Biden pitches new $1.75 trillion spending blueprint to Democrats that drops paid family leave

(Official portrait of President Joe Biden in the White House (Official White House Photo by David Lienemann)
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(Missouri Independent) – President Joe Biden is meeting with congressional Democrats on Capitol Hill Thursday morning to pitch lawmakers on a new slimmed-down framework for what would be included in a massive social reform package, according to senior administration officials.

The $1.75 trillion blueprint that Biden is presenting to Democrats includes a universal pre-K program for 3-and-4 year-olds, limits child care costs so that families do not pay more than 7% of their income, and extends funding for both for six years. Those two programs are estimated to cost $400 billion.

It would also extend for a year the expanded child tax credit; improve long-term care for seniors and people with disabilities; extend expanded tax credits for the Affordable Care Act, and provide the tax credits to 4 million uninsured people in states where Medicaid has not been expanded.

Notably, Biden’s new plan does not include paid family and medical leave, a major initiative that had been included in earlier versions of the Build Back Better plan before it was trimmed to meet demands from moderate Democrats.

Paid leave would set groundbreaking policy in the U.S., which is one of six wealthy countries in the world where no national paid parental policy exists. Most daycare centers don’t accept newborns until they are six weeks old.

The White House said that Biden developed the new plan after “hearing input from all sides and negotiating in good faith with Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema, Congressional Leadership, and a broad swath of Members of Congress” and is confident his plan could pass Congress.

Biden is set to speak to the nation at 11:30 a.m. Thursday, just before he leaves for a long-planned trip to Europe and a major climate conference. He will discuss how he plans to pass the social reforms piece of the Build Back Better bill, along with his physical infrastructure bill, aides said.

The framework he will present to Democrats also provides $550 billion for climate change policy, ranging from tax credits for clean energy to investments in making communities climate-resilient through a civilian climate corps.

The plan would be paid for with a 15% minimum tax on the corporate profits that large corporations—those with over $1 billion in profits—report to shareholders, as well as a new surtax on the income of multi-millionaires and billionaires, the wealthiest 0.02 percent of Americans, the White House said. It would apply a 5 percent rate above income of $10 million, and an additional 3 percent surtax on income above $25 million.

It’s unclear if Democrats will support the new framework, particularly Sinema of Arizona and Manchin of West Virginia, who have objected to tax raises on corporations and four weeks of paid parental leave.

House progressives have also warned that they want to see the bill’s legislative text before making a decision to vote on the package.

The leader of the House Progressive Caucus, Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., said that she has an idea of what’s in the framework, but wants to see the bill’s text, according to Capitol Hill pool reports.

“We want to see the actual text because we don’t want any confusion and misunderstandings,” she said. “My understanding is that the framework is very general. So let’s turn it into legislative text. If 90% of the text is already written as the speaker has said, then it should be very quick—we can do anywhere from two to seven days.”

Several major policy initiatives that Biden campaigned on have been stripped from the framework, such as paid parental leave, free community college, and climate change policy such as the Clean Energy Performance Program, which incentivized utilities to switch to clean energy and penalized those who don’t.

Democrats also tried to include an expansion of the Affordable Care Act to include dental benefits in Medicare. The framework Biden is expected to show to lawmakers would help reduce premiums and have Medicare cover hearing services.

Democrats have also struggled to include immigration policy in the package after the Senate parliamentarian ruled that lawmakers cannot create a pathway to citizenship for millions of undocumented people through reconciliation, the process being used for Build Back Better that requires just a simple majority vote in the evenly divided Senate.

The White House specifies that it would “reform our broken immigration system, consistent with the Senate’s reconciliation rules.” Some advocates have pushed for lawmakers to overturn the parliamentarian’s ruling in the interests of getting immigration reform enacted.

The framework Biden is presenting to lawmakers would provide $100 billion to help reduce immigration backlogs, expand legal representation and help with processing at the border.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is set to hold a press conference late Thursday morning, but no vote is scheduled yet for the massive social reform package.

(Official White House Photo by David Lienemann)


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Ariana Figueroa

https://www.missouriindependent.com

Ariana Figueroa covers the nation's capital for States Newsroom, a network of state-based nonprofit news outlets that includes The Missouri Independent. Her areas of coverage include politics and policy, lobbying, elections, and campaign finance. Before joining States Newsroom, Ariana covered public health and chemical policy on Capitol Hill for E&E News. As a Florida native, she's worked for the Miami Herald and her hometown paper, the Tampa Bay Times. Her work has also appeared in the Chicago Tribune and NPR. She is a graduate of the University of Florida.

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