When I saw the news that Senate Democrats had reached an agreement to invest $3.5 trillion in American families and fighting climate change, let’s just say I was ebullient about it on Twitter.
To be clear up front, there’s no room for error over the next few weeks in transforming the deal Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., announced Tuesday night into a law that reaches President Joe Biden’s desk. There are no votes for Democrats to lose in the Senate, and just four defections in the House would doom this whole endeavor.
But if they pull this off, it would be one of the biggest expansions of the social safety net in decades and a veritable smorgasbord of other progressive priorities.
We were still waiting on officially released details Wednesday evening, but here’s some of what’s expected to be in the package:
- Extending the child tax credit expansion until at least 2024.
- Universal child care, pre-kindergarten and community college free of cost.
- Expanding Medicare to include vision, dental and hearing coverage for millions of Americans.
- A provision on immigration reform, which advocates hope will include a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
- Funding for the Civilian Climate Corps that would create jobs in mitigating the effects of climate change.
- Establishing a Clean Electricity Standard that would aim to have America reach 100 percent carbon-free power by 2035.
This is the exact sort of balling out that liberals and progressives have been waiting for from Democrats. As a bonus, Schumer claims that the provisions would all be paid for by raising taxes on the wealthy and businesses while making sure no one making under $400,000 a year would see their taxes go up.
All of this will be included in a budget reconciliation bill, a method that’s filibuster-proof, requiring only 50 votes (plus Vice President Kamala Harris as a tiebreaker) to pass. When or if that happens, it will deliver on the promises Democrats made when they were trying to capture total control of Washington in last year’s elections.
That we even got to this point feels like a minor miracle. (I’ve gotten very used to feeling let down by the Senate, especially when it comes to overcoming Republican obstruction.) I argued in January that Biden’s inauguration started a clock of — at most — two years for Democrats to accomplish anything before they could lose their slim majorities. The narrow time frame and the low overhead for error were concerning, even after passage of the Covid-19 stimulus package.
The choice to engage in months of bipartisan negotiations with Republicans had me low-key convinced that Democrats were turning their only remaining bite at the apple, fiscally speaking, into more of a nibble. Tuesday’s announcement disabused me of that notion. The two-track strategy he was pursuing — allowing bipartisan talks to reach a deal on physical infrastructure and letting negotiations on this bigger package continue — was a gamble that seems to have paid off.
Coupled with a bipartisan package of nearly $1 trillion in physical infrastructure, the two bills would just about cover the roughly $4 trillion in spending that Biden laid out in his twin infrastructure plans this year.








