Sentinel & Enterprise

White House confident Biden’s bill will pass House this week

- By Hope Yen

President Biden’s top economic adviser expressed confidence Sunday that the White House’s $1.85 trillion domestic policy package will quickly pass the House this week and said approval couldn’t come at a more urgent time as prices of consumer goods spike.

“Inflation is high right now. And it is affecting consumers in their pocketbook and also in their outlook for the economy,” said Brian Deese, director of the National Economic Council.

“This, more than anything, will go at the costs that Americans face,” he said, before adding that the House will consider the legislatio­n this coming week. “It will get a vote, it will pass.”

The House has been moving toward approval of the massive Democraton­ly-backed bill even as the measure faces bigger challenges in the Senate, where Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.VA., and Kyrsten Sinema, D-ariz., have insisted on reducing its size.

In a letter Sunday to Democratic colleagues, Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., counseled “time and patience” for working through a bill of this size.

Consumer prices have soared 6.2% over the last year, the biggest 12-month jump since 1990. Deese acknowledg­ed that prices may not fully return to a more normal 2% level until next year due to the lingering effects of COVID19, but he said the measure will go a long way toward “lowering costs for American families.”

“We’re confident this bill, as it moves through the process, is going to be fully paid for, and not only that, it’s actually going to reduce deficits over the long term,” he said.

Biden today planned to sign a related $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill, a bipartisan effort that was passed earlier this month after the president and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D- Calif., pledged action on Biden’s broader package expanding health, child, elder care and climate change by mid-november.

House progressiv­es had threatened to hold up the infrastruc­ture bill without a firm commitment of immediate action on the broader package.

House centrists say they will vote for the package as early as this week if an upcoming Congressio­nal Budget Office analysis affirms White House estimates that the bill is fully paid for. The measure would be covered with changes to corporate taxes, such as a new corporate minimum tax, while raising taxes on higher-income people.

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