Manchin memo reveals he never intended to support progressive economic package
As revealed in a July 28 memo, Sen. Joe Manchin never planned to vote for the $3.5 trillion reconciliation package. | AP photo

Sen. Joe Manchin admitted Thursday, ahead of a planned but scuttled House vote on the Senate-passed bipartisan infrastructure bill, that it had been corporate Democrats’ plan all along to first secure passage of their fossil fuel-friendly legislation and then undermine the party’s more ambitious reconciliation package that proposes investing up to $3.5 trillion over a decade in clean energy and the social safety net.

The conservative West Virginia Democrat told reporters Thursday that on July 28, he secured a signed agreement from Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., outlining his conditions for voting on the final reconciliation bill.

A spokesperson for Schumer, meanwhile, told Politico that “Schumer never agreed to any of the conditions Sen. Manchin laid out; he merely acknowledged where Sen. Manchin was on the subject at the time.”

In addition to demanding a topline figure no higher than $1.5 trillion, something he reiterated on Thursday, Manchin said in July that he wanted to delay debate on the reconciliation package until Oct. 1.

The July 28 memo from Manchin to Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced that West Virginia senator had no intention of voting for the progressive economic package, the Build Back Better Act. | via Manchin’s office

Meanwhile, a small group of corporate-funded House Democrats—led by Rep. Josh Gottheimer (N.J.) and supported by Manchin and fellow right-wing Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (Ariz.)—in August pressured Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to bring the Bipartisan Infrastructure Framework (BIF) to the floor by Sept. 27 in exchange for their votes on the $3.5 trillion budget resolution that enabled lawmakers to draft the Build Back Better Act, as the reconciliation package has since been named.

Critics were quick to point out the significance of Manchin’s revelation.

“It sure feeds the idea that their goal is to pass BIF then bail on reconciliation,” noted former Senate staffer Adam Jentleson, now executive director of the Battle Born Collective, a progressive messaging firm.

Ezra Levin, co-founder and co-executive director of Indivisible, a progressive advocacy group, expressed gratitude for the Congressional Progressive Caucus, which has vowed to secure President Joe Biden’s entire domestic policy agenda by voting down the bipartisan physical infrastructure bill until Congress passes the popular Build Back Better Act—a broader social infrastructure package that would fund climate action and anti-poverty measures by raising taxes on corporations and the rich—through the filibuster-proof budget reconciliation process.

The exact timing for the full House to take up the BIF remains unclear, since Pelosi pulled the plug on a Thursday night vote after progressives threatened to withhold their support. Their pledge to block the bipartisan bill until it is relinked with the reconciliation package is consistent with the deal that Democratic Party leaders outlined months ago to keep both pieces of legislation connected and advance them together.

In June, Pelosi said that the House would not take up either piece of legislation until the Senate passed both. Last month, she successfully got Gottheimer and the other holdouts to vote for the $3.5 trillion budget blueprint. In order to secure their support, however, Pelosi agreed to hold a late-September vote on the Senate-passed Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, as the BIF is also known.

Pelosi’s decision on Monday to schedule a vote on the bipartisan bill even though the reconciliation package is not yet ready, let alone approved—a reversal of her earlier promise to not decouple the two pieces of legislation—has been sharply rebuked by progressives in the House as well as Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.

As Sanders said Tuesday, if the bipartisan infrastructure bill is passed on its own, it would “be in violation of an agreement that was reached within the Democratic Caucus in Congress.”

“More importantly,” Sanders warned, “it will end all leverage that we have to pass a major reconciliation bill.”

“That means there will be no serious effort to address the long-neglected crises facing the working families of our country, the children, the elderly, the sick, and the poor,” he added. “It also means that Congress will continue to ignore the existential threat to our country and planet with regard to climate change.”

Read the Manchin Memo.

via Common Dreams


CONTRIBUTOR

Kenny Stancil
Kenny Stancil

Kenny Stancil is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

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