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Analysis-Biden ambitions on infrastructure, voting, guns hit Washington buzz saw

Published 06/09/2021, 04:29 PM
Updated 06/09/2021, 04:36 PM
© Reuters. U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks to U.S. Air Force personnel and their families stationed at  RAF Mildenhall, ahead of the G7 Summit, near Mildenhall, Britain June 9, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

© Reuters. U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks to U.S. Air Force personnel and their families stationed at RAF Mildenhall, ahead of the G7 Summit, near Mildenhall, Britain June 9, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

By Jarrett Renshaw

(Reuters) - President Joe Biden embarked on his first foreign trip on Wednesday, leaving behind an uncertain domestic agenda with many of his most ambitious pledges on the U.S. economy, civil rights and climate change facing massive challenges.

Hope for a bipartisan infrastructure bill faded this week after a group of Republican lawmakers offered the Democratic president a third of the investment he has sought.

An ambitious elections and voting rights bill is on life support after a pivotal Democratic senator shunned it. Democratic legislation on policing reform, gun control and immigration has stalled. Global minimum tax? International allies say yes to Biden, but Republicans at home say no.

While his party controls the White House and both chambers of Congress - allowing him to narrowly win congressional approval in March of a major pandemic-related relief bill - Biden has found other goals elusive. A difficult barrier is the log jam in the Senate, whose rules make it hard to advance legislation without Republican support.

"In a 50-50 Senate, it was never gonna be easy. The place we are now was predicted and predictable," said Matt Bennett, a vice president with Third Way, a centrist think.

Most legislation requires 60 votes to move forward in the 100-seat Senate.

Biden came into office in January promising to harness the power of bipartisanship for grand action to tackle COVID-19, fortify the American economy and fight racial injustice.

The early months of his presidency, following a turbulent four years under former President Donald Trump, demonstrate that bringing Republicans and Democrats together - or even Democrats and Democrats - in a U.S. capital riven with partisanship is no simple task.

Biden has made significant progress on the pandemic. His administration has helped facilitate vaccinations, with more than 60 percent of Americans age 12 and above receiving at least one dose https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccinations and 50 percent fully vaccinated, even as other nations struggle.

The U.S. economy - battered like so many other nations by the pandemic - has rebounded under Biden more quickly than previously expected, growing 6.4% in the first quarter of the year on the back of his $1.8 trillion stimulus package, which was passed in Congress without Republican support.

This summer will test whether Biden and his Democratic allies in Congress can pass some of the rest of his agenda - proposals that polls show are embraced by many Americans but are rejected by most Republican lawmakers.

"If Democrats can't come out of this year without saying they solved the problems they were elected to solve, that will be trouble," said a Democratic strategist who coordinates with the White House, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The path to do so through Congress is not clear, the strategist added.

White House officials are exploring multiple options on passing a major jobs and infrastructure package after Biden on Tuesday ended negotiations with a group of Republicans led by Senator Shelley Moore Capito. Biden's proposal includes spending on infrastructure projects like roads and bridges as well as on climate change and social programs.

One option is a two-track approach that would include a smaller but bipartisan bill and then a larger spending plan advanced by Democrats without Republican support using an avenue that requires a simple majority vote in the Senate for certain types of legislation.

Democrats on key House of Representatives committees are moving budget bills that could serve as the foundation for the larger spending legislation. Separately, a bipartisan group of 10 senators that includes Republicans Mitt Romney and Rob Portman and Democrats Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema is trying to craft infrastructure legislation both parties could embrace.

Democrats control the evenly split Senate only because Vice President Kamala Harris can cast a tie-breaking vote. Manchin, a centrist Democrat from Republican-leaning West Virginia, has emerged as a pivotal figure in the chamber. His announcement on Sunday that he opposes the voting bill embraced by most in his party might doom it.

Other Democrats have called the measure essential to protect American democracy in light of voting restrictions being implemented in Republican-led states in the aftermath of Trump's false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him through widespread voting fraud.

Manchin also reiterated his opposition to ending the Senate filibuster rule that establishes the 60-vote hurdle. Some Democrats have called for ditching the filibuster to enable passage of Biden's agenda items, from voting rights to police reform to gun control.

© Reuters. U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks to U.S. Air Force personnel and their families stationed at  RAF Mildenhall, ahead of the G7 Summit, near Mildenhall, Britain June 9, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

There remains a chance that the policing legislation may pass, given progress in talks between Democratic Senator Cory Booker and Republican Senator Tim Scott. It would create a national registry of police misconduct, ban chokeholds and no-knock warrants, and may overhaul legal protections for police officers.

"Beyond that, it's hard to see anything else happening" in Congress this year, Bennett said.

Latest comments

washington will do what they please until we as a country speak up for ourselves
i do not agree to call it voting restrictions at all.. in most civilized countries ID checks are perfectly acceptable.. those are not restrictions, but Standard voting requirements
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