruc­ture, President Joe Biden said Saturday he didn’t mean to suggest he would veto the nearly $ 1 trillion bill unless Congress also passed a larger package to expand the social safety net.

Speaking on Thursday moments after fulfilling his hopes of reaching a bipartisan accord, Biden appeared to put the deal in jeopardy with his comment that the infrastruc­ture bill would have to move in “tandem” with a larger bill that he and Democrats aim to pass along party lines.

Though Biden had been clear he would pursue roughly $ 6 trillion in new spending for child care, Medicare and other investment­s, Republican­s balked at the president’s notion that he would not sign one without the other. “If this is the only thing that comes to me, I’m not signing it,” Biden said then of the infrastruc­ture bill. “It’s in tandem.“

By Saturday, Biden was walking those comments back, after his top negotiator­s Steve Ricchetti and Louisa Terrell worked to assure senators that Biden remained enthusiast­ic about the deal.

“My comments also created the impression that I was issuing a veto threat on the very plan I had just agreed to, which was certainly not my intent,“Biden said in a statement.

“I intend to pursue the passage of that plan, which Democrats and Republican­s agreed to on Thursday, with vigor,” Biden added. “It would be good for the economy, good for our country, good for our people. I fully stand behind it without reservatio­n or hesitation.”

Biden’s earlier remarks had drawn sharp criticism from some Republican­s, including Sen. Lindsey Graham, R- S. C., who tweeted on Friday, “No deal by extortion!” Others felt “blindsided” by what they said was a shift in their understand­ing of his position.

Tensions appeared to calm afterward, when senators from the group of negotiator­s convened a conference call, according to a person who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private meeting.

“My hope is that we’ll still get this done,” said Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, the lead Republican negotiator, in an interview Friday with The Associated Press. “Our infrastruc­ture is in bad shape.”

Biden was set to travel on Tuesday to Wisconsin for the first stop on a nationwide tour to promote the infrastruc­ture package, the White House said.

The sudden swings point to the difficult path ahead for what promises to be a long process of turning Biden’s nearly $ 4 trillion infrastruc­ture proposals into law.

The two measures were always expected to move together through Congress: the bipartisan plan and a second bill that would advance under special rules allowing for passage solely with majority Democrats votes. Biden reiterated that was his plan on Saturday, but said he was not conditioni­ng one on the other.

“So to be clear,“his statement said, “our bipartisan agreement does not preclude Republican­s from attempting to defeat my Families Plan; likewise, they should have no objections to my devoted efforts to pass that Families Plan and other proposals in tandem.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States