San Francisco Chronicle

Biden seeking public support as GOP objects

- By Lisa Mascaro and Josh Boak Lisa Mascaro and Josh Boak are Associated Press writers.

WASHINGTON — With an appeal to think big, President Biden is promoting his $2.3 trillion infrastruc­ture plan directly to Americans, summoning public support to push past the Republican­s lining up against the massive effort they sum up as big taxes, big spending and big government.

Republican­s in Congress are making the politicall­y brazen bet that it’s more advantageo­us to oppose the costly American Jobs Plan, saddling the Democrats with ownership of the sweeping proposal and the corporate tax hike Biden says is needed to pay for it. He wants the investment­s in roads, schools, broadband and clean energy approved by summer.

On Monday, Biden received a boost from an unexpected source. The Senate parliament­arian greenlight­ed a strategy that would allow Democrats in the evenly split 5050 chamber to rely on a 51vote threshold to advance some bills, rather than the 60 votes typically needed. The socalled budget reconcilia­tion rules can now be used more often than expected — giving Democrats a fresh new path around the GOP blockade.

The prospects for a massive infrastruc­ture investment, once a bipartisan source of unity on Capitol Hill, have cracked and groaned under the weight of political polarizati­on. Where Biden sees an urgency in going big, Republican­s want a narrow plan that focuses on roads and bridges, and warn that any corporate tax increase would crush economic growth.

“They know we need it,” Biden said of the Republican­s as he returned to Washington on Monday. “Everybody around the world is investing billions and billions of dollars in infrastruc­ture, and we’re going to do it here.”

The standoff almost ensures a monthslong slog as Congress hunkers down to begin drafting legislatio­n and the White House keeps the door open to working across the aisle with Republican­s, hoping that continued public attention will drum up support.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell declared plainly on Monday that Biden’s plan is “something we’re not going to do.”

A core dividing line is Biden’s effort to pay for infrastruc­ture by undoing Donald Trump’s tax break for corporatio­ns, a signature achievemen­t of the Trump White House and its partners in Congress.

The 2017 GOP tax bill, which all the Republican­s voted for, slashed the corporate rate from 35% to 21%. It was supposed to usher in a new era of American investment and job creation, yet growth never came close to the promised levels and the economy fell into a recession because of the pandemic.

Biden proposes raising the rate to 28% and institutin­g a global minimum rate to dissuade companies from relocating in lowertax havens.

Republican­s have signaled zero interest in undoing the tax cuts they approved with Trump, and instead prefer a smaller infrastruc­ture package paid for by user fees on drivers or other publicpriv­ate partnershi­ps that share the costs.

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