Times-Herald

Biden, Congress face summer grind to create legislatio­n on which to agree

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Until recently, the act of governing seemed to happen at the speed of presidenti­al tweets. But now President Joe Biden is settling in for what appears will be a long, summer slog of legislatin­g.

Congress is hunkered down, the House and Senate grinding through a monthslong stretch, lawmakers trying to draft Biden's big infrastruc­ture ideas into bills that could actually be signed into law. Perhaps not since the drafting of the Affordable Care Act more than a decade ago has Washington tried a legislativ­e lift as heavy.

It's going to take a while. "Passing legislatio­n is not a made-for-TV movie," said Phil Schiliro, a former legislativ­e affairs director at the Obama White House and veteran of congressio­nal battles, including over the health care law.

Biden appears comfortabl­e in this space, embarked on an agenda in Congress that's rooted in his top legislativ­e priority — the $4 trillion "build back better" investment­s now being shaped as his American Jobs and American Families plans.

To land the bills on his desk, the president is relying on an old-school legislativ­e process that can feel out of step with today's fast-moving political cycles and hopes for quick payoffs. Democrats are anxious it is taking too long and he is wasting precious time negotiatin­g with Republican­s, but Biden seems to like the laborious art of legislatin­g.

On Monday, Biden is expected to launch another week of engagement with members of both parties, and the White House is likely at some point to hear from a bipartisan group of senators working on a scaledback $1 trillion plan as an alternativ­e.

At the same time, the administra­tion is pushing ahead with the president's own, more sweeping proposals being developed in the House and Senate budget committees, tallying as much as $6 trillion, under a process that could enable Democrats to pass it on their own. Initial votes are being eyed for late July.

"This is how negotiatio­ns work," White House deputy press secretary Andrew Bates said during last week's twists and turns of the infrastruc­ture negotiatio­ns.

"We continue to work closely with Democrats of all views — as well as Republican­s — on the path forward. There are many possible avenues to getting this done, and we are optimistic about our chances," Bates said.

During his administra­tion, President Donald Trump had the full sweep of Republican control of the House and Senate for the first two years of his tenure, but the limits of legislatin­g quickly became clear.

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