The Guardian (USA)

US Senate votes to advance infrastruc­ture deal after bipartisan breakthrou­gh

- Joan E Greve in Washington and agency

The US Senate voted on Wednesday to begin work on a $1.2tn bipartisan infrastruc­ture deal after negotiator­s reached agreement on the major components of the package that is a key priority of Joe Biden.

The agreement follows months of talks between Senate Democrats and Republican­s.

“It happened from the center out,” said lead Republican negotiator senator Rob Portman after the vote. “In other words, at a time when Washington seems broken, this group of members behind me came together, along with others, and decided we were going to do something great for our country.”

Biden has hailed the deal as “historic” and promised to work with members of both parties to ensure the bill’s passage “because while there’s a lot we don’t agree on, I believe that we should be able to work together on the few things we do agree on. I think it’s important.”

Wednesday night’s vote was a key procedural victory that paves the way to begin work on the bill, which proposes $550bn in new spending on everything from roads and bridges to broadband and green energy.

The rare bipartisan showing on the 67-32 vote, with support from 17 Republican­s, signaled the interest among senators, but it’s unclear if enough Republican­s will eventually join Democrats to support final passage. The procedural step Wednesday night is expected to launch lengthy considerat­ion.

The bipartisan bill is a key component of Biden’s larger domestic policy agenda. Democrats plan to address the remainder with a sweeping $3.5tn reconcilia­tion package that Republican­s have vowed to oppose.

However, there were still signs of potential trouble for the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill on Wednesday afternoon, after the lead Democratic negotiator, Senator Kyrsten Sinema,said she does not support the price tag of the separate reconcilia­tion bill, which would fund many of Biden’s “human infrastruc­ture” initiative­s championed by progressiv­es in his party.

“Good luck tanking your own party’s investment on childcare, climate action, and infrastruc­ture while presuming you’ll survive a three-vote House margin – especially after choosing to exclude members of color from negotiatio­ns and calling that a “bipartisan accomplish­ment”, progressiv­e congresswo­man Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York tweeted.

“Without a reconcilia­tion package that meets this moment, I’m a no on this bipartisan deal,” tweeted Mondaire Jones,the progressiv­e congressma­n who represents parts of the Bronx.

“Sinema is more interested in gaining GOP friends and blocking much needed resources, than fighting for her residents’ future,” Congresswo­man Rashida Tlaib of Michigan tweeted.

Some Senate progressiv­es have indicated they will vote in favor of the bipartisan bill only if their moderate colleagues help them pass the reconcilia­tion package.

Democrats also have an extremely narrow margin in the House, which could create hurdles for the passage of the bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill if progressiv­es oppose it.

The $550bn proposed in the infrastruc­ture bill is down from $579bn in a framework the negotiator­s sketched out several weeks ago. The package includes $110bn for roads and bridges, $73bn for modernizin­g the nation’s electric grid and expanding the use of renewable energy, and $65bn to expand broadband access, a particular problem for rural areas and tribal communitie­s, and $47bn for environmen­tal resiliency.

Addressing a concern over funding among Republican lawmakers including Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell, Portman said the package

is “more than paid for” and added: “We look forward to moving ahead and having a healthy debate.”

It scraps previous plans to spend $20bn to create an infrastruc­ture financing authority, sources in both parties said. It had been intended to attract investment through private-public partnershi­ps, but Republican­s opposed Democratic demands designed to lift worker wages by attaching requiremen­ts that contractor­s pay prevailing wages, typically higher levels secured by unions.

Four other Republican negotiator­s joined Portman, including Senator Lisa Murkowski, who said the agreement showed Republican­s and Democrats in the sharply divided US Congress “can come together over really hard stuff to negotiate in good faith to broker an agreement”.

Before the announceme­nt, Murkowski told reporters: “I think that there is a strong, solid number of folks on both sides of the aisle that want to get on to an infrastruc­ture package.”

 ?? Photograph: Matt Smith/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Biden at a Mack Trucks factory in Pennsylvan­ia on Thursday. Bidenpromi­sed to work with members of both parties to ensure the bill’s passage.
Photograph: Matt Smith/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Biden at a Mack Trucks factory in Pennsylvan­ia on Thursday. Bidenpromi­sed to work with members of both parties to ensure the bill’s passage.

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