It almost derailed the bipartisan infrastructure bill’s passage.
As Biden seeks to anoint himself the next Franklin Roosevelt, he should avoid repeating some of his predecessor’s mistakes.
Party leaders hoping to pass the infrastructure and social policy bills in tandem look to a similar maneuver from 2010 that secured the Affordable Care Act.
The $1 trillion package that passed in the Senate on Tuesday would be a “generational investment” if enacted into law, but not quite “the largest in history,” as some have said.
We must sweep away the regulations that keep us from building housing and infrastructure.
Lead pipes had tainted Newark’s drinking water. Now it is close to replacing nearly all those lines.
The Senate’s convincing passage of a trillion-dollar infrastructure plan was vindication of President Biden’s commitment to bipartisanship, but to make it law, he will need Democrats in lock step.
President Biden celebrated the Senate’s passage of a $1 trillion package to upgrade roads, bridges, rail and water systems as a win for bipartisanship in American government. The bill now goes to the House.
The Senate passed a sweeping $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure package, following weeks of negotiations and debate over the largest federal investment in the nation’s public works system in more than a decade.
The approval came after months of negotiations and despite deficit concerns, reflecting an appetite in both parties for the long-awaited spending package.
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