Friday, December 17, 2021

THE TWO-JOE JAM: The Power & The Spotlight

 

When the balance of political parties is split down-the-middle, the fulcrum at the center of the see-saw can teeter-or-totter on one guy named Joe

One year of ‘President Manchin’: For the Democratic agenda, all roads go through West Virginia

"They wait for Joe. And while they wait, they wonder. “His entourage vanished,” says a reporter.

“Maybe they snuck out the back,” says a photographer.

It’s a Tuesday in early December. Sen. Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.), the Flowbee-haired centrist whose vote in the evenly divided Senate could make or break any given deal, had been spotted ducking into Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer’s office at exactly 11:06 a.m. That’s a conspicuous time and place for a private tête-à-tête — just before the Senate’s Tuesday lunches, when the Capitol Hill press would swarm the corridors in search of scooplets about the fate of Democrats’ social spending bill.

Sure enough, the press has taken notice. And now, they wait. . .[...]

“Sometimes I wish I wasn’t chained to this one spot,” says Burgess Everett, Politico’s chief Manchin correspondent. “But, at the same time, this is the best place to get the news of the day because it’s what everyone is interested in.”

The power and spotlight has earned the gentleman from West Virginia a new nickname.

“Mister President,” Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) once said, greeting Manchin in a Capitol Hill elevator.

“It looks like we have President Manchin instead of President Biden,” Faiz Shakir, a close adviser to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) told the New York Times.

“Maybe we should say President Manchin at this point!” then-Fox News anchor Chris Wallace chuckled on the air.

It’s been an eventful first year of the Manchin presidency. His Washington home, a large boat on the Potomac, has become a floating West Wing: a place that the White House chief of staff (among others) has visited, and where Manchin has hosted raucous, bipartisan parties.

The journalists doing the waiting are proxies for a Washington establishment eager to see how the Biden administration plans to make its mark, and for the millions of Americans who care about an agenda that could change the trajectory of a teetering democracy and a warming planet. They wait for the senator from West Virginia to decide the fate of Cabinet-level nominees (sorry, Neera Tanden). They wait for him to agree to stimulus funding in the midst of the pandemic, which he did. They wait for him to find enough Republicans to back a voting rights bill as state GOP officials clamp down on voting access, which he hasn’t. People have mostly stopped waiting for him to nuke the filibuster.

These days everyone’s waiting on the Build Back Better bill, the Democrats’ signature piece of legislation, which “President Manchin” keeps vetoing before it gets to President Biden’s desk.

[...]

The whole "President Manchin" bit? Not everybody finds it amusing.

“He’s not a president,” says Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.). “The farthest you’ll get me to go is I see this as the ‘Manchin majority.’ ”

“It’s tongue-in-cheek,” says Romney when reminded of his “Mister President” elevator greeting.

“The fact is, he’s just a senator,” says Anita Dunn, who until recently was a top adviser to Biden.

Plus, she points out, “He supported the rescue plan, he supported the bipartisan infrastructure plan, he has supported the president and his agenda and has worked hard to find a way to support the final big piece of the economic agenda and has negotiated in good faith around it.”

“I don’t think it’s a coup,” says Ben Nelson, former Democratic senator from Nebraska, unprompted, of the Manchin presidency. . ."

READ MORE

 

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$1.75T BUILD BACK BETTER? Not Happening This Year, Folks ...but $768B National Defense Policy Bill OK'd

Congress passed a big $768B NDAA Defense Policy - Republicans and Democrats in both the House and Senate joined forces to push the bill's budget top line by $25 billion. Many lawmakers argued Biden's $715 billion request for the Pentagon portion of the budget, though still an increase from the previous level locked in during the Trump administration, should be much higher to keep up with inflation and match military gains made by China and Russia.
Passage of the defense bill comes as congressional leaders rush to finish several major year-end agenda items, including raising the government's borrowing limit, confirming dozens of Biden's nominees and Democrats' $1.7 trillion social spending package.
Political cartoon
 

Senate sends $768B defense policy bill to Biden

The Senate overwhelmingly approved a compromise $768 billion defense policy bill on Wednesday, sending a bipartisan rebuke of President Joe Biden's original Pentagon plans back to him for his signature. [...]

Seven Democrats, three Republicans and Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont opposed the legislation in the final vote. Wednesday's roll call was even wider than an 86-13 procedural vote to end debate on the bill on Tuesday. Three senators who opposed advancing the bill on Tuesday — Ben Cardin (D-Md.), Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) — ultimately voted to pass it.

The bill initially passed 89-10, but Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) was permitted to switch his vote to oppose it after the fact. The procedural maneuver did not affect the outcome of the vote.

The final deal authorizes $768 billion for national defense programs. That total includes $740 billion for the Pentagon and $27.8 billion for nuclear weapons programs that fall under the Department of Energy. . .

The bill increases Pentagon weapons programs that have wide bipartisan support.

Lawmakers authorized $27.3 billion for the Navy to procure 13 new warships, an increase of $4.7 billion from the budget request. The bill adds five more ships than requested by the Navy.

The bill would allow the Pentagon to purchase 85 Lockheed Martin-built F-35 fighters, matching the Pentagon's request. Negotiators agreed to procure 17 F-15EX jets, five more than the Air Force requested, and 12 F/A-18E/F Super Hornet fighters that the Navy didn't include in its budget. Both jets are built by Boeing.

The legislation also would prohibit the Air Force from retiring any A-10 close-air support jets.

The defense deal also includes a 2.7 percent troop pay raise. . ."

READ MORE https://www.politico.com/news/2021/12/15/senate-sends-768b-defense-policy-bill-to-biden-524734

Biden concedes Build Back Better bill won’t get passed this year

“It takes time to finalize these agreements, prepare the legislative changes, and finish all the parliamentary and procedural steps needed to enable a Senate vote,” the president said.

President Joe Biden acknowledged Thursday that negotiations over his Build Back Better bill are poised to drag on into 2022 despite efforts and pledges by Democrats to get it done before Christmas.

President Joe Biden speaks at a meeting.

“It takes time to finalize these agreements, prepare the legislative changes, and finish all the parliamentary and procedural steps needed to enable a Senate vote,” the president said in a statement. He said that he spoke to Democratic leaders in Congress, Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, earlier Thursday and they plan to “advance this work together over the days and weeks ahead; Leader Schumer and I are determined to see the bill successfully on the floor as early as possible.”

With the holidays approaching and the Senate eager to leave town on Friday, however, a vote isn't likely until after New Year's Day.

The statement is a recognition that the president’s team has so far failed to persuade Sen. Joe Manchin (D–W.Va.) to sign onto anything resembling the $1.75 trillion social spending and climate mitigation bill passed by the House of Representatives last month. . .

[...] The drawn-out negotiations come at a vulnerable moment for the Biden presidency after months of anemic polling. The White House remains confident they will get a deal eventually but it is almost certain to be far short of their original ambitions, which included trillions more in spending and, among other things, free community college nationwide.

READ MORE: https://www.politico.com/news/2021/12/16/biden-concedes-bbb-bill-wont-get-passed-this-year-525194

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