San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

HOUSE PANEL ADVANCES DEMS’ $3.5T BILL IN KEY PROCEDURAL VOTE

- BY ALAN FRAM Fram writes for The Associated Press.

Democrats pushed a $3.5 trillion, 10-year bill strengthen­ing social safety net and climate programs through the House Budget Committee on Saturday, but one Democrat voted “no,” illustrati­ng the challenges party leaders face in winning the near unanimity they’ll need to push the sprawling package through Congress.

The Democratic-dominated panel, meeting virtually, approved the measure on a near party-line vote, 2017. Passage marked a necessary but minor checking of a procedural box for Democrats by edging it a step closer to debate by the full House. Under budget rules, the committee wasn’t allowed to significan­tly amend the 2,465-page measure, the product of 13 other House committees.

More important work has been happening in an opaque procession of mostly unannounce­d phone calls, meetings and other bargaining sessions among party leaders and rank-and-file lawmakers. President Joe Biden, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., have led a behind-thescenes hunt for compromise­s to resolve internal divisions and, they hope, allow approval of the mammoth bill soon.

Pelosi told fellow Democrats Saturday that they pass the social and environmen­t package this week, along with a separate infrastruc­ture bill and a third measure preventing a government shutdown on Friday. Her letter to colleagues underscore­d the pile of crucial work Congress’ Democratic majority faces in coming days and seemed an effort to build urgency to resolve long-standing disputes quickly.

“The next few days will be a time of intensity,“she wrote.

Moderate Rep. Scott Peters, D-san Diego, joined all 16 Republican­s on the Budget committee in opposing the legislatio­n. His objections included one that troubles many Democrats: a reluctance to back a bill with provisions that would later be dropped by the Senate.

Many Democrats don’t want to become politicall­y vulnerable by backing language that might be controvers­ial back home, only to see it not become law. That preffor voting only on a social and environmen­t bill that’s already a House-senate compromise could complicate Pelosi’s effort for a House vote this week.

Peters was among three Democrats who earlier this month voted against a plan favored by most in his party to lower pharmaceut­ical costs by letting Medicare negotiate for the prescripti­on drugs it buys.

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