After voting for the early blueprint for the 3.5 trillion dollar settlement plan on Wednesday, Virginia Democratic Senator Joe Manchin expressed “serious concern.” The settlement bill is part of the Biden administration’s “Rebuild Better” plan, which can create 2 million jobs every year while improving efforts to curb climate change and other initiatives.
The Senate passed the measure by a vote of 50 to 49, and Senator Mike Rounds and his sick wife missed the vote.
Manchin said in a statement that he was worried about inflation and the size of the package. He said the government needs to be wary of “irresponsible spending.”
Manchin said in the statement: “In view of the current economic recovery, it is irresponsible to continue spending at a level more suitable for dealing with the Great Depression or Great Recession, rather than an economy on the verge of overheating.”
My statement raised concerns about the consequences of passing the 3.5 trillion dollar budget: pic.twitter.com/gGsEXcVTxd
— Senator Joe Manchin (@Sen_JoeManchin) August 11, 2021
After voting on Wednesday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer admitted that “the hardest job is yet to come.” Schumer will need Manchin to pass the bill through a settlement in the equally distributed Senate. Kyrsten Sinema, a Democrat in Arizona, also criticized the bill’s price tag.
The settlement bill will make bold investments in childcare, family leave and climate change provisions. US$198 billion will be allocated to the Energy and Natural Resources Commission, which is involved in clean energy development.
Republican senators are not expected to support the bill. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called it “reckless” and a “tax-free consumer frenzy.”
If the settlement bill fails to pass, DN.Y. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez threatened to cancel the bipartisan $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill. Cortez said there are “more than enough” members of the House of Representatives who are willing to stifle the bipartisan bill.
“The House of Representatives will uphold the agreement we reached and will not pass a bipartisan bill until we have all these investments,” Cortez says, Refer to the priorities of the bill.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said that unless both pass the Senate, she will not allow any bill to be voted in the House of Representatives.



