After months of difficult negotiations over his Build Back Better agenda, President Joe Biden did not reference the legislative package by name in his State of the Union address.
But that doesn’t mean key elements of the plan went unmentioned.
In his speech to a joint session, the Democratic president specifically highlighted his proposals to help families pay for child care, affordable housing, and pre-K for 3- and 4-year-olds. In a message that appeared specifically directed at Sen. Joe Manchin — who’s played a prominent role in derailing the Build Back Better agenda — Biden also referenced deficit reduction, a priority for the conservative West Virginia Democrat.
Between the presidential rhetoric and his party’s behind-the-scenes efforts, the plan to keep at least some version of Build Back Better alive is obvious. The Hill reported that Manchin — who eyed a relatively ambitious package of his own as recently as December — doesn’t sound interested.
West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin (D) poured cold water on President Biden’s attempt to revive the core elements of his Build Back Better agenda, questioning the president’s claim that passing a $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion spending package would “lower costs” for most Americans. “They just can’t help themselves,” Manchin quipped when asked by reporters after Biden’s State of the Union speech whether he was surprised by the president’s effort to try to use the moment to try to revive his stalled climate and social spending plan.
After telling reporters that “nothing’s changed on the legislative front, the West Virginian added, according to The Hill’s report, “I’ve never found out that you can lower costs by spending more.”
It was a quote that apparently delighted Republican Sen. Mitt Romney, who chimed in, “You can’t say it better than that.”
For those wondering whether a Build Back Better package is still possible, Manchin’s rhetoric was hardly encouraging, and probably did not go unnoticed at the White House.
But the senator’s reaction was also flawed in a couple of ways.









