Los Angeles Times

House OKs healthcare, tax and climate bill

Democrats prepare to promote its benefits as Inflation Act heads to Biden for signature.

- By Nolan D. McCaskill Times staff writer Jennifer Haberkorn contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — House Democrats on Friday passed a sweeping healthcare, tax and climate change bill. Now they have to sell it.

The vote was 220 to 207, with all Democrats voting in favor and all Republican­s opposing it.

With the midterm elections quickly approachin­g, congressio­nal Democrats have had a series of legislativ­e victories in recent weeks — expanding NATO, securing healthcare and benefits for veterans exposed to toxic burn pits, investing nearly $53 billion into the U.S. semiconduc­tor industry and passing bipartisan gun safety legislatio­n.

That momentum has culminated in the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, an offshoot of the many versions of President Biden’s failed Build Back Better Act. The Inflation Reduction Act, which the Senate passed Sunday with Vice President Kamala Harris breaking a tie, now heads to President Biden’s desk for his signature.

With Biden poised to sign the bill into law in the coming days, House Democrats say their focus should now shift to promoting its benefits to Americans.

They readily admit they failed to adequately communicat­e to the American people how previous massive legislatio­n that passed this Congress — including last year’s $1-trillion infrastruc­ture package — would improve their lives.

Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Fremont) said Democrats need an “all-hands-on-deck approach” that gets beyond the media and the Beltway and directly into communitie­s.

“We need administra­tion officials. We need members of Congress. We need state legislatur­es. We need 1,000 surrogates flooding every community in this country,” Khanna said in an interview. “We need to do things like that: have people out in their communitie­s, not just their districts but in communitie­s across this country, talking about why this is going to matter.”

Rep. Jimmy Gomez (DLos Angeles) pointed to three tax credits in the Inflation Reduction Act: one for used electric vehicles, including hybrids, and two for home efficiency for new and existing homeowners.

“A lot of times people don’t recognize the significan­ce of these achievemen­ts,” Gomez said. “They don’t know what was in it and they don’t know how they benefit.”

Forty-one percent of Americans are familiar with the Inflation Reduction Act, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released this week. More than a quarter of respondent­s, however, said they’d never heard of the legislatio­n, and nearly a third acknowledg­ed having heard of it but not knowing more about it.

The bill will allow Medicare to negotiate some prescripti­on drug prices, cap out-of-pocket drug expenses for Medicare beneficiar­ies at $2,000 per year, and cap drugmakers’ price increases.

On climate, it will reduce emissions by about 40% by 2030, proponents say.

The measure will also impose new taxes on wealthy corporatio­ns and their stock buyback programs, and provide funding to beef up the Internal Revenue Service’s taxpayer services and enforcemen­t.

It also includes $4 billion to address the Colorado River water crisis.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (DSan Francisco) framed the legislatio­n as a “kitchen table issue” at a news conference hours before the vote.

“If you are sitting at your kitchen table and wonder how you’re going to pay the bills — your healthcare bills, your prescripti­on drug bills — this bill’s for you,” Pelosi said.

Rep. Josh Harder (DTurlock), one of the most vulnerable California Democrats seeking reelection, emphasized the importance of getting savings to Americans as quickly as possible.

“Families in the Central Valley are paying an arm and a leg at the grocery store and the gas pump right now, so our No. 1 priority has to be implementi­ng this bill so they see real savings on their prescripti­on drugs, their healthcare costs and their energy bills,” Harder said.

House GOP leaders mocked the bill as the “Inf lation, Recession, and IRS Army Act” in a message sent to all House Republican­s’ offices.

In a lengthy floor speech, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) panned the legislatio­n as a “misguided, tone-deaf bill” that will raise taxes and hand out tax credits “like candy, with no accountabi­lity.”

Progressiv­es cheered the legislatio­n while acknowledg­ing they would have preferred it had gone further to fight climate change and bolster the nation’s social safety net.

“We are — at the Progressiv­e Caucus — heartbroke­n to see investment­s in care, in housing, immigratio­n, workforce and more left on the cutting room floor,” said Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal (DWash.).

She called it “particular­ly outrageous” that Republican­s had stripped out a provision that would have capped the price of insulin at $35 a month for everyone with private insurance.

Rep. Jared Huffman (DSan Rafael) commended the bill for addressing some of his constituen­ts’ most pressing issues.

“This is by far the biggest step the U.S. has ever taken to combat climate change, but I know that this is by no means a ‘mission accomplish­ed’ moment,” he said. “We must get off the fossil fuel roller coaster that has been driving inflation and killing our planet, once and for all.”

In an appearance Friday morning on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer suggested Senate Democrats in battlegrou­nd states were already reaping the benefits of the Inflation Reduction Act’s passage in the upper chamber.

“The way I look at it,” Schumer said, “if we held the election today, there is a damn good chance we’d pick up a few seats.”

 ?? Godofredo A. Vásquez Associated Press ?? THE PACKAGE of Democratic priorities will reduce emissions by about 40% by 2030, proponents say, with new incentives for climate-friendly energy such as the wind power from these turbines in Livermore, Calif.
Godofredo A. Vásquez Associated Press THE PACKAGE of Democratic priorities will reduce emissions by about 40% by 2030, proponents say, with new incentives for climate-friendly energy such as the wind power from these turbines in Livermore, Calif.

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