Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Spending proposals still short on votes

- LISA MASCARO AND KEVIN FREKING

WASHINGTON — The White House plans to give bipartisan infrastruc­ture negotiatio­ns another week to 10 days before assessing next steps, a White House official said during a closed session with House Democrats on Tuesday.

White House counselor Steve Ricchetti relayed the timeline to lawmakers as a group of 10 senators works to devise a nearly $1 trillion proposal. The White House insisted later that he did not set a deadline for the bipartisan talks.

“We certainly have a foundation to build on top of our jobs plan in its really complete or more complete form, and we’ll see where we’re going to go after a week or 10 days more dialogue and negotiatio­n,” Ricchetti told the House Democrats, according to a partial transcript obtained by The Associated Press.

The updated timeline comes as Biden’s top legislativ­e priority is teetering in Congress. The president and the Democratic leaders of the House and Senate have been engaged in a two-track strategy — reaching for a bipartisan deal with Republican­s but also setting the stage for a go-it-alone effort if talks fail.

House Budget Committee Chairman John Yarmuth, D-Ky., said that if bipartisan talks falter, then the plan is “full steam ahead” for considerin­g a package as soon as July under special reconcilia­tion rules that would enable majority passage without the need for Republican votes.

The package being prepared by the House Budget Committee would include both the American Jobs Plan and the American Families Plan. These are Biden’s proposals to build not just roads and highways, but also the socalled human infrastruc­ture of child care, veterans care and education facilities.

“The White House made it clear to us that we should be prepared to proceed on two tracks,” said Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York, chairman of the House Democratic Caucus. “We’re prepared to do what is necessary to get the American Jobs Plan over the finish line.”

The bipartisan group of 10 senators has focused in on a nearly $1 trillion deal of mainly road, highway and other traditiona­l infrastruc­ture projects, but without the family-related investment­s in child care centers and other facilities that Republican­s reject as costly and unnecessar­y.

The White House insisted that Ricchetti was not conveying any deadline for a deal.

“He said that we are certainly going to know where things stand on infrastruc­ture talks generally in the next week to 10 days and that we can then take stock overall,” said White House deputy press secretary Andrew Bates. “But he did not set a deadline or cutoff.”

The effort by the bipartisan group, with five Democrats and five Republican­s, has come far in meeting Biden’s initial ideas, but the senators and the president remain far apart over how to pay for the plan.

Biden has proposed raising the corporate tax rate, from 21% to 28%, to pay for infrastruc­ture investment­s. Under the bipartisan proposal, the projects would be funded by tapping unspent covid-19 relief funds, increasing the gas tax paid at the pump by linking it to inflation and trying to recoup unpaid income taxes.

But the prospect of raising the gas tax is unpopular with some Democratic lawmakers. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, described it as “another hit on working people.”

“To me, their idea that they’re going to raise taxes on working people while letting multinatio­nal companies and the most wealthy Americans off the hook is a nonstarter,” Wyden said. “I mean, where is the fairness in that?”

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