This past weekend, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sent a letter to her members, letting them know that this week would be “a time of intensity.” Not surprisingly, she was right.
Those who’ve been keeping an eye on Capitol Hill this week have probably noticed that negotiations over President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda have intensified. At issue are two bills: a bipartisan infrastructure measure, approved by the Senate last month, and a more ambitious Build Back Better package, focused on safety-net-and-climate policies, pending in the House.
Democratic leaders hoped to reach an agreement on the latter so that the House could pass the former. As NBC News reported overnight, that didn’t happen.
House Democrats delayed a planned vote Thursday on a major infrastructure package, heading home for the night after intraparty fighting hamstrung their ability to pass the legislation. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., announced after a series of late-night negotiations that the vote had been postponed indefinitely as Democrats battle over the way forward on President Joe Biden’s agenda.
Some of the media coverage this morning characterized the delay as a major blow to the party’s agenda. The New York Times’ online front page, for example, described last night’s developments on Capitol Hill as a “big setback” for the White House.
That’s certainly one way to look at the story, but given all of the relevant details, the assessment may have it backwards.
Remember, the original plan was for the House to vote on the bipartisan Senate bill — known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Framework (or BIF) — on Monday. When rank-and-file House progressives balked, saying they wanted to see progress on the Build Back Better bill first, Monday’s vote was scrapped and moved to Thursday.
Last night, Pelosi again proposed a vote on the more modest Senate bill. Progressives balked again, and so the vote was scrapped again.
But that’s not a “big setback” for the president’s agenda; it’s a development that keeps the president’s agenda alive.
After all, the ambitious Build Back Better legislation is, for all intents and purposes, Biden’s domestic agenda. It comprises a great many White House priorities — from health care to education, climate to housing — that comprised the president’s 2020 platform.
If House Democrats were to simply pass the bipartisan Senate bill, before the more ambitious Democratic bill is complete, it would shift the leverage to a small group of centrist and conservative Democrats who would no longer have any incentive to pass the Build Back Better package, in turn gutting Biden’s blueprint.
This need not be complicated: The whole point of the two-track strategy is to pass both parts of the plan. Centrist and conservative Democrats have effectively said, “Pass our bill and we’ll consider giving you some fraction of your bill.” Progressive Democrats have effectively countered, “We don’t love your bill, but we’ll vote for it anyway if you help us pass our bill.”








