San Antonio Express-News

Infrastruc­ture deal a loser for GOP

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So far, the bipartisan infrastruc­ture deal is going through the normal life cycle of such proposals — alive, dead, revived, uncertain. For Republican­s, the best answer should be dead.

They have nothing to gain by blessing a portion of President Joe Biden’s spending plans, when an ungodly amount of money is going to go out the door regardless of whether they vote for a chunk of it or not.

The convention­al wisdom is that the Senate has to prove that it can work, and the test of its functionin­g is how much of Biden’s spending Republican­s endorse.

This is a distorted view of the Senate’s role, which shouldn’t be to get on board a historic spending spree for which Biden won no mandate and which isn’t justified by conditions in the country (it’s not true, for instance, that the nation’s infrastruc­ture is crumbling).

Besides, if bipartisan spending is the test, the Senate just a few weeks ago passed a $200 billion China competitio­n bill by a 68-32 vote. It used to be that $200 billion constitute­d a lot of money, but now it doesn’t rate, not when there’s $6 trillion on the table.

The infrastruc­ture deal lurched from gloriously alive to dead when Biden explicitly linked its passage to the simultaneo­us passage of a reconcilia­tion bill with the rest of the Democratic Party’s spending priorities in it.

Then it was revived again when Biden walked this back and promised a dual track for the two bills.

The fierce Republican insistence on these two tracks doesn’t make much sense and amounts to asking Democrats to allow a decent interval before going ahead with the rest of their spending — Democrats are going to try to pass a reconcilia­tion whether the bipartisan deal passes or not.

In other words, at the end of the day, there’s only one track.

The calculatio­n of Republican­s supporting the deal is that a significan­t bipartisan package can take some of the heat off Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema in their resistance to eliminatin­g the filibuster.

A deal that passes and is signed into law will certainly be a feather in their caps, but it’s hard to believe they’d change their minds on the filibuster if the deal fell apart.

They are both so extensivel­y and adamantly on the record in favor of the filibuster that a climb-down would be politicall­y embarrassi­ng and perilous.

Republican­s supporting the deal also think it will make passing the subsequent reconcilia­tion bill harder. First, the parts of infrastruc­ture that have the widest support — roads and bridges — will be in the deal and not in the reconcilia­tion bill. Second, the unwelcome tax increases excluded from the bipartisan deal will be in the reconcilia­tion bill.

This isn’t a crazy calculatio­n, although it’s not clearly correct either. The higher the top-line number is for the reconcilia­tion bill, the harder it will be to pass. By allowing Democrats to cleave off some spending into a bipartisan deal, the overall number for the reconcilia­tion bill gets smaller. In other words, the bipartisan deal could make the partisan reconcilia­tion easier, rather than harder, to pass.

It’s not as though Biden is fiscally prudent on all other fronts except in this one area, which he considers a particular­ly important national investment with unmistakab­le returns. No, he’s universall­y profligate. His reckless spending on all fronts (except defense) makes it more imperative for Republican­s to stake out a position in foursquare opposition.

The bipartisan deal is hardly exemplary legislatio­n, by the way. It resorts to all the usual Beltway gimmicks to create the pretense that it’s paid for, when it’s basically as irresponsi­ble as the rest of the Biden spending.

Bipartisan­ship has its uses, but so does partisansh­ip. Biden wants to be known for his Fdrand Lbj-like government spending, believing that it’s the key to political success and to an enduring legacy. Fine. Let him and his party own it.

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden, with a bipartisan group of senators, speaks about the infrastruc­ture plan. Republican­s, let Biden and the Democrats own the infrastruc­ture bill — and its cost.
Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press President Joe Biden, with a bipartisan group of senators, speaks about the infrastruc­ture plan. Republican­s, let Biden and the Democrats own the infrastruc­ture bill — and its cost.
 ?? RICH LOWRY ??
RICH LOWRY

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