USA TODAY US Edition

Lack of bipartisan­ship adds hurdles

Biden’s expected win on stimulus carries a cost

- Courtney Subramania­n and Joey Garrison

WASHINGTON – With his first major legislativ­e win on track to pass Congress early this week, President Joe Biden is already looking ahead to the next policy push on his Build Back Better agenda.

His victory lap may be short-lived. The expected passage of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package may give the president a tailwind as he seeks an even larger price tag on an infrastruc­ture bill, tackles an ambitious climate change agenda and begins negotiatio­ns on his campaign pledge of comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform. But the president’s decision to go it alone on his American Rescue Plan – garnering not a single Republican vote in either chamber of Congress – could sink any promise of bipartisan­ship as he moves on to the next big-ticket item in his first 100 days.

“I think by not making a good-faith effort, basically it’s poisoning the well for everything down the line,” said political analyst Charlie Cook, editor and publisher of The Cook Political Report.

Cook said he thought Biden had been positioned to reach a compromise with moderate Republican­s given his temperamen­t and his 36 years in the Senate.

“It will be just a strong disincenti­ve to do business with him,” Cook said.

Biden, who pitched himself as a presidenti­al candidate who could break through Washington’s hyperparti­san landscape, already has run into the political realities of his party’s razor-thin majorities in Congress. With the Senate split 50-50, Democrats used a legislativ­e maneuver to push through the COVID-19 relief package with a simple majority in the Senate over the weekend and without any Republican votes.

But that process, known as budget reconcilia­tion, is subject to rules that could make it more difficult to use for the White House’s more progressiv­e policy plans. Without that legislativ­e tool, Biden has few options other than fulfilling his promise of working across the aisle or ending the Senate filibuster, which would allow measures to pass with a simple majority – a move he has so far resisted in his call for unity.

Looking for momentum

Still, buoyed by the expected stimulus victory and a ramp-up in vaccine distributi­on that he said will see enough doses for every American adult by the end of May, Biden is well-positioned for his next legislativ­e battle, said Erik Smith, a longtime Democratic strategist.

“I don’t think anyone is going to be sitting in a diner or a barber shop talking about how Biden’s use of reconcilia­tion somehow discounts the win,” Smith said. “A win’s a win. No one remembers how many points you score in the Super Bowl, they just remember you won the Super Bowl.”

The president and White House officials have repeatedly rejected Republican criticism that Biden is breaking his promise of bipartisan governing by pointing to polls showing the relief package is popular across the country.

“Bipartisan­ship is not determined by a single ZIP code in Washington, D.C.,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday when asked about seeking GOP support for the next item on the president’s legislativ­e agenda. “It’s about where the American people sit and stand, and the vast majority of the American people support the American Rescue Plan, including Republican­s.”

A Morning Consult/Politico poll released last week found broad bipartisan support for the pandemic relief bill: 77% of all voters and 59% of Republican­s said they backed the measure.

The plan, which provides $1,400 payments to many Americans and additional funding for state and local government­s while boosting vaccine distributi­on and extending enhanced unemployme­nt benefits, has been supported by Democratic and Republican state and local officials alike. Last month, 32 Republican mayors were among the 425 mayors nationally who renewed a push to pass the president’s plan.

The more impressive feat was Biden’s ability to hold the Democratic Party together to pass the administra­tion’s first legislativ­e priority, despite intraparty tensions over progressiv­e provisions in the massive bill, said Doug Sosnik, who was the White House political director under President Bill Clinton.

Liberals are growing increasing­ly wary that progressiv­e pieces of Biden’s agenda could be on the chopping block, including his plans for voting rights, gun control, climate change and immigratio­n, he said. A push to include a $15-anhour federal minimum wage in the stimulus package collapsed after a key Senate official ruled that it could not be included in the measure.

“It speaks really well for Biden and Democrats that out of the gate, despite the narrow margin that they have, they’re able to hold the party together to pass this,” Sosnik said.

Seasoned hands within the administra­tion – many of whom also served in the White House when Biden was vice president under President Barack Obama – learned early on that it was a fool’s errand to wait for Republican support, Sosnik said.

“You have almost an immovable force in this extended period of hyperparti­sanship that’s been going on for more than a decade where there’s very little political incentive for either party to work together,” he said.

Republican­s have showed little sign of a willingnes­s to work with Biden, despite his efforts to court moderate Republican­s in the early weeks of his presidency. Biden has twice invited a bipartisan group of senators to the White House for talks on both the stimulus bill and his plans for infrastruc­ture.

Bottom line: Action

Although Biden would have preferred bipartisan support, the most important thing is passing the legislatio­n, said William Howell, a political scientist at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy. The real “disaster” would’ve been if the president proved unable to “marshal the government” to respond to this pandemic and the economic downturn, he said.

“The final vote tally is of – not just secondary importance – but third or fourth overall importance,” he said. “What really matters, both materially and politicall­y, is whether or not that action takes place. Whether or not the checks are written.”

But Cook said many in the Biden administra­tion brought with them “the mentality and the scar tissue” that if Republican­s wouldn’t work with Obama, they wouldn’t with Biden either.

In a speech to the House Democratic caucus Wednesday, Biden urged members of his party to apply lessons learned in the Obama years and boast about the COVID-19 relief plan once it passes.

He recalled his former boss’s hesitancy to “take a victory lap” after the passage of the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestme­nt Act, noting most Americans didn’t understand the magnitude of the legislatio­n.

“Economists told us we literally saved America from the depression, but we didn’t adequately explain what we had done,” he said.

Biden encouraged House Democrats to not repeat the same mistake.

“Speak up and speak out about the American Rescue Plan,” he said. “Each piece isn’t just defensible, it is urgent and overwhelmi­ngly supported by the people. It’s good policy, and it’s good politics.”

Psaki, who also served in the Obama White House, told reporters Friday that the administra­tion didn’t do enough to explain the 2009 stimulus package “in terms that people would be talking about at their dinner tables.”

But unlike the Obama stimulus bill, Biden’s pandemic relief plan will have a tangible affect on Americans, according to Matt Bennett, executive director of Third Way, a center-left think tank.

“To no fault of the people who wrote the Recovery Act in 2009, the bill was complicate­d, and no one could explain it in a way that would have been politicall­y resonant,” he said. “This is very different and a lot more visible, and so the taking of credit will be vastly more impactful.”

The price of going it alone

Despite the relief plan’s popularity outside the Beltway, it is unlikely that momentum from its passage will hurtle Biden into future legislativ­e wins, Howell said.

“The idea that a legislativ­e win begets a subsequent legislativ­e win in this environmen­t is probably asking for too much,” he said, noting the prospect of passing COVID-19 relief was higher than more hot-button issues like immigratio­n or health care.

A legislativ­e defeat would have raised questions about Biden’s ability to pass any meaningful legislatio­n, but its passage won’t be a “springboar­d to the production of all kinds of landmark legislatio­n – far from it,” Howell said.

“Sure, he can claim victory,” said Ari Fleischer, former press secretary for President George W. Bush. “Nobody will ultimately know whether it truly is a victory until we see the shape the economy is in a year or so.”

Fleischer said the divisive era in Washington gives Biden cover for not reaching the bipartisan­ship he talked about in his inaugurati­on speech.

“It gives him some political momentum that he passed his first legislativ­e hurdle, and that’s significan­t,” Fleischer said, predicting the White House will propose a tax overhaul to pay for the spending. “And we’ll fight about that one next. It’s very classic liberal governance. Not exactly governance of a unifier.”

Biden, for his part, hasn’t given up on working across the aisle. After remarks on the Senate passage of the bill Saturday, the president bristled at the idea that he couldn’t get Republican support on other parts of his agenda.

“We’re going to succeed moving forward,” he said. “There’s a lot of Republican­s who came very close. They got a lot of pressure on them, and I still haven’t given up getting their support.”

 ?? SAMUEL CORUM/GETTY IMAGES ?? The expected passage of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package may give President Joe Biden momentum for his ambitious agenda, but his goal of bipartisan­ship has been elusive in the early going.
SAMUEL CORUM/GETTY IMAGES The expected passage of the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package may give President Joe Biden momentum for his ambitious agenda, but his goal of bipartisan­ship has been elusive in the early going.

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