CONGRESS
Senate's season of Manchin starts winding down
A few Democrats still want to keep cajoling their
elusive centrist on climate and taxes. But his downsized party-line vision is
coming to the floor.
There's a clear divide within the party over whether
to keep pursuing climate negotiations with Sen. Joe Manchin
By BURGESS
EVERETT and MARIANNE LEVINE
07/19/2022
05:00 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/07/19/manchin-senate-agenda-00046623
By noon on
Tuesday, Joe Manchin was done talking about himself.
Halfway
through his first full day on the Hill since dealing another blow to Democrats’
grand party-line ambitions, the West Virginian had already traded barbs with
Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), right outside the Energy Committee that Manchin
leads. After Heinrich said Manchin strung along Democrats for a year on a bill
that could reshape U.S. climate policy, Manchin replied that he’d done no such
thing.
“I never
strung anyone along. I was the first one to raise alarm on inflation” that
required Democrats to trim their vision, Manchin said.
After
giving a few more terse answers throughout the morning to a crowd of mostly TV
reporters outside the committee room, Manchin dipped into his office and came
back out, saying he’d take no more questions. He skipped a subsequent caucus
lunch on Tuesday, citing a doctor’s appointment — his second absence in two
days after Monday’s Democratic leadership meeting.
Nearly 18
months since Manchin became Democrats’ elusive 50th Senate vote, it’s become
clear that most in his party — himself included — are ready to put endless
party-line negotiations behind them. As Democrats move forward into the
midterms, what started on paper as a $3.5 trillion plan to reshape the
government will almost surely become a health care bill that reduces the
deficit and spends perhaps $40 billion.
That health
care bill will achieve real gains for the party, fulfilling its long-sought
goal of reducing some prescription drug prices while lowering health care
premiums. But Democrats are hardly in the mood to declare victory. Senate Majority
Leader Chuck Schumer proclaimed his caucus is “excited” about the deal with
Manchin, even though the topic was not the focus of the party’s weekly lunch.
And some
colleagues are criticizing Manchin openly, a move that may only further
alienate the centrist.
“It’s very
unfortunate,” said Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), whose vote against Obamacare
repeal triggered intense backlash within her own party. “Joe’s a very strong
person. I know him well. And he has an inner core of strength that sustains him
as well as his family. It’s hard. I can sympathize.”
Other
Democrats are refusing to talk about him. Still more are holding out hope that
he is open to padding the legislation with billions of dollars in clean energy
and tax increases on the wealthy and corporations, though Schumer seemed to end
that drama by vowing to move forward with the health care package.
An election
that may hand the House or Senate to Republicans looms — barely three months
away. Democrats hope it instead delivers them two more seats to give them what
Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) calls a “working majority.”
“We’ve had
our successes, we’ve had our failures,” Tester said of his negotiations with
Manchin. “It was a 50-50 Senate. And I think this election is going to change
that … that’ll help Joe, I think it’ll help Kyrsten [Sinema], I think it’ll
help me. I think it’ll help everybody.”
Though
Heinrich and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) publicly criticized Manchin in recent
days, many others are restraining themselves. They still need Manchin’s vote on
nominations and other must-pass bills and they do not want to tempt him to
switch parties, however long a shot that is.
Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell was asked Tuesday whether, should Manchin
switch parties, he could hang onto the Energy Committee gavel. McConnell’s
reply: “We’d be glad to have that discussion at any time.”
As he’s
fought progressive priorities, Manchin’s political standing has improved in
deep-red West Virginia, and many colleagues think he’s gearing up for a run for
third full term in 2024. On Tuesday Manchin declined to discuss his political
future: “Next question.”
At least
Democrats see an end in sight to the “will he-won’t he” status of negotiations
that plagued their signature policy bill for more than a year, ever since
Manchin and other moderates decided to cut a bipartisan infrastructure deal and
leave the rest of Biden’s agenda in limbo — everything from housing to paid
leave to education. Summing up his view of talks with Manchin, Sanders said
Tuesday: “My ending point was six months ago.”
After all,
even if Democrats do keep or expand their majority in the Senate this fall,
they’re widely expected to lose the House. That essentially dooms their
prospects of passing any legislation along party lines.
“We’re not
moving on from climate. But we’re moving on from waiting on one member to
determine whether or not we’re going to act on climate,” said Sen. Brian Schatz
(D-Hawaii), who suggested the focus on Manchin’s power was something of a media
creation.
Manchin
certainly seemed less excited than usual about his elevated importance on
Tuesday after 18 months of constant questioning. He told one reporter to “get
out of my way” and deemed another as doing a “piss-poor job” for repeatedly
asking about whether his business interests are a conflict of interest on
climate bills.
There’s a
clear divide within the party over whether to keep pursuing climate
negotiations with Manchin. Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) said he met with the
centrist Monday and is still “holding out hope” for climate and tax provisions
in a party-line package.
Sen. John
Hickenlooper (D-Colo.) put it this way: “We’d be crazy not to keep working on
it … As long as Joe Manchin is at the table, I’m at the table.”
Schumer
suggested Tuesday that his caucus would focus on passing a prescription drug
proposal without GOP votes, using the so-called budget reconciliation process,
and “keep fighting on climate.” The majority leader and Manchin signed an
agreement nearly a year ago outlining a $1.5 trillion bill; now Democrats
couldn’t be further from that sort of gargantuan legislation.
Manchin has
largely defended his relationship with Schumer, saying they understand each
other even as he remains an outlier in a mostly liberal caucus. But given that
Manchin only a few months ago laid out a climate, tax, and prescription drugs
package — a proposal he’s not currently willing to pass until he sees inflation
decline, does Schumer see Manchin as an honest broker?
“Sen.
Manchin and I have known each other a long time. We have many disagreements, I
am very strenuous when I talk to him about my disagreements,” Schumer said. “But
we always try to show each other respect.”


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