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Build Back Better ‘Is Dead’: Sen. Joe Manchin – Epoch Times

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., a centrist Democrat vital to the fate of President Joe Biden's $3.5 government overhaul, walks to a caucus lunch at the Capitol in Washington, Friday, Dec. 17, 2021. Despite months of being courted and cajoled, Sen. Manchin is still not a yes on President Joe Biden's big $2 trillion domestic package and has thrown Democrats into turmoil. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

The following article was copied and pasted from my Epoch Times electronic subscription to display their reporting and concern for truth and facts; and to provide a perspective not possible via big media and social media, as they only publish the leftist state approved narrative about their agenda; it is usually devoid of facts.

Build Back Better ‘Is Dead’: Sen. Joe Manchin

By Joseph Lord
February 1, 2022 Updated: February 1, 2022
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Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) told reporters on Tuesday that the Build Back Better Act (BBB), President Joe Biden’s multi-trillion dollar social spending package, “is dead,” dashing any lingering Democratic hopes that Manchin will rally behind a further scaled-down version.

Manchin’s opposition to BBB has been well-known and oft-repeated for months, and his opposition to the package led it through one price cut after another. In December, Manchin finally gave up on the project, saying that he would not vote for even a smaller package put forward by his party.

Manchin linked his opposition to the bill with inflation, which has risen at a breakneck pace despite frantic efforts by the White House and the Federal Reserve to get it under control.

In the original draft of the BBB authored by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), the legislation would have cost the U.S. government around $6 trillion. Despite being supported by Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), such a massive expenditure had little chance of winning the support even of more left-of-center Democrats.

Presaging the trouble the legislation would have, the price tag was almost immediately reduced to $3.5 trillion before coming to a floor vote in either the House or Senate.

Sanders and other progressives considered this a substantial compromise, but for Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), this was still far too much.

After weeks of negotiations with the pair, the Biden White House unveiled a $1.85 trillion draft of the bill. Sinema remained mum on the updated draft, citing her opposition to “[negotiating] through the press.” Manchin, far more vocal than Sinema, remained skeptical of the bill until December, when he announced that he would not vote for it.

Despite Manchin’s wholesale opposition, several Senate Democrats continued to work behind the scenes to further reduce BBB in a way that Manchin could support.

Democrats have focused particularly on climate policies, the child tax credit, and reinstating pre-2017 state and local tax deduction (SALT) rules.

On Tuesday, Manchin suggested that he remains as opposed to the project as ever.

Asked by a reporter whether the SALT deduction should go into BBB, Manchin replied tersely, “What Build Back Better? There is no—I mean, I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

Whatever work Democrats have been doing behind the scenes to resurrect the bill, Manchin made clear that he has not been a part of it.

“No, no, no, no,” Manchin responded when asked if he had participated in these discussions. “It’s dead.”

Later, Manchin clarified his statements from Tuesday morning.

“If we’re talking about the whole big package, that’s gone,” Manchin said.

Pressed on whether he would support a smaller package, he responded noncommittally, “We’ll see what people come up with. I don’t know.”

Manchin’s comments are a blow for those senators who continued to work on the bill after Manchin snuffed it out in December, and indicate that Manchin has not changed his position on the bill in the intervening weeks.

The bill passed the House, where Democrats have a slightly more stable hold, on Nov. 19. Despite months of infighting between moderates and progressives, every single Democrat aside from Rep. Jared Golden (D-Maine) voted to advance the bill to the Senate.

In the evenly-divided Senate, Manchin’s support is a must-have for the package. Unlike most legislation, BBB was advanced under the reconciliation process, a uniquely partisan process that allows legislation to pass by a simple majority. With a more united caucus, Democrats may have been able to advance the legislation easily.

But divisions in the party have been on full display since the majority-Democrat 117th Congress sat in January 2020. Moderate and progressive elements in the party have clashed incessantly over policy disagreements, including BBB and its provisions, the filibuster, court-packing schemes, and proposed election law overhauls.

Still, several Democrats have proposed breaking BBB into smaller pieces to get past opposition from Manchin and Sinema. Any such effort would almost certainly have to go through the reconciliation process, since Republicans have been united against the bill since its introduction.

In a Jan. 20 interview with Fox News, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) decried this effort, saying that Biden “got no mandate” for such a wide policy overhaul.

“The American people aren’t for all of this,” said McConnell. “They thought they were electing a moderate.”

As the entire House and one-third of the Senate prepares for tough midterm battles in November, work on any smaller draft of the bill will become more difficult. And because Republicans are widely expected to take the House in November, proponents of a scaled-down BBB have little time left to craft and pass the legislation.

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Joseph Lord is a Congressional reporter for The Epoch Times who focuses on the Democrats. He got his Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy from Clemson University and was a scholar in the Lyceum Program.
Featured Image: Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), a centrist Democrat vital to the fate of President Joe Biden’s $3.5 government overhaul, walks to a caucus lunch at the Capitol in Washington on Dec. 17, 2021. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo)
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