Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like neither bill will survive.
Infrastructure would if they would unshackle it from that bloated Build Back Better bill.
Its already done the hard part of passing the Senate. The House is a rubber-stamp and they already have GOP support anyway.
Well no, it's not going to pass the house. If it goes to vote on Sept. 27 as planned, almost all republicans will vote against it (it will get maybe 5 GOP votes), and 50-70 democrats will vote against it.
Why would the Democrats vote against it? It's their freaking bill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like neither bill will survive.
Infrastructure would if they would unshackle it from that bloated Build Back Better bill.
Its already done the hard part of passing the Senate. The House is a rubber-stamp and they already have GOP support anyway.
Well no, it's not going to pass the house. If it goes to vote on Sept. 27 as planned, almost all republicans will vote against it (it will get maybe 5 GOP votes), and 50-70 democrats will vote against it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like neither bill will survive.
Infrastructure would if they would unshackle it from that bloated Build Back Better bill.
Its already done the hard part of passing the Senate. The House is a rubber-stamp and they already have GOP support anyway.
What is bloated about it? It is $3.5T over 10 Years that is generally revenue neutral, so it is drop in the bucket compared to the unfunded 2017 tax cuts, which have ballooned our debt by $8T.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like neither bill will survive.
Infrastructure would if they would unshackle it from that bloated Build Back Better bill.
Its already done the hard part of passing the Senate. The House is a rubber-stamp and they already have GOP support anyway.
Well no, it's not going to pass the house. If it goes to vote on Sept. 27 as planned, almost all republicans will vote against it (it will get maybe 5 GOP votes), and 50-70 democrats will vote against it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like neither bill will survive.
Infrastructure would if they would unshackle it from that bloated Build Back Better bill.
Its already done the hard part of passing the Senate. The House is a rubber-stamp and they already have GOP support anyway.
Anonymous wrote:I am very curious to see how this all shakes out. Manchin is talking a good game, but in he end he needs some kind of infrastructure bull to pass. For all his grandstanding in 2018 about that being his last Senate campaign, he’s been quietly fundraising for 2024 and is going to run again. He barely eked out a win last time and his approval numbers in WV are shaky, so he needs something to solidify support at home. Not delivering something for his state on infrastructure will hurt him a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like neither bill will survive.
Infrastructure would if they would unshackle it from that bloated Build Back Better bill.
Its already done the hard part of passing the Senate. The House is a rubber-stamp and they already have GOP support anyway.
Anonymous wrote:It looks like neither bill will survive.
Anonymous wrote:It looks like both sides are digging in. Pelosis gambit to tie them together appears not to be working.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like both sides are digging in. Pelosis gambit to tie them together appears not to be working.
Let’s wait and see. Lots of public posturing but who knows what’s going on behind the scenes. I do enjoy knowing that the corporate, centerist wind of the Dem party has some opposition. They’ve alway been able to call the shots but no more.
Anonymous wrote:It looks like both sides are digging in. Pelosis gambit to tie them together appears not to be working.