U.S. Republicans expected to unveil $1 trillion infrastructure plan
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[May 27, 2021] By
David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senate
Republicans, hoping to strike a deal with President Joe Biden on
infrastructure, are expected to unveil a new offer on Thursday that
would spend about $1 trillion to revitalize America's roads, bridges and
broadband systems.
The plan, from a group of six Republicans led by Senator Shelley Moore
Capito, represents their counter-offer to a week-old $1.7 trillion
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/white-house-says-it-has-pared-down-infrastructure-proposal-17-trillion-2021-05-21
White House proposal that slashed more than $500 billion from Biden's
original $2.25 trillion plan in a bid to reach a bipartisan agreement.
"Hopefully, it will move the ball along," Capito told reporters on
Wednesday.
Biden has imposed an unofficial end-of-May deadline on the negotiations,
and some Senate Democrats have been pushing to go it alone if
Republicans do not reach an agreement soon.
The White House has expressed willingness to negotiate on some of the
finer details but has said it wants a large package that expands the
definition of infrastructure to include items such as free community
college and paid family leave.
To pay for it, the administration has said it is open to any ideas as
long as they don't include asking Americans earning less than $400,000
to pick up the bill.
Capito, the top Republican on the Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee, would not confirm that the new proposal calls for spending $1
trillion. But other Republicans have said the offer would match
parameters set by Biden at a White House meeting on May 13, when they
said he mentioned a $1 trillion figure.
Her 20-member committee on Wednesday unanimously approved a $304 billion
surface transportation bill that she said would anchor the Republican
proposal.
Republicans initially proposed a $568 billion https://www.reuters.com/business/autos-transportation/republicans-vs-biden-whats-their-infrastructure-plans-2021-04-22,
five-year plan and increased the top line to around $800 billion over
eight years when the two sides met on Capitol Hill on May 18, according
to the lawmakers.
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U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) asks questions during a
Senate Appropriations Subcommittee hearing to examine the FY 2022
budget request for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in
the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, U.S. May 19, 2021.
Greg Nash/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
A $1 trillion proposal would still leave the two sides hundreds of billions of
dollars apart, with no agreement on the scope of a package or how to pay for it.
Republicans want the package limited to roads, bridges, airports, waterways and
broadband access. The group rejected the White House's $1.7 trillion offer,
saying it still contained social spending provisions and tax hikes on U.S.
corporations that they have opposed.
Republicans are expected to propose that a bipartisan package be funded with
unspent COVID-19 relief money.
Republican Senator Mitt Romney said the Capito group's proposal parallels a
separate bipartisan proposal that he has been working on with other
congressional Republicans and Democrats including Senator Joe Manchin.
The bipartisan group could step forward with their own proposal, which is also
expected to range near the $1 trillion mark, if talks between the White House
and Capito's group fail.
"They're on the front burner, we're on the back burner," Romney said.
(Reporting by David Morgan, Additional reporting by Susan Cornwell, Jarrett
Renshaw and Nandita Bose; Editing by Scott Malone and Cynthia Osterman)
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