By Philip Klein
Monday, July 26,
2021
I’ve repeatedly written about how ridiculous and counterproductive it is for a group of
Republicans to be negotiating a bipartisan deal on infrastructure with a Democratic
Party that is racing to spend $4.1 trillion. But one argument that defenders of
the negotiations have been making to conservatives is that if Republicans agree
on a bipartisan deal, moderates such as Senator Joe Manchin will be more likely
to oppose the larger Democrats-only $3.5 trillion bill crammed with liberal
priorities. But now even that flimsy argument has blown up.
CNN’s Manu Raju reports the following on
Manchin pushing for bipartisan talks to continue:
Get that? “If the bipartisan infrastructure
bill falls apart, everything falls apart.”
Far from supporting the theory that a
bipartisan deal would dissuade Manchin from supporting the bigger bill, Manchin
is making it clear that he thinks agreeing to a bipartisan deal is a critical
part of passing the combined spending package. Were it to fall apart, instead
of breaking the massive agenda into several smaller parts that may be
digestible, moderates will have to consider swallowing a massive $4.1 trillion
bill. Additionally, the process would no longer have any bipartisan cover.
So make no mistake. Any Republican that
votes for the bipartisan charade is greasing the wheels for Democrats
to ram through their entire agenda — on climate; expanding Medicare, Medicaid,
and Obamacare; subsidizing college and childcare; and a host of other liberal
priorities.
(Note: The $1.2 trillion includes existing spending on infrastructure plus an additional $600 billion in new spending. My $4.1 trillion figure only includes the new spending).
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