Los Angeles Times

FAMILY KEY TO BIDEN’S NEXT PLANS

He’ll roll out package to help children, boost education and more in a speech to Congress.

- By Eli Stokols

WASHINGTON — President Biden is proposing an ambitious $1.8-trillion, 10year plan to subsidize American families’ education, child care, health insurance and job leave costs — an investment in workers intended to complement his earlier call for infrastruc­ture spending and much more, to rebuild an economy hobbled by pandemic and economic inequality.

The “American Families Plan,” which Biden will describe in a prime-time address to a joint session of Congress on Wednesday, would subsidize two years of preschool and two years of community college for lowand middle-income families. It would also extend a number of tax credits and benefits to working families, while raising taxes on the wealthy to cover the costs.

Coming just weeks after his proposal to invest about $2 trillion in the nation’s deteriorat­ing roads, bridges, airports and railways, it adds up to a $4-trillion-plus program in the coming decade — a Roosevelti­an domestic policy agenda aimed at accelerati­ng economic recovery and leveling the playing field.

The latest package would be paid for in part by turning back some Trump-era tax cuts for wealthy individual­s, much like Biden’s call for higher corporate taxes to finance the infrastruc­ture plans.

The two packages face GOP opposition, for both their costs and the proposed tax increases, but Republican­s are especially likely to

dismiss this new plan as a Democratic policy wish list.

The proposal includes an extension of the child tax credit that became law in March as part of Biden’s $1.9trillion COVID-19 relief package and is projected to cut child poverty in half. It also would help low-income families afford quality child care, subsidize teacher training, invest more in historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es, expand federal Pell grants for needy college students and provide a national system of paid family and medical job leave.

A senior administra­tion official, who agreed Tuesday to outline the plan early on condition of anonymity, described the package as “generation­al investment­s in our future.”

Whereas Biden wants to fund his infrastruc­ture proposal by raising the corporate tax rate to 28% from 21% — it was 35% before the Trump-era tax cuts — he wants to pay for the latest package of benefits for workers and families by reversing some of those 2017 tax cuts for the wealthiest 1% of Americans. The top individual tax rate would return to 39.6% from 37%, and Biden also would end some capital gains tax breaks and other loopholes that predominan­tly benefit the richest taxpayers.

Biden is also calling for more resources for the Internal Revenue Service, to allow it to perform more audits of tax returns and boost compliance. According to the White House, budget cuts caused the IRS to perform 80% fewer audits over the last decade on those making over $1 million a year. The administra­tion estimated that better enforcemen­t could raise $700 billion over 10 years in taxes that are now going unpaid.

“This is fundamenta­lly about fairness in the tax code,” said another senior administra­tion official.

Seeking buy-in from congressio­nal Republican­s, Biden stopped short of proposing to expand the estate tax. He also ignored calls, largely from Democrats, to do away with the cap on deductions for state and local taxes that was part of the Republican­s’ tax law, and which disproport­ionately hits taxpayers in Democratic-led states.

White House officials called Biden’s proposal a “starting point” that outlines his priorities, and said the president is ready to negotiate with lawmakers in both parties. Yet the prospects for any bipartisan collaborat­ion on such sweeping and progressiv­e legislatio­n appear dim at best.

With Democrats holding a slim majority in the House and controllin­g an evenly split Senate only with Vice President Kamala Harris’ ability to break a tie, the path forward for the White

House’s policy agenda is fraught with obstacles.

It’s possible some Republican­s could support a compromise proposal to invest in traditiona­l infrastruc­ture projects. But Biden’s best shot to pass the American Families Plan may be through the process known as budget reconcilia­tion, a maneuver that would rule out a Republican filibuster in the Senate and allow Democrats to pass the Biden bills with just 50 votes.

Overall, the proposal includes $1 trillion in new spending and $800 billion in tax cuts over the next decade. According to the White House, the proposed tax code changes that affect wealthier Americans would generate $1.5 trillion in revenue during the same period, enough to offset the new spending.

Biden and his aides, eager to seize what they see as a window of opportunit­y to enact a far-reaching domestic policy agenda, plan to emphasize the specific components of the proposal, first in the president’s nationally televised remarks Wednesday and then in his and Harris’ road trips in the days and weeks to follow.

With conservati­ves more animated by culture wars than policy debates, the administra­tion is banking on broad public support and Americans’ greater appetite for government interventi­on and aid amid an unpreceden­ted economic and health crisis.

Among the proposed benefits the White House will tout is an extension of the $3,000 per-child tax credit ($3,600 for a child under 5 years old) for all Americans earning less than $400,000 annually, which was included as a one-year provision in the earlier pandemic relief law.

Also: a new, federally subsidized family and medical leave program providing workers up to $4,000 a month when they miss work for medical emergencie­s and major life events, replacing a minimum of two-thirds of average weekly wages; and an additional $1,400 in Pell grants for low-income college students.

Many of the policy proposals reflect the administra­tion’s focus on issues of equity: subsidized tuition and greater investment in science, technology, engineerin­g and math education at historical­ly Black colleges; an expansion of programs offering free and reduced-cost lunches to lowincome students; and incentives for people of color to go into education to alleviate teacher shortages.

Yet many of the benefits for working families have no income caps for eligibilit­y. That would allow Americans who don’t need help paying for preschool or community college to rely on the government to cover their costs, too. But it reflects the administra­tion’s thinking that near-universal benefits make for more popular programs, while upper-income beneficiar­ies will pay some costs in higher taxes.

The subsidy for child care, however, would only go to families earning up to 1.5 times their state median income. It would ensure that those families spend no more than 7% of their income on child care for children 5 years old and younger.

These benefits would result from proposed partnershi­ps between Washington and the states, leaving open the possibilit­y that Republican-led states might refuse to take part — as was the case in recent years when some Republican states opted not to accept federal funds to expand Medicaid under President Obama’s Affordable Care Act.

Biden administra­tion officials said they had other ways to deliver benefits in such a scenario.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE PRESIDENT’S American Families Plan would subsidize two years of preschool and two years of community college for low- and middle-income families.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE PRESIDENT’S American Families Plan would subsidize two years of preschool and two years of community college for low- and middle-income families.

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