Los Angeles Times

Social safety net plan advances

Democrats push through a $3.5-trillion blueprint to bolster social safety net and fight climate change.

- By Alan Fram Fram writes for the Associated Press.

Senators approve President Biden’s $3.5-trillion blueprint to bolster family services.

WASHINGTON — Democrats pushed a $3.5-trillion framework for bolstering family services and health and environmen­tal programs through the Senate early Wednesday, advancing President Biden’s expansive vision for reshaping federal priorities just hours after handing him a triumph on a hefty infrastruc­ture package.

Lawmakers approved Democrats’ budget resolution on a party-line 50-49 vote, a crucial step for a president and party set on training the government’s fiscal might on assisting families, creating jobs and fighting climate change. Higher taxes on the wealthy and corporatio­ns would pay for much of the plan.

Passage came despite an avalanche of Republican amendments intended to make their rivals pay a price in next year’s election for control of Congress.

House leaders said their chamber would return from summer recess in two weeks to vote on the fiscal blueprint, which would disburse the $3.5 trillion over the next decade. Final congressio­nal approval, which appears certain, would protect a follow-up bill to enact the spending and tax changes from the threat of being killed by a Republican filibuster in the 50-50 Senate.

Even so, passing that follow-up legislatio­n will be dicey: Democratic moderates who are wary of the massive $3.5-trillion price tag are sparring with progressiv­es who demand aggressive action. The party controls the House with just four votes to spare, while the evenly divided Senate is under the party’s control only due to Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote. Solid GOP opposition to the legislatio­n seems guaranteed.

Senate Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), once a maverick congressio­nal progressiv­e voice but now a national figure wielding legislativ­e clout, said the measure would help children, families, elderly and working people — and more.

“It will also, I hope, restore the faith of the American people in the belief that we can have a government that works for all of us, and not just the few,” he said.

Republican­s said Democrats’ proposals would waste money, raise economy-wounding taxes, fuel inflation and codify far-left dictates that would harm Americans. They were happy to use Sanders, a selfavowed democratic socialist, to try to tar all Democrats backing the measure.

If Biden and Senate Democrats want to “outsource domestic policy to Chairman Sanders” with a “historical­ly reckless taxing and spending spree,” Republican­s lack the votes to stop them, conceded Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). “But we will debate. We will vote.”

The Senate turned to the budget minutes after it approved Biden’s other major objective: a compromise bundle of transporta­tion, water, broadband and other infrastruc­ture projects costing about $1 trillion in new and old spending. That measure passed 69 to 30, with McConnell among the 19 Republican­s backing it. It will need House approval next.

Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (DN.Y.) assured progressiv­es that Congress would pursue sweeping initiative­s that go beyond the infrastruc­ture compromise, in a nod to divisions between the party’s moderates and liberals that he and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) must resolve before Congress can approve Democrats’ fiscal goals.

“To my colleagues who are concerned that this does not do enough on climate, for families, and making corporatio­ns and the rich pay their fair share: We are moving on to a second track, which will make a generation­al transforma­tion in these areas,” Schumer said.

In a budget ritual, senators plunged into a “vote-arama,” a nonstop parade of messaging amendments that often becomes an allnight ordeal. This time, the Senate held more than 40 votes before approving the measure around 4 a.m. Eastern time, more than 14 hours after the procedural marathon began.

Sen. Mike Rounds (RS.D.) missed the votes to be with his ailing wife.

With the budget resolution largely advisory, most amendments were offered not in hopes of passing but to force the other party’s vulnerable senators to cast troublesom­e votes that can be used against them in next year’s midterm election.

Republican­s crowed after Democrats opposed GOP amendments calling for the full-time reopening of pandemic-shuttered schools, boosting the Pentagon’s budget and retaining limits on federal income tax deductions for state and local levies. Those deduction caps are opposed by lawmakers from upper-income, mostly Democratic states.

Republican­s were also happy when Democrats opposed restrictin­g the Internal Revenue Service’s access

to some financial records, which McConnell’s office said would prompt political “witch hunts,” and when Democrats showed support for Biden’s now-suspended ban on oil and gas leasing on federal lands, which Republican­s said would prompt gasoline price increases.

One amendment may have boomerange­d after the Senate voted 99 to 0 for a proposal by freshman Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) to curb federal funds for any municipali­ties that defund their local police. That idea has been rejected by all but the most progressiv­e Democrats, but Republican­s persist in accusing them all of backing it.

In an animated, sardonic rejoinder, Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) called Tuberville’s amendment “a gift” that would let Democrats “put to bed this scurrilous accusation that somebody in this great esteemed body would want to defund the police.” He said he wanted to “walk over there and hug” Tuberville.

Republican­s claimed narrow victories on two nonbinding amendments with potential long-term implicatio­ns when West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin III, one of the chamber’s more conservati­ve Democrats, voted with them on both.

One amendment indicated support for healthcare providers who refuse to participat­e in abortions. The other voiced opposition to teaching critical race theory, the study of systemic racial inequities in America — though there’s scant evidence that it’s part of public school curricula.

The budget blueprint envisions creating new programs such as tuition-free prekinderg­arten and community college, paid family leave and a Civilian Climate Corps whose workers would tackle environmen­tal projects. Millions of immigrants in the U.S. illegally would have a new path toward citizenshi­p, and there would be financial incentives for states to adopt more laborfrien­dly laws.

Medicare would add dental, hearing and vision benefits, and new tax credits and grants would encourage utilities and industries to embrace clean energy. Child tax credits beefed up for the pandemic would be extended, along with federal subsidies for health insurance.

Besides higher taxes on the wealthy and corporatio­ns, Democrats envision savings by letting the government negotiate prices for the pharmaceut­icals it buys, by slapping taxes on imported carbon fuels and by strengthen­ing IRS tax collection­s.

Democrats have said their policies will be fully funded, but they’ll make no final decisions until this fall’s follow-up bill.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? BUDGET COMMITTEE CHAIR Bernie Sanders, pictured last month, says the plan will help children, the elderly and more. Republican­s tried to tar other Democrats for siding with Sanders, a democratic socialist.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times BUDGET COMMITTEE CHAIR Bernie Sanders, pictured last month, says the plan will help children, the elderly and more. Republican­s tried to tar other Democrats for siding with Sanders, a democratic socialist.

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