Springfield News-Sun

Moderate Democrats threaten budget effort

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi faced a fresh hurdle Friday to passing President Joe Biden’s multitrill­ion-dollar domestic policy aspiration­s, as nine moderate Democrats threatened to derail a budget blueprint crucial to opening the door to much of that spending.

In a letter to Pelosi, D-calif., the nine said they “will not consider voting” for a budget resolution mapping Democrats’ ambitious fiscal plans until the House approves a separate, Senate-passed package of road, broadband and other infrastruc­ture projects and sends it to Biden.

“We simply can’t afford months of unnecessar­y delays and risk squanderin­g this once-in-a-century, bipartisan infrastruc­ture package,” the centrists wrote.

That’s the opposite of Pelosi’s current strategy as party leaders plot how to steer Biden’s agenda through a Congress the divided party runs by paper-thin margins. She’s repeatedly said her chamber won’t vote on the bipartisan, $1 trillion infrastruc­ture measure that moderates covet until the Senate sends the House a companion, $3.5 trillion bundle of social safety net and environmen­tal initiative­s favored by progressiv­es.

Progressiv­es have applied their own pressure, saying many would vote against the infrastruc­ture measure until the Senate approves the $3.5 trillion social and environmen­t bill. That larger measure is unlikely to be ready until autumn.

Democrats have too much at stake to let internal turmoil sink their domestic ambitions, but it was initially unclear how leaders would untie the knot. With Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., facing a similar moderates-vs.-progressiv­es balancing act in his chamber, Biden may eventually need to play a more forceful role and prod rankand-file lawmakers into line.

Seeming to take middle ground, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that officials believe House Democrats will approve “both key elements of the President’s economic agenda,” as the Senate has.

“Both are essential, and we are working closely with Speaker Pelosi and the leadership to get both to the President’s desk,” Psaki said in a written statement.

Biden consulted with his legislativ­e affairs team about his economic plan’s pathway in the House, the White House said.

Together, the infrastruc­ture and social and environmen­t bills make up the heart of Biden’s governing goals, and their enactment would likely stand as one of his legacy achievemen­ts as president. But neither wing of his party in Congress fully trusts the other to back both packages, so leaders want to sequence votes in a way that gives neither faction an edge.

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