Progressive frustration with the Democratic leadership’s slow-walking of climate and infrastructure legislation is reaching a boiling point this week as the Biden administration—wedded to the pursuit of a bipartisan bill—continues to hold out hope for a deal with Republican lawmakers, even as they put forth woefully inadequate counteroffers.
“This is completely unacceptable,” Evan Weber, political director of the youth-led Sunrise Movement, said Tuesday in response to a report indicating that Democrats—who narrowly control both chambers of Congress—don’t believe they can complete work on an infrastructure package by September 30, the end of the fiscal year.
“Now is the time to go big and bold. Mitch McConnell said 100% of his focus is on blocking this administration—so it’s time to move forward without Republicans.”
—Rep. Pramila Jayapal
“This is how you lose your majority,” Weber added.
Waleed Shahid, a spokesperson for Justice Democrats, echoed Weber’s warning of potential voter backlash at the polls if Democrats fail to deliver on their promises.
“This is an impending disaster for Democrats,” Shahid tweeted.
The White House and Republican lawmakers have made no discernible progress in infrastructure talks since President Joe Biden unveiled his $2.2 trillion opening offer at the end of March, a package progressives criticized as insufficient. Late last week, as Common Dreams reported, Biden drew the ire of environmentalists and other critics by shaving $550 billion off his initial plan in a bid to attract GOP support.
But Republicans were nowhere near satisfied with the cut, which slashed proposed spending on manufacturing, research and development, broadband expansion, and other elements of the package.
On Thursday, as ABC News reported, “Senate Republicans intend to send President Joe Biden a nearly $1 trillion counterproposal on infrastructure spending” in the latest effort to work toward a bipartisan compromise before Biden’s soft Memorial Day deadline.
“Talks stalled Friday after Republicans flatly rejected a $1.7 trillion offer from the White House, a pared down version of Biden’s American Jobs Plan,” ABC noted. “Republicans opposed the overall price of the White House package, but also rejected the proposed White House funding mechanism.”
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.)—the GOP’s lead infrastructure negotiator—have said Republicans are unwilling to accept any proposal that alters the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, a key achievement of former President Donald Trump that predominately rewarded the rich and large corporations.
In the original version of the American Jobs Plan, Biden proposed hiking the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28% and the top individual tax rate from 37% to 39.6%.
“There is no chance 10 Senate Republicans will vote for any major [Democratic] bill—not infrastructure, not health, not climate, not immigration,” climate journalist David Roberts tweeted Tuesday. “It is wild how many people and institutions are involved in what is effectively an elaborate bit of theater, pretending otherwise.”
For weeks, progressive leaders in Congress have warned Biden that the GOP is not negotiating in good faith and urged the administration and Democratic leaders to go it alone on infrastructure using the budget reconciliation process, by which bills can pass with a simple-majority vote.
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