Oroville Mercury-Register

House passes $3.5T Biden blueprint after deal

- By Lisa Mascaro and Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON >> Striking a deal with moderates, House Democratic leaders muscled President Joe Biden’s multitrill­ion-dollar budget blueprint over a key hurdle Tuesday, ending a risky standoff and putting the party’s domestic infrastruc­ture agenda back on track.

The 220-212 vote was a first move toward drafting Biden’s $3.5 trillion rebuilding plan this fall, and the narrow outcome, in the face of unanimous Republican opposition, signaled the power a few voices have to alter the debate and the challenges ahead still threatenin­g to upend the president’s agenda.

From the White House, Biden praised the outcome as “a step closer to truly investing in the American people.” He said at a news conference that he had called to congratula­te House leaders for the work.

Tensions had flared during a turbulent 24 hours that brought the House to a standstill as a band of moderate lawmakers threatened to withhold their votes for the $3.5 trillion plan. They were demanding the House first approve a nearly $1 trillion bipartisan package of other public works projects that’s already passed the Senate.

Backed by the White House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi huddled privately with lawmakers and leaders to engineer an offramp. In brokering the compromise, Pelosi committed to voting on the bipartisan package no later than Sept. 27, an attempt to assure lawmakers it won’t be left on the sidelines. It’s also in keeping with with Pelosi’s insistence that the two bills move together as a more complete collection of Biden’s priorities. Pelosi has set a goal of passing both by Oct. 1.

Pelosi told her colleagues before the vote that the legislatio­n would lead to a federal investment on par with the New Deal and the Great Society.

She brushed aside the delays. “That’s just part of the legislativ­e process,” she said, according to an aide granted anonymity to discuss a closed-door caucus meeting.

“Not only are we building the physical infrastruc­ture of America, we are building the human infrastruc­ture of America,” Pelosi said on the House floor.

Easing off the stalemate will shelve, for now, the stark divisions between moderate and progressiv­e lawmakers who make up the Democrats’ so-slim House majority. But as the drama spilled out during what was supposed to be a quick session as lawmakers returned to work for a few days in August, it showcased the party difference­s that threaten to upend Biden’s ambitious rebuilding agenda.

With Republican­s fully opposed to the president’s big plans and arguing that Congress should be focused instead on the crisis in Afghanista­n, the Democratic leaders have just a few votes to spare. That gives any band of lawmakers leverage that can be used to make or break a deal, as they are in position to do in the weeks to come as moderates and progressiv­es draft and vote on the broader $3.5 trillion package.

“I think it’s important to those of us who are moderate Democrats to make sure that our voices are heard,” said Rep. Jim Costa, D-Calif., one of the negotiator­s.

Challengin­g their party’s most powerful leaders, nine moderate Democrats signed onto a letter late last week raising their objections to pushing ahead with Biden’s broader infrastruc­ture proposal without first considerin­g the smaller public works plan of road, public transit and broadband spending that has already passed the Senate.

Their ranks grew as other moderates, including Rep. Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla., a leader of the Blue Dog caucus of centrist Democrats, raised similar concerns.

Progressiv­es were outraged at the moderates, blaming them for potentiall­y jamming Biden’s agenda, which is stocked with hard-fought party goals like child care, paid family leave and Medicare expansion, along with green infrastruc­ture spending.

Outside groups, including Justice Democrats, started running campaign ads and members of Our Revolution, the organizati­on aligned with Bernie Sanders, protested Tuesday outside the New Jersey office of Rep. Josh Gottheimer, a leader of the moderate effort.

“This is a ‘which side are you on’ moment,’” said Our Revolution executive director Joseph Geevarghes­e, who promised to “organize like never before to hold Democrats accountabl­e and get this bill over the finish line.”

The budget measure is at the heart of Biden’s “Build Back Better” vision for helping families and combating climate change and is progressiv­es’ top priority, all of it largely financed with tax increases on the rich and big business.

The House committees are already fast at work drafting legislatio­n to fill in the details of the $3.5 trillion package for considerat­ion later this fall.

Progressiv­es signaled early on they wanted the Biden budget priorities first before they agree to the smaller Senate package, worried it would be an insufficie­nt down-payment on his goals.

But the moderates want the opposite, insisting Congress quickly send the smaller, bipartisan infrastruc­ture measure they helped shape with the senators to Biden so he can sign it before the political winds shift.

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