Could there be a bipartisan truce on infrastructure?
Just a week after the shutdown ended, House Republicans who were blasting Democrats on spending overwhelmingly passed an infrastructure bill to repair the country’s waterways, at the cost of an estimated $8.2 billion.
Now President Obama has re-upped his $50 billion plan to invest in the country’s aging ports, bridges, and power lines. Though a plan of such magnitude is unlikely to pass any time soon, infrastructure projects could become a priority in the current 2014 budget talks.
“We should be building, not tearing things down,” Obama said in New Orleans on Friday, criticizing the recent government shutdown for interfering with an economy that is finally showing some signs of life. “These self-inflicted wounds don’t have to happen, we shouldn’t be endangering ourselves–we should be investing.”
The president said he was encouraged by the new October jobs report, showing that the country added 204,000 jobs last month in spite of the government shutdown last month—a figure that was significantly higher than expected. But he warned that GDP growth for the quarter “could be down because of what happened in Washington.”
Even discounting the impact of furloughed federal workers, many of whom were classified as “unemployed,” the total number of employed Americans dropped last month by more than 510,000, according to Betsey Stevenson, a member of the president’s Council of Economic Advisers. And more people have given up looking for work entirely.
Obama stressed the need to make investments to bolster growth, reviving the plan he proposed earlier this year to close tax loopholes to pay for infrastructure spending.









