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Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill Passes Senate Vote for Debate

The Senate voted 67-32 to start official debate on the bipartisan infrastructure bill. Although the bill is not fully written, passing this vote was key for the deal to move forward.

U.S. Capitol building at night
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(TNS) — The Senate on Wednesday cleared the first procedural hurdle toward enacting an expansive proposal to build and repair the nation’s roads, bridges and broadband Internet networks. But significant challenges remain.

The Senate voted 67-32 to open formal debate on the bipartisan infrastructure proposal. The procedural motion, which needed 60 votes, had support from 17 Republicans as well as 48 Democrats and the two independents who caucus with them.

After weeks of negotiation, the vote is a decisive victory for the first portion of President Joe Biden’s “Build Back Better” infrastructure proposal.

According to the White House, the proposal would amount to the largest-ever federal investment in public transit, the largest investment in passenger rail since the creation of Amtrak and the largest bridge investment since the interstate highway system was constructed.

Despite wide bipartisan support for improving the nation’s infrastructure, the bill, which is not yet completely written, will face further tests in the coming days as it goes through the Senate and later, when it goes to the House.

A separate, follow-on infrastructure bill that Democrats plan to push through without GOP support will likely be even more difficult.

Wednesday’s successful vote to open debate on the bipartisan plan is no guarantee it will pass.

In addition to the risk of losing support from those Republicans who voted yes on Wednesday, a handful of Democrats have only committed to starting the process, and said they wanted to review the whole bill before agreeing to support final passage.

Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, a lead Democratic negotiator, acknowledged it would not get every Democratic vote. “Anytime you do a bipartisan deal that doesn’t go through regular order, people are understandably upset,” he said.

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, a moderate Democrat, told the Arizona Republic she would support starting the process on the bipartisan bill but still had concerns about the separate, second infrastructure bill Democrats planned to pursue without GOP support.

A previous attempt to start formal debate on the bipartisan plan failed last week when Republicans balked at Schumer’s attempt to advance the bill before the final details had been hammered out.

Republicans who backed the proposal say that although they oppose Biden’s broader infrastructure initiative — which includes improving health care and social safety-net programs — they support investing in the hard infrastructure projects, like roads and bridges.

“The need is dire,” said Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, the lead Republican in the negotiations, citing 46,000 structurally deficient bridges in America.

The proposal includes $550 billion in new spending, down from $579 billion in prior drafts, according to Democrats and Republicans. Earlier drafts envisioned a total of $1.2 trillion in funds, after including the reallocation of previously approved spending.

Biden, touring a Mack truck plant in Pennsylvania on Wednesday, told reporters he felt “confident” about the emerging agreement.

The plan includes $110 billion in new funding for roads, bridges and surface transportation projects over the next five years. Another $73 billion will go to upgrading power infrastructure; $65 billion for expanding high-speed Internet throughout the country; and $55 billion for the expansion of clean drinking water.

The plan also includes $50 billion for what the White House called resilience and water infrastructure, such as funding to protect against droughts, floods and cybersecurity intrusions. White House officials provided no further details.

Further spending would pay to make roads safer for pedestrians and cyclists, to create an electric vehicle charging network, to modernize existing transit and rail systems, and to secure infrastructure for climate change and cyber attacks.

Biden and the group of bipartisan senators announced a month ago they had reached an agreement on an infrastructure framework.

But it quickly became clear that that framework was incomplete. The group, with the addition of White House staffers, continued to meet on Capitol Hill to iron out details. For more than a week, members of the negotiating group said they were close to a deal.

White House chief of staff Ron Klain spoke several times a day with Schumer, while presidential counselor Steve Richetti huddled for the last several days with Portman to hammer out the final details.

The president, after spending much of his weekend working the phones, met Tuesday morning at the White House with Sinema, knowing a final agreement was close.

Biden’s Build Back Better plan is a $4.1 trillion infrastructure proposal to build roads, water pipes and broadband Internet networks as well as to reshape the nation’s social safety net.

Democrats hope to approve about $3.5 trillion for the rest of Biden’s plan under a budget process known as reconciliation that doesn’t allow for a GOP filibuster.

That part of the plan includes an ambitious list of new and expanded social programs, such as child and elder care and enhanced Medicare benefits. With Republicans opposing these programs, Democrats must rely solely on their own caucus for the votes.

Because Democrats will have no margin of error, Sinema’s skepticism about this second bill could prove problematic.

“I do not support a bill that costs $3.5 trillion — and in the coming months, I will work in good faith to develop this legislation with my colleagues and the administration to strengthen Arizona’s economy and help Arizona’s everyday families get ahead,” Sinema said.

The House has not yet taken up either proposal. Amid concern from progressives that Senate moderates might balk at the partisan proposal, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., has said the House won’t take up the bipartisan bill until the companion legislation gets through the Senate.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said Wednesday that the bipartisan bill will not advance in the House “unless it has a reconciliation package, with our priorities, alongside it.”

©2021 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.