This article is from the source 'rtcom' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.rt.com/usa/536401-biden-congress-democrats-infrastructure-bill/

The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
‘Doesn’t matter when’: Biden goes to Congress to convince Dems to ‘Build Back Better’ as his signature bills stall on Capitol Hill ‘Doesn’t matter when’: Biden goes to Congress to convince Dems to ‘Build Back Better’ as his signature bills stall on Capitol Hill
(17 days later)
President Joe Biden visited Capitol Hill on Friday in a bid to rally Democratic support for his ‘Build Back Better’ agenda. But the president’s signature spending bills are currently stalled amid party infighting.President Joe Biden visited Capitol Hill on Friday in a bid to rally Democratic support for his ‘Build Back Better’ agenda. But the president’s signature spending bills are currently stalled amid party infighting.
Biden spoke with lawmakers from his party on Friday afternoon, shortly before they were set to decamp from Washington after another day without the passage of two mammoth spending bills: a $1 trillion infrastructure bill that already has bipartisan support in the Senate, and a whopping $3.5 trillion bill rolling in “human infrastructure” provisions, new climate laws, welfare expansion and tax hikes.Biden spoke with lawmakers from his party on Friday afternoon, shortly before they were set to decamp from Washington after another day without the passage of two mammoth spending bills: a $1 trillion infrastructure bill that already has bipartisan support in the Senate, and a whopping $3.5 trillion bill rolling in “human infrastructure” provisions, new climate laws, welfare expansion and tax hikes.
While the first bill has bipartisan support, progressives say they won’t vote for it without a guarantee that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-California) will also put the larger bill up for a vote. While Democrats are utilizing a process called ‘budget reconciliation’ to pass the larger bill with a simple majority, which they hold in both houses of Congress, Democratic Senators Joe Manchin (West Virginia) and Kyrsten Sinema (Arizona) oppose the bill’s astronomical price tag. With control split 50-50, a defection by either would be enough to scupper its passage.While the first bill has bipartisan support, progressives say they won’t vote for it without a guarantee that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-California) will also put the larger bill up for a vote. While Democrats are utilizing a process called ‘budget reconciliation’ to pass the larger bill with a simple majority, which they hold in both houses of Congress, Democratic Senators Joe Manchin (West Virginia) and Kyrsten Sinema (Arizona) oppose the bill’s astronomical price tag. With control split 50-50, a defection by either would be enough to scupper its passage.
The content of Biden’s talks with lawmakers is unclear, though the president has already met with Manchin and Sinema in a bid to squeeze some compromise out of the pair of recalcitrant Democrats. Manchin has stated that he would support a reconciliation bill with a price tag under $1.5 trillion, along with an amendment prohibiting federal funding for abortion.The content of Biden’s talks with lawmakers is unclear, though the president has already met with Manchin and Sinema in a bid to squeeze some compromise out of the pair of recalcitrant Democrats. Manchin has stated that he would support a reconciliation bill with a price tag under $1.5 trillion, along with an amendment prohibiting federal funding for abortion.
Sinema hasn’t floated a concrete figure, but refused to sign on to a $2.1 trillion cap proposed by the White House on Thursday, according to Politico. Sinema also won’t be holding any in-person discussions with Biden on Friday, as she headed home to Arizona earlier in the day.Sinema hasn’t floated a concrete figure, but refused to sign on to a $2.1 trillion cap proposed by the White House on Thursday, according to Politico. Sinema also won’t be holding any in-person discussions with Biden on Friday, as she headed home to Arizona earlier in the day.
Biden, however, remains confident that Sinema and Manchin will eventually compromise or cave. “It doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter whether it’s in six minutes, six days, or six weeks… we’re going to get it done,” he told reporters on Friday.Biden, however, remains confident that Sinema and Manchin will eventually compromise or cave. “It doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter whether it’s in six minutes, six days, or six weeks… we’re going to get it done,” he told reporters on Friday.
Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!
Dear readers and commenters,
We have implemented a new engine for our comment section. We hope the transition goes smoothly for all of you. Unfortunately, the comments made before the change have been lost due to a technical problem. We are working on restoring them, and hoping to see you fill up the comment section with new ones. You should still be able to log in to comment using your social-media profiles, but if you signed up under an RT profile before, you are invited to create a new profile with the new commenting system.
Sorry for the inconvenience, and looking forward to your future comments,
RT Team.