Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said earlier on Thursday
the chamber would convene on Saturday to vote on a motion to
proceed and then begin debate on the bill.
The bill known as the Inflation Reduction Act, introduced last
week by Schumer and Democratic Senator Joe Manchin, is a key
priority for Democrats and President Joe Biden ahead of
November's election battle for control of the U.S. Congress.
The act will help people save money on prescription drugs and
health premiums, Biden said in a statement on Thursday.
"It will make our tax system more fair by making corporations
pay a minimum tax," he said.
With the 100-seat Senate split 50-50, Democrats plan to pass the
bill without Republican support through a parliamentary process
known as reconciliation.
But they cannot afford to lose support from a single lawmaker.
Sinema's agreement was a critical breakthrough. Another worry is
COVID-19 - senators can only vote in person, so Schumer will
need his full caucus to be present and healthy to pass the
measure if Republicans remain unified in opposition.
Sinema said she had reached an agreement with other Democrats to
remove a provision that would impose new taxes on carried
interest. Without the provision, private equity and hedge fund
financiers can continue to pay the lower capital gains tax rate
on much of their income, instead of the higher income tax rate
paid by wage-earners.
She cautioned that her agreement to "move forward" was subject
to the review of the Senate parliamentarian. The parliamentarian
has to approve the contents of the bill to allow it to move
forward through the "reconciliation" process that Democrats plan
to use to bypass the chamber's normal rules requiring 60
Senators to agree to advance most legislation.
Schumer, in a statement, said, he believed he now had the votes
to pass the bill.
"The agreement preserves the major components of the Inflation
Reduction Act, including reducing prescription drug costs,
fighting climate change, closing tax loopholes exploited by big
corporations and the wealthy, and reducing the deficit by $300
billion," Schumer said.
(Reporting by Scott Malone, Additional reporting by Shivani
Tanna in Bengaluru; Editing by Daniel Wallis, Shri Navaratnam
and Tom Hogue)
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