The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Deadline slips, but Pelosi says Biden deal ‘very possible’

- By Lisa Mascaro, Darlene Superville and Alan Fram

» A deal within reach, President Joe Biden and Congress’ top Democrats edged close to sealing their giant domestic legislatio­n Friday, though appearing to let the day’s informal deadline slip as they worked to scale back the measure and determine how to pay for it.

Negotiatio­ns were expected to continue into the weekend, all sides indicating just a few issues remained unsettled in the sweeping package of social services and climate change strategies.

Biden met at the White House with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer joined by video call from from New York, trying to shore up details. The leaders have been working with party moderates and progressiv­es to shrink the once-$3.5 trillion, 10year package to around $2 trillion in child care, health care and clean energy programs.

Pelosi said a deal was “very possible.”

She told reporters back at the Capitol that more than 90% of the package was agreed to: The climate change components of the bill “are resolved,” but outstandin­g questions remain on health care provisions.

Biden wants a deal before he leaves next week for global summits in Europe.

Pelosi said she hoped the

House could start voting as soon as next week, but no schedule was set. Democrats had imposed a Friday deadline to at least strike agreement, but by early evening no deal was announced.

“Much of what we need to do has been written. Just a few decisions now,” Pelosi said.

Sticking points appear to include proposed corporate tax hikes to help finance the plan and an effort to lower prescripti­on drug costs that has raised concerns from the pharmaceut­ical industry. Democrats are in search of a broad compromise between the party’s progressiv­es and moderates on the measure’s price tag, revenue sources and basic components.

At the White House, the president has “rolled up his

sleeves and is deep in the details of spreadshee­ts and numbers,” press secretary Jen Psaki said.

Psaki compared the work to starting Social Security and other major federal programs decades ago, and then building on them in following years.

“Progress here is a historic package that will put in place systems and programs that have never existed in our society before,” she said, noting the effort to expand child care and provide free pre-kindergart­en for all youngsters.

Negotiatio­ns are proceeding as Biden more forcefully appeals to the American public, including in a televised town hall, for what he says are the middle-class values at the heart of his proposal.

In a Senate that is evenly divided between the Democrats and firmly opposed Republican­s, Biden can’t afford to lose a single vote. He is navigating his own party’s factions — progressiv­es, who want major investment­s in social services, and centrists, who prefer to see the overall price tag go down.

“When you’re president of the United States, you have 50 Democrats — every one is a president. Every single one. So you gotta work things out,” he said during a CNN town hall Thursday.

Still, he expressed optimism about the process. “It’s all about compromise. Compromise has become a dirty word, but bipartisan­ship and compromise still has to be possible,” he said.

Biden said the discussion­s were “down to four or five issues.”

On one issue — the taxes to pay for the package — the White House idea seemed to be making headway with a new strategy of abandoning plans for reversing Trumpera tax cuts in favor of an approach that would involve imposing a 15% corporate minimum tax and also taxing the investment incomes of billionair­es to help finance the deal.

Biden has faced resistance from key holdouts, in particular Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., who has not been on board with her party’s plan to undo President Donald Trump’s tax breaks for big corporatio­ns and individual­s earning more than $400,000 a year.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Oct. 1, 2021photo, President Joe Biden and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., walk in a basement hallway of the Capitol after meeting with House Democrats, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Divided Democrats struggling to enact President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda are confrontin­g one of Congress’ cruelest conundrums — your goals may be popular, but that doesn’t ensure they’ll become law or that voters will reward you.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Oct. 1, 2021photo, President Joe Biden and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., walk in a basement hallway of the Capitol after meeting with House Democrats, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Divided Democrats struggling to enact President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda are confrontin­g one of Congress’ cruelest conundrums — your goals may be popular, but that doesn’t ensure they’ll become law or that voters will reward you.

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