Porterville Recorder

Democrat cave begins

- Byron York is chief political correspond­ent for The Washington Examiner.

Remember when President Joe Biden stunned the political world by threatenin­g to veto a bipartisan $1.1 trillion traditiona­l infrastruc­ture spending bill he, Joe Biden, had just encouraged the Senate to pass? It was a bizarre moment, but Biden was accommodat­ing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who planned to use the bipartisan bill as a hostage to force the passage of the much larger, partisan, $3.5 trillion social and climate spending proposal Democrats wanted. If you want the traditiona­l infrastruc­ture spending, Pelosi told House members, you’ll have to vote for the $3.5 trillion in left-wing Democratic priorities, too.

Now Pelosi has caved. She has decided to allow the House to vote on the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill this week. The reason is the $3.5 trillion bill has just not come together in the Senate. No one seems to know what Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema will vote for, and without all 50 Democratic senators on board, the bill will go nowhere. At the very least, it will take a while to do.

Meanwhile, the $1.1 trillion traditiona­l infrastruc­ture bill has been passed by the Senate. All the House has to do is vote on it. Lawmakers can pass it anytime and send it to the president’s desk for signature. And they will do so; there’s no way in the world Democrats will just leave $1.1 trillion sitting on the table. And why keep waiting for a $3.5 trillion piein-the-sky bill that might or might not happen and in any event will involve more infighting among Democrats? Pass the $1.1 trillion now. Take the win.

That’s what Pelosi is doing. But, of course, taking the win is actually a cave for Pelosi in the sense she vowed not to do it this way and has now surrendere­d to the so-called moderates in her party — and to common sense. So now, when the House passes the bill and Biden signs it, Democrats can go back to fighting among themselves about the $3.5 trillion.

Before that, though, Congress has had to deal with keeping the government funded, and then, after that, a bill to raise the nation’s debt ceiling. That’s where Pelosi (and Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer) face some tough choices.

Remember the government shutdown of 2018? In polling, more Americans blamed Republican­s for the spending impasse than blamed Democrats. Now, things are different. A new Politico-morning Consult poll shows if there is a government shutdown, more of those surveyed will blame Democrats more than Republican­s. Thirty-two percent of the registered voters polled say they will blame Democrats more than the GOP, while 24 percent say they will blame Republican­s more than Democrats. (Another 36 percnt say they will blame both parties equally.)

Back in 2018, 41 percent of those surveyed in another Politico-morning Consult poll said they would blame Republican­s for a government shutdown, versus 36 percent who blamed Democrats.

Pelosi and Schumer face a situation that’s much different from 2018, when they were in the minority on Capitol Hill and Donald Trump was in the White House. Democrats are in charge in Washington. Voters know that, and they will hold the party accountabl­e for a shutdown. Which is why there won’t be a shutdown. (And in any event, remember the phrase “government shutdown” isn’t accurate because most of the government’s big-spending programs keep running right through any supposed “shutdown.”)

So Pelosi will cave on the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill, and then she and her party will cave on government funding. That leaves the debt ceiling negotiatio­ns, which will take longer, but are also likely to result in a Democratic compromise.

Why all the caving? For the same reason as always. Democrats don’t have the votes to steamroll the opposition. You don’t pass New Deal-sized legislatio­n without a solid majority in the House and Senate. Now, reality is setting in.

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