U.S. Senate poised to pass $1 trillion infrastructure bill, debate $3.5
trillion budget plan
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[August 10, 2021] By
Richard Cowan and David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate on
Tuesday is set to hand President Joe Biden a $1 trillion victory when it
votes to pass one of the largest infrastructure investment bills in
decades and then launches debate on a budget framework aimed at setting
the stage for $3.5 trillion in additional investments.
Taken together, the measures, if eventually enacted into law, would
jump-start road and bridge-building projects across the United States
over the next five years and new social programs over the next decade.
Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer late on Monday set the
vote on the bipartisan infrastructure bill for 11 a.m. (1500 GMT) on
Tuesday.
If the Senate, as expected, passes the bill, many rural communities
would be in line to get broadband internet service, potentially boosting
their economies.
Once passed, the legislation would go to the Democratic-controlled House
of Representatives for consideration sometime this fall.
An around-the-clock session could then be in store for the Senate as it
aims to debate and pass the larger, $3.5 trillion budget plan.
In order to move through the evenly divided Senate without Republican
support, Democrats aim to employ a "reconciliation" procedure that would
allow them to advance the budget plan this week and implementing
legislation later this year on simple majority votes.
The budget plan would provide various Senate committees with top-line
spending levels for a wide range of federal initiatives, including
helping the elderly get home healthcare and more families afford early
childhood education.
It also would provide tuition-free community college and foster major
investments in programs to significantly reduce carbon emissions blamed
for climate change.
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The sun rises on the
U.S. Capitol dome before Joe Biden's presidential inauguration in
Washington, U.S., January 20, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File
Photo
Later, Senate committees would have to fill in the details for scores of federal
programs.
The budget blueprint was formally unveiled on Monday, the same day a U.N.
climate panel warned that global warming was reaching emergency levels, or what
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres described as a "code red for
humanity."
Referring to the budget initiative, Democratic Senator Gary Peters, who
represents the auto-manufacturing state of Michigan, said during debate on
Monday: "Not only will this set us on a path to a more sustainable future, it
helps grow America's domestic manufacturing sector."
Republicans, however, have dismissed the Democrats' budget plan as a "socialist"
waste of money. They vow to oppose it.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the top Democrat in Congress, has warned that the
Senate must pass both the $1 trillion infrastructure bill and the $3.5 trillion
measures before it will act.
Senate passage of the infrastructure bill and the budget plan would clear the
way for it to begin a month-long summer break.
When Congress returns in September, it will not only debate the large investment
measures but have to fund government activities for the fiscal year beginning on
Oct. 1, increase Washington's borrowing authority and possibly try to pass a
voting reform bill.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan and David Morgan; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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