Biden to promote U.S. infrastructure spending in bipartisan Kentucky
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[January 02, 2023]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Democratic U.S. President Joe Biden will join
Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell in a Wednesday event
in Kentucky aimed at highlighting the effects of the $1 trillion 2021
infrastructure bill, a White House official said Sunday.
The pair, along with Republican Ohio Governor Mike DeWine and Democratic
Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear, are to appear at a ceremony highlighting
the $1.64 billion in funding awarded to for the Brent Spence Bridge
Corridor Project connecting the two states across the Ohio River.
Funding for the crossing includes a new bridge and rehabilitation of the
heavily congested 60-year-old one.
The new bridge is intended to rehabilitate a heavily congested
60-year-old span and add a second crossing.
McConnell, of Kentucky, was among the Republicans who voted for the
infrastructure law, which was passed in November 2021, while many House
Republicans including Representative Kevin McCarthy opposed it.
McConnell said last week in a statement that "building a new companion
bridge on the Brent Spence Bridge corridor will be one of the bill's
crowning accomplishments."
The event is set to take place the day after McCarthy's Republicans take
the majority in the House, breaking Democrats' control of Congress and
ushering in a period of divided government.
Kentucky and Ohio had sought funding for the project for years.
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U.S. President Barack Obama speaks in
front of the dilapidated Brent Spence Bridge during a visit to
Cincinnati, Ohio September 22, 2011. REUTERS/John Sommers II
"This project will not only ease the traffic nightmare that drivers
have suffered through for years, but it will also help ensure that
the movement of the supply chain doesn't stall on this nationally
significant corridor," DeWine said.
Then President Barack Obama visited the crossing in 2011 and urged
Congress to pass a jobs bill costing billions of dollars that he
said could include rebuilding the bridge, which by then had already
been declared functionally obsolete.
During his 2016 run for the White House, Donald Trump backed funding
for the project, but he failed during his four years in office to
secure money for it or to pass the big infrastructure bill he
repeatedly promised.
The 2021 infrastructure law includes $27 billion over five years to
fix and replace thousands of aging U.S. bridges.
Other administration officials including Vice President Kamala
Harris will also tout infrastructure awards in other events this
week.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Bradley Perrett)
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