“As the White House's fruitless infrastructure talks
with Republican lawmakers persist with no deal in sight, Sen.
Bernie Sanders of Vermont warned Thursday that Democrats risk losing control of
Congress if they get bogged down in unending negotiations with the GOP and fail
to urgently confront the climate emergency, soaring prescription drug prices,
and other key issues.
“‘What happens if they spend week after week, month after month
'negotiating' with Republicans who have little intention of addressing the
serious crises facing the working families of this country?’ Sanders asked in a CNN op-ed. ‘What happens if, after the
passage of the vitally important American Rescue Plan—the Covid-19 rescue
package signed into law by President Biden in March—the momentum stops and we
accomplish little or nothing?’
“Under such a scenario, the Vermont senator wrote, ‘there is a
strong possibility that Republicans will win the House or the Senate or both
bodies next year.’
“Sanders continued: ‘The American people want action, not
never-ending ‘negotiations’ and obstructionism, and they will not come out and
vote for a party that does not deliver. And if the Republicans do regain
control of Congress, we can be sure that the economy will move steadily forward
toward a system in which the rich get richer thanks to increased corporate
domination. We can be sure that the climate crisis will intensify, diminishing
the likelihood of our children and grandchildren living in a healthy and
habitable environment. We can be sure that our government will drift away from
democracy, as voter suppression, dark money and conspiracy theories continue to
dominate our political system.’
“This is an unprecedented moment in American
history. The Democrats in Congress must move forward boldly, protecting the
working families of our country and restoring faith in government. Yes, the
future of the country is at stake.The Vermont senator's warning came hours
after Senate Republicans unveiled the outlines of an
infrastructure counteroffer calling for just $257 billion in new spending over
the next eight years—a far cry from Biden's initial $2.2 trillion plan and
the president's pared-back $1.7 trillion proposal.
“Senior Senate Democrats reportedly believe that, with
bipartisan talks set to spill into next week and possibly beyond, they will not
be able to complete work on an eventual infrastructure and climate package by
September 30, the end of the fiscal year—a timeline that likely means
additional months of inaction on voting rights, child care, immigration reform,
and other top agenda items.
“Earlier this week, Sanders cautioned that ‘millions of voters
will be disenfranchised and Democrats will become a permanent minority party’
without passage of the For the People Act, a sweeping voting rights bill that
is currently stuck in the Senate due
to opposition from the GOP and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.). If passed, the
legislation would counteract many of the
Republican Party's attacks on ballot access at the state level. In his op-ed on
Thursday, Sanders—the chair of the Senate Budget Committee—wrote that he is
prepared to swiftly assemble and approve a far-reaching infrastructure and
climate measure using reconciliation, a filibuster-proof process that allows
for the passage of spending bills with a simple-majority vote.
“But President Joe Biden, the Democratic leadership,
and conservative rank-and-file Democrats such as Manchin have thus far refused
to endorse such a path, opting instead to let weeks go by as bipartisan
infrastructure talks continue to flounder. During a Financial
Times event on Tuesday, Manchin signaled that he would be
willing to let the negotiations drag out until the end of the year in the
interest of pursuing an unlikely compromise with the
GOP.
“‘Legislative calendar is a precious commodity,’ New York magazine's Eric Levitz wrote Monday. ‘And Democrats
may have even less time to enact their agenda than they realize. On average, ten lawmakers have died in each two-year
Congress. Chuck Schumer's bare majority rests on the health of several senior citizens in
states where Republican governors have the power to fill vacant
Senate seats. Biden can't afford to waste more than a month on a charade—which
is what the infrastructure negotiations have become.’
“The Week's
Ryan Cooper similarly argued in a column Thursday that—contrary
to Manchin's claim that a bipartisan deal
is within reach—congressional Republicans ‘obviously don't want Biden to pass anything,’ preferring instead to ‘string him along
with fake promises of bipartisanship, running out the clock on the Democratic
majority, until they get a chance at taking control of Congress in the 2022
midterms.’
“‘If that happens,’ Cooper wrote, ‘they will try to strangle the
economy by demanding massive austerity every time the government needs to pass
a budget or raise the debt limit—trying to create a recession that Biden will
be blamed for, so that the Republican nominee (probably Donald Trump) will be
elected in 2024.’
“‘Even the most conservative Democratic members of Congress
agree on the need to do something on infrastructure,’ Cooper continued. ‘They
can either figure out internally (and quickly) what they want to do and pass
that on a party-line vote, or they can do nothing and effectively collaborate
with the Republican plot to topple Biden and set up one-party rule. Those are
the only options’” (Jake Johnson, Common Dreams).
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.