In speech, Biden to shift from Build Back Better bill to 4-point
economic rescue plan
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[March 01, 2022]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe
Biden will shift emphasis away from his Build Back Better spending plan
when he delivers his State of the Union address on Tuesday, focusing
instead on a four-point plan to save the U.S. economy, administration
officials said.
"It's not about the name of the bill," said an administration official.
"It's about the ideas. It's about lowering costs for families."
Dominating the news is Russia's invasion of Ukraine, a crisis that has
redirected Biden's attention from the administration's effort to revive
his domestic economic agenda ahead of Nov. 8 congressional elections.
Yet, with his approval ratings wilting, Biden is retooling his push for
broad tax-and-spending changes in a new way.
Many of the policies he promotes will seem familiar - raising Pell
grants for education, raising the federal minimum wage to $15 and
creating a national paid family medical leave program - but the
messaging is different.
"The president will call on Congress to send him a bill that lowers
costs and lowers the deficit without delay," the White House said in a
preview of the speech. "American families need relief from higher costs,
and they need it now."
Out is talk of remaking society with a Build Back Better social-spending
agenda.
In is talk of restraining deficits and putting an end to inflation, two
of the concerns that Democrat Joe Manchin, the swing vote in the U.S.
Senate, thought the administration had failed to emphasize enough.
Manchin's opposition tanked a package of Biden economic reforms that
were aimed at working women and families, paring down the country's
massive income inequality and meeting climate goals.
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President Joe Biden walks from Marine One upon his return to the
White House in Washington, U.S., February 28, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
Biden's speech will call for many of
the reforms on housing, education and climate to be passed under the
rubric of a four-point plan: moving goods cheaper and faster;
reducing everyday costs; promoting competition; and eliminating
barriers to jobs.
Biden will commit to a number of initiatives related to his $1
trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill, including repairing 65,000
miles (105,000 kilometers) of roads and 1,500 bridges. He also will
ask Congress to complete work on bills he hopes will make the U.S.
economy more competitive against China.
Biden will also argue that ocean shipping is dominated by a small
number of foreign-owned companies which are increasing costs too
much and announce steps by agencies including the Department of
Justice to promote competition in that space. The administration
estimates that rising shipping costs will add 1% to consumer prices
over the coming year.
He will also announce plans to increase safety inspections at
nursing homes to reduce their cost and bad patient outcomes,
especially those owned by private equity firms. He also wants the
federal government to hire more people based on their skills instead
of educational qualifications alone.
Rising costs have threatened the economic recovery from the
coronavirus pandemic and undermined Biden's favorability with voters
as a steward of the economy.
In the 12 months through January, the CPI jumped 7.5%, the biggest
year-on-year increase since February 1982. Biden's approval rating,
meanwhile, sits at 43%, which is close to the lowest level of his
presidency according to Reuters/Ipsos polling.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Nandita Bose; Editing by Heather
Timmons and Howard Goller)
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