Biden can’t quit infrastructure talks and
progressives are losing their minds
The White House has worked to keep its liberal base
happy. How much longer can it last?
By LAURA
BARRÓN-LÓPEZ, CHRISTOPHER CADELAGO and SAM STEIN
06/03/2021
07:02 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/06/03/infrastructure-liberals-progressives-gop-biden-491845
Progressive
activists have mostly kept their cool as President Joe Biden’s infrastructure
negotiations with Republican senators stretch on longer than planned.
But with
talks ongoing and new concessions being offered, leaders of liberal
organizations say they’re losing patience, fearful that the White House is
wasting time in pursuit of Republican votes that are unlikely to materialize.
The latest
bout of anxiety came this week after Biden met with the lead Republican
negotiator, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, and backed off his
insistence that a narrow infrastructure bill be paid for by a hike in the
corporate tax rate. Instead, the president floated a corporate tax floor of 15
percent, arguing that it would raise money by going after companies that have
avoided tax liabilities. It also avoids crossing Republican’s red line: undoing
parts of Donald Trump’s 2017 tax bill that lowered corporate rates to 21
percent.
“We’ve seen
this dynamic over and over again where Democrats are effectively negotiating
with themselves, watering down their own package, not in exchange for votes but
in exchange for the hope of keeping the negotiations going,” said Leah
Greenberg, a co-founder of the liberal organization Indivisible. “And the
inevitable result is that what passes is weaker and less popular than what
would have passed if they had gotten bigger and bolder to begin with.”
“Every day
that passes where we're still sort of hopelessly pursuing a mirage of
bipartisanship is a day that we're not moving on to the priorities that
Democrats were actually elected to do,” Greenberg added, pointing to voting
rights, equal pay and nondiscrimination laws.
The rising
anger over infrastructure talks is feeding calls in the progressive political
ecosystem to ramp up the pressure on Biden to put an end to the negotiations
and move ahead with efforts to pass a spending bill through a process known as
budget reconciliation, which requires just 50 votes in the Senate. Up to this
point, liberal organizations have largely given the president space to
negotiate and have praised not just the scope of his proposals — especially on
Covid relief — but his willingness to move quickly.
The White
House had to earn that trust. According to more than a dozen activists and
movement leaders interviewed for this piece, the White House has taken the task
of progressive outreach incredibly seriously. A host of close Biden aides are
routinely in touch with top officials on a range of policy fronts. There are
regular meetings and informal chats, during which frank discussions are
encouraged.
"They
have a whole engagement team and there are so many different calls,” said one
top official at a leading environmental group. “They do a pretty incredible job
with outreach. I think the reason why there is not more progressive frustration
is that they do feel heard."
Over the
past few weeks, sources at these meetings say, White House representatives have
been repeatedly pressed on infrastructure talks, including fears that if a deal
is reached, it could sap momentum for a follow-up bill that includes the rest
of Biden’s jobs and family plans, like child care, community college and
parental leave. In a recent meeting the administration was asked why they blew
through the president's initial Memorial Day deadline for talks to end. The
response has been essentially what the administration says publicly: Biden
believes that a big bipartisan bill is important, but he won’t let the pursuit
of it override the need to get something done.
Andrew
Bates, a White House spokesman, said the president is engaged in good faith
talks with both parties in Congress and “has been emphatic that inaction is not
an option, that progress needs to be made in the short term, and that he is
open to other conversations about infrastructure.” He pointed to a June 9 House
markup as a key date. “Equity is at the heart of his agenda," Bates added.
But
progressives are done waiting. Drawn out negotiations, they say, could hurt the
prospects of passing other liberal priorities — not only those included in
Biden’s jobs and family plans, but campaign promises like voting rights
legislation and police reform.
“There's no
deal to be had here,” said Brian Fallon, an Obama alum and executive director
of the advocacy group Demand Justice, which supports liberal judicial nominees.
“To the extent that it's a political imperative for the White House to want to
look like they tried to get a bipartisan deal, they've achieved that. So what's
clouding their judgment this time?”
Some
leaders on the left pointed to the recent GOP votes blocking a bipartisan
commission to investigate the Jan. 6 insurrection as an inflection point. For
progressives, the vote further cemented that the White House, for all its
wishful thinking, isn’t dealing with good-faith negotiators. Others noted the
fact that Republicans in 2017 had no problem pushing through their tax cut by a
partisan vote and are now trying to rule the bill off limits during bipartisan
negotiations.
And some
activists say the administration’s dedication to striking a deal with
Republicans to create traditional infrastructure jobs creates the impression
that they are prioritizing white blue collar workers over women of color
working in elder and child care, which the president has, for now, put off for
a second, subsequent bill.
Maurice
Mitchell, a leader with the Movement for Black Lives coalition, said he saw a
“lack of coherence” in Biden stressing the need for urgent action to close the
racial wealth gap in a speech in Tulsa, Okla., but a day later engaging in
further negotiations with Republicans. The GOP’s push to pass a narrow bill
focused on physical infrastructure like roads and bridges prioritizes
“traditional white, male laborers” said Mitchell, risking the elements of
Biden’s plan to boost working conditions for elder care jobs held primarily by
women of color and immigrants.
“The way
that people talk about what does infrastructure mean and the difference between
physical infrastructure or a broader definition of infrastructure and the care
economy — folks are not understanding the race and gender implications of these
questions,” said Mitchell, executive director of the Working Families Party.
“They drive at the heart of who is being prioritized in these policy
conversations on the Hill, which people are being prioritized.”
Out of fear
about the direction that talks are heading, some groups are planning more direct
action. The liberal advocacy group MoveOn is set to mobilize its members and
target lawmakers attempting to water down Biden’s proposal. Sunrise Movement, a
progressive climate change group, wants Biden to meet with them rather than
Republicans. In an internal strategy memo circulated by Sunrise this week,
leaders called for “short, intense” bursts of pressure on the White House and
Democrats to “stiffen their spines in negotiations with moderate Republican and
Democratic senators.”
“If we
learned anything from this year alone, the GOP is not the party that I think
Biden idealizes,” said Ellen Scales, a spokesperson for the group. “Voters in
2022 and 2024, young people, are not going to ask whether or not Joe Biden was
kind to Shelley Moore Capito — they don't even know who that is. They're going
to see whether or not he dealt with the climate crisis and created millions of
good jobs.”
The White
House says it’s not going to negotiate much longer and maintain that the
president wants to move quickly. An administration official said they still
needed to play ball to the extent that it helps firm up the support of moderate
Senate Democrats, who will be needed if Biden falls back on using
reconciliation to push a bill with only Democrat votes. And White House
advisers like Steve Ricchetti have told Democrats that a concerted bipartisan
attempt would benefit Democrats politically.
“The tail
is wagging the dog here and the strategy is being driven by congressional
Democrats that are high on their own supply in terms of enjoying the constant
running back and forth of offers with Republicans,” said Fallon. “Voices like
Ricchetti,” Fallon assumed, are “arguing internally” to give moderate
congressional Democrats “more space” to bring along Republicans.
The White
House and Republicans remain at odds over how to pay for the package, the size
of it, and what actually defines infrastructure. Though Biden revised his
proposed tax hikes, and Republicans are entertaining increasing their current
$250 billion offer, few on the Hill or in the White House expect negotiations
to ultimately succeed.
Meanwhile,
progressives are fearful that Republicans may actually take the deal that Biden
has offered and fracture the Democratic party in the process.
"We
are rooting for them to be dumb,” said one top consultant who advises several
progressive groups. “If they were smart they would take it. They'd box Biden in
on it. And, not just that, he would legitimately be fine with it. And
the left would be livid.”


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