Deal with Manchin would reshape Dems’ fight to keep majority

 

Sen. Joe Manchin speaks during a news conference about a bill to ban Russian energy imports on Thursday, March 3, 2022, on Capitol Hill in Washington. | Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo

The party hopes rebranding President Joe Biden's signature bill as a way to cut inflation would help them keep their Senate majority.

by BURGESS EVERETT and MARIANNE LEVINE

Democrats’ most at-risk senators want to transform the artist formerly known as “Build Back Better” into an inflation-buster, just in time for the midterms.

It’s a gambit that could jump-start President Joe Biden’s stalled domestic agenda by helping Democrats cut a deal with Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), sell the legislation as a cost-cutting package and run on it in the fall. That would give the party’s most vulnerable incumbents a potent message to help keep their seats, and keep the majority for two more years as a result.

“That obviously would have an effect on helping people in their reelections,” said Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), who defeated an incumbent GOP senator in 2020.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer started things off Monday by offering something of a roadmap to revive Democrats’ stalled domestic agenda, including hearings on a plan to lower prescription drug costs that would be the wallet-friendly centerpiece of the pitch by vulnerable Democrats. Moreover, the party’s cost-cutting agenda is expected to be a major focus in House and Senate Democratic retreats this week, a sign that the party is hearing out its endangered members who want to see a rebrand of their signature bill.

It’s Democrats’ attempt at a do-over after they struggled to sell a $1.7 trillion spending bill that Manchin rejected in December, capping off a gloomy period for the party following months of battling with progressives. Since then, Democrats have touted their pandemic aid law and the bipartisan infrastructure law — both passed last year — as proof of their effective governance, but lawmakers increasingly sense they need to clinch another signature piece of legislation to convince voters.

Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), who faces a tough reelection campaign this fall, said his constituents barely know what’s been in previous proposals “because of the hideous lack of communication with the American people.”

“What’s critically important for us is to come to an agreement quickly. The good news is there is a lot of potential here to pass something that is extremely popular with the American people,” Bennet said. “This gives us another chance, I mean Joe’s only one of 50 of us. But he said start with a blank sheet of paper. Well, he’s put some pencil marks on a blank sheet of paper.”

Manchin is floating a package that would reduce the deficit, lower prescription drug costs, plow some money into fighting climate change and reform the tax code. While he’s repeatedly said there are no formal talks going on with Biden or his colleagues, most Democrats take it as a sign he’s open for business.

And that’s welcome news for a group of Democrats who are trying to assemble a cost-cutting agenda but struggling to break through. Their proposed relaxation of the federal gas tax appears to be going nowhere, but the possibility of a party-line spending deal with Manchin through the budget reconciliation process offers Democrats some new hope.

“It is worth continuing to figure out how we work together to really focus on how we lower these costs for families and individuals right now,” said Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), who said she is talking with a group of Democrats on a package that would take some pieces of the Build Back Better bill. “We should pull out those that really make sense.”

Democrats have talked for years about cutting the cost of prescription drugs, yet face the possibility their majorities will go home empty handed. Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.), another endangered incumbent, said her goal is to “hold Big Pharma accountable and bring down prescription drug costs.”

If all Democrats stick together, they could pass a tax reform, climate and prescription drug package without Republican support. Manchin envisions half of the revenues from the bill going toward deficit reduction and fighting inflation, which he believes is “very popular” among voters.

Still, it could be a tough sell for some progressives, who envisioned a broader package spending literal trillions of dollars. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is pushing for a floor vote on legislation to lower the cost of prescription drug prices, regardless of whether it has the votes to pass the Senate.

And Bennet wants to revive the expired child tax credits that sent millions of families hundreds of dollars per month. That would eat up plenty of any revenue generated by the bill, however, and Manchin said that when it comes to getting his vote: “You don’t fight inflation by spending more.”

Senate Republicans, meanwhile, are skeptical of Democrats’ efforts to resuscitate their domestic agenda. Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), the party’s campaign chair, panned Democrats’ pursuit of tax increases. And Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) said the push “makes no sense at all.”

“That horse is out of the barn,” he added.

For most Democrats, Manchin’s vision is as good as any at this point. But time is running out; congressional primaries are already taking place and floor time is being gamed out of the rest of the year. Democrats’ chances are at reviving a party-line spending bill that solves some of their policy and political problems are dwindling.

“We need to get some more things done for the people of Georgia, for the American people. And I’d be interested in pursuing whatever path lowers costs for people, holds corporations accountable that are artificially raising prices,” said incumbent Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), who is prioritizing lowering insulin prices. “It doesn’t matter to me about the path. I just want to get something done.”

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