Biden to tout climate change, prescription drugs law at White House
event
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[September 13, 2022]
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden
will celebrate his climate change and drug pricing law, The Inflation
Reduction Act, on Tuesday with an event at the White House to highlight
Democrats' commitment to progressive priorities ahead of the November
election.
Biden signed the $430 billion bill, seen as the biggest climate change
package in U.S. history, into law last month in a low-key ceremony.
The Tuesday event on the White House South Lawn will bring together more
lawmakers and interest groups who worked at getting it passed, and give
Biden an opportunity to talk about key elements of the law that are
important to his political base.
He will also use it to take aim at Republicans. Biden plans to argue
they should have supported the package but instead "unanimously opposed
lowering costs for the American people," the White House said in a
preview of his remarks.
Republicans suggest the legislation will lead to higher energy prices
and aggressive audits from the Internal Revenue Service.
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In addition to providing incentives for the clean energy industry, the
law allows Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices for the elderly,
seeks to ensure corporations and wealthy people pay their taxes through
beefed-up IRS resources, and aims to combat inflation by reducing the
federal deficit.
Biden had hoped to secure a trillion-dollar-plus "Build Back Better"
bill with measures to fight global warming and tackle other social
issues but could not get it through the 100-member U.S. Senate, which is
evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans and whose rules require
60 votes to advance most legislation.
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers
remarks to tout the benefits of the "Infrastructure Investment and
Jobs Act," at Boston Logan International Airport's Terminal E in
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., September 12, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque/File Photo
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Support from Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia, a conservative
Democrat who opposed the more expensive bill, helped get the smaller
one passed. At the Aug. 17 signing ceremony, Biden gave Manchin the
pen he used to sign the legislation into law.
As a presidential candidate Biden promised to make fighting global
warming a top priority. He returned the United States to the
international Paris climate accord, from which Republican President
Donald Trump had withdrawn, and has sought to revamp the U.S.
economy to prioritize clean energy, electric vehicles, and lower
greenhouse gas emissions.
Younger, left-leaning voters are especially eager to fight climate
change, and the president has sought to appeal to them ahead of the
congressional elections in November in which Democrats risk losing
control of the House of Representatives and Senate.
Inflation is a top political headache for Biden, though, and one of
the reasons the bill was named for efforts to fight it.
A key measure of inflation, August's consumer price index, will be
released on Tuesday and is expected to show a decline from July, led
by falling gasoline prices.
U.S. consumer prices, which have been climbing at the fastest pace
in four decades, rose 8.5% over the 12 months through July.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Tim Ahmann and Gerry Doyle)
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