Republicans nix U.S. infrastructure debate, which could resume next week
		
		 
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		 [July 22, 2021] 
		By Susan Cornwell 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Senate 
		Republicans blocked a move to open debate on Wednesday on a $1.2 
		trillion bipartisan infrastructure measure that is a top priority for 
		Democratic President Joe Biden, but the chamber was poised to take it up 
		again as early as Monday. 
		 
		Republicans objected to opening debate on the bill https://www.reuters.com/world/us/whats-us-senates-12-trillion-infrastructure-plan-2021-06-24 
		because it was not yet written, although it is not unusual for the 
		chamber to vote on a skeleton "shell" bill to move the legislative 
		process along. 
		 
		Fifty-one senators voted against opening debate after Democratic 
		Majority Leader Chuck Schumer changed his vote to "no" from "yes" at the 
		last minute, saying that would allow him under Senate rules to move to 
		reconsider the vote at a future time. Senate rules require 60 votes to 
		advance most legislation. 
		 
		Senator Rob Portman, the leading Republican in the bipartisan group that 
		developed the plan, said 11 Republicans signed a letter to Schumer 
		telling him they would be willing to vote "yes" as soon as next week.
		 
		  
		
		  
		
		 
		They hope to have resolved outstanding issues with the proposal by then, 
		including how to pay for it.  
		 
		"We're voting no today, because we're not ready, but we're saying we do 
		want to take up this bill as soon as we are. We think that'll be 
		Monday," Portman said before the vote. 
		 
		In a statement, the bipartisan group said it was close to a final 
		agreement on the bill, which includes $600 billion in new spending on 
		roads, bridges and other infrastructure.  
		 
		Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, one of the group's members, said in a 
		statement that the senators had made significant progress and were 
		nearing a final agreement. 
		 
		But Senator Mitt Romney, another Republican in the group, said he did 
		not expect to have a full text by Monday: "We'll have an agreement and a 
		lot of text, but not all of it. It's going to take quite a while to get 
		the full text. It'll be hundreds of pages." 
		
            Schumer had insisted on holding the procedural vote 
		on Wednesday, saying that after weeks of negotiators haggling over 
		details, it was time to start debating the measure on the Senate floor.
		 
		 
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			Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell speaks to reporters following 
			a weekly Senate lunch at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., July 
			20, 2021. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz 
            
			
			  
            "Senators should feel comfortable voting to move forward today," he 
			said. 
			 
			Some liberal Democrats have said they believed Republicans were 
			deliberately slow-walking a measure that they could ultimately vote 
			against. 
			 
			TWO-STEP APPROACH 
			 
			Both parties have used incomplete bills in the past to get floor 
			action moving or satisfy technical requirements. Republicans notably 
			used that technique in attempting to repeal the Affordable Care Act. 
			 
			Biden has deemed the bipartisan infrastructure bill essential. He 
			also wants Congress to pass a separate $3.5 trillion budget 
			initiative that allows legislation to be developed on climate change 
			and social spending provisions that are anathema to most 
			Republicans. 
			 
			Democrats want to push the larger measure through Congress along 
			party lines as soon as the bipartisan bill is finished. Republicans 
			argued that two-step approach undercuts the bipartisanship of the 
			infrastructure bill. 
			 
			Schumer had hoped to get both through the Senate before the August 
			recess. Both parties are acutely aware of the congressional 
			elections in November 2022, which will determine who controls 
			Congress for the second half of Biden's term. 
			 
			(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Additional reporting by David Morgan 
			and Makini Brice; Editing by Scott Malone, Sonya Hepinstall and 
			Peter Cooney) 
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