Biden, Capito Infrastructure Talks Break Down After Failing To Reach Deal; Will Shift To Bipartisan Group
Talks between President Joe Biden and Sen. Shelly Moore Capito (R-WV) – lead GOP negotiator on infrastructure legislation – have ended with no resolution, according to Bloomberg‘s Josh Wingrove. The negotiations, held via teleconference between the White House and a small group of Republican senators, were weighed down by deep disagreements over what actually constitutes ‘infrastructure,’ with Republicans using the dictionary definition of roads and other public works, and Democrats expanding it to include just about anything they want it to mean.
The talks will now shift to a bipartisan group after Biden reportedly said that the GOP offer was too low and too vague.
Infrastructure talks between Biden and Senator Capito have ended (at least for now), per an official to @nancook and me.
Biden will shift talks to a bipartisan group instead. Biden thinks highly of Capito but believes GOP offer was too low & too vague on pay-fors, per official.
— Josh Wingrove (@josh_wingrove) June 8, 2021
The talks concluded Tuesday after a brief phone call between the president and the West Virginia senator. Biden will instead seek to develop an infrastructure bill with a bipartisan group of lawmakers, a White House official said.
The bipartisan group of 20 senators has not yet signed off on a proposal, according to members. Instead, a smaller faction led by Utah Republican Mitt Romney and Arizona Democrat Kyrsten Sinema have agreed on a spending level and how to pay for it, according to Romney, though he declined to give any details. -Bloomberg
As noted earlier by CNN, the discussion between Capito and Biden would likely be their last before the president leaves on his first international trip to Europe, however staff-level talks are expected to continue.
Biden and Capito had been speaking frequently since the White House introduced a comprehensive infrastructure plan, however talks had been dragging on post a Memorial Day deadline without any significant breakthroughs, which led to pressure from Democrats to shift to bipartisan negotiations.
According to Bloomberg, Romney and members of the smaller group will meet this evening to discuss their proposal.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 06/08/2021 – 16:51
via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3cstsL9 Tyler Durden