After months of debate and internal fighting among Congressional Democrats, the House of Representatives is working hard to pass President Biden’s trillion-dollar legislative agenda.
The two bills in question are a $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure deal aimed at improving the country’s roads, bridges, highways, public transportation, waterways, and broadband. The second is the US$1.85 trillion social expenditure bill, which aims to expand medical insurance to cover hearings, subsidize universal preschools, child tax credits, child care, US$150 billion for housing, climate change, immigration funding, The company levies a 15% tax and provides 4 weeks of paid family leave.
The corporate media is increasingly demanding that the Democratic Party cut its promised agenda, which is exactly the same as what happened in 2009-2010.
The Democrats at the time complied with these requirements, and then came under fire in the midterm exams that started the MELTDOWN that we are now experiencing.https://t.co/dN7bqYMji4
— David Sirota (@davidsirota) November 5, 2021
Republicans talk about family values, but oppose policies that strengthen American working families.
For Democrats, our budget is a reflection of our values. according to.Biden’s #BuildBackBetter The agenda is historic, transformative & do the right thing for kids. pic.twitter.com/JakrdcRBgu
— Nancy Pelosi (@TeamPelosi) November 4, 2021
When asked what different measures the Democratic Party can take to avoid similar losses in the 2022 midterm elections, President Biden said: “I think we should produce for the American people.” https://t.co/6XIcZdC3wP
— NBC News (@NBCNews) November 4, 2021
Due to the weak advantages of the two houses, the Democrats must pass the budget bill unanimously in the Senate and cannot afford the consequences of losing more than three votes to any one bill in the House of Representatives. The infrastructure bill will be submitted to the president, and the social expenditure bill will be submitted to the Senate for the last amendment. Washington State Democratic Rep. Pramila Jayapar said that despite repeated attempts by moderate Democrats to reduce the spending bill from $3.5 trillion, it is still the right thing to pass the spending bill.
“We are improving people’s lives. What is the alternative? Do nothing. I mean, this will not allow us to make any progress… Part of the work we have to do is to truly understand the economic setbacks people are facing now. I think this is really important to us,” Jayapar said.
As Democratic lawmakers worked hard to reach an agreement in the longest legislative deadlock in modern history, the House bill is still being voted on. When Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi tried to unite her caucus, a source familiar with the meeting told Hill that they “do not look good.”



