
Senate GOP Threatens to Block Infrastructure
Vote as Talks Continue
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s scheduled vote
Wednesday on the bipartisan infrastructure framework appears doomed
to fail — but that doesn’t mean that the infrastructure plan is
dead.
Schumer on Monday set in motion the steps to hold a
procedural vote on the on the as-yet unfinished infrastructure
legislation Wednesday, but Senate Republicans are reportedly
united
in their intention to vote against moving forward without a final
agreement, meaning that the package won’t be able to get the 60
votes needed to advance.
"We have a pretty good sense of where our members are. They
won’t get 60," Senate Minority Whip John Thune (R-SD)
said. "Our members are committed to actually
having a bill and [Congressional Budget Office] scores and all that
kind of stuff before they vote to get on a bill."
Centrist Republicans on Tuesday
pressed Schumer to postpone the planned vote until
Monday to give negotiators more time to resolve their differences
and finalize a deal. "My hope is that Sen. Schumer will agree to
postpone the vote. We’re making significant progress," said Sen.
Susan Collins (R-ME), one of the negotiators.
Sen. Mitt Romney, another member of the negotiating group, also
called for more time. "I think it should be Monday, not Wednesday.
Give us time to resolve the remaining issues," he said. Romney
reportedly said that negotiators had resolved three-quarters of the
outstanding issues over the last two days and that he expects the
rest would be addressed by the end of the week. "We’ll be ready
Monday. We won’t have the full text, of course, but we’ll have a
detailed outline," he
said.
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA), another member of the group,
reportedly said he "hopes" a deal can be reached by the end of the
week but the negotiators still needed to get feedback from the
White House, Congressional Budget Office scorekeepers and other
lawmakers.
A note on the pay-fors: CNN Congressional Correspondent
Lauren Fox
reported Tuesday that multiple aides had pointed
out that it was "wild" that Republican negotiators had pushed to
eliminate a key financing mechanism — an increase in IRS funding
meant to boost tax collections, representing about $100 billion in
revenue in the deal they agreed to weeks ago. One Democrat said of
the proposed pay-fors in the deal: "[W]e knew damn well some of it
was hokey, and we knew we weren't gonna get a CBO score. Now, all
of a sudden, they have to have a CBO score and all this stuff. It's
fine, but it just takes a lot longer."
Schumer presses ahead: Schumer urged Republicans to agree
to advance the bill, arguing that the Senate often votes to begin
debate on legislation that is still being negotiated. Schumer said
that if that bipartisan bill is not ready, he would fill the shell
brought up for the vote with bipartisan transportation, water and
energy bills, allowing negotiators more time to finish their
work.
"It is not a final deadline for legislative text. It is not a
cynical ploy. It is not a fish-or-cut-bait moment. It is not an
attempt to jam anyone," Schumer said on the Senate floor Tuesday.
"It is only a signal that the Senate is ready to get the process
started – something the Senate has routinely done on other
bipartisan bills this year."
He added: "The bottom line is very simple: if senators agree to
start debate, there will be many, many opportunities for the
bipartisan group to make their agreement the base of the bill."
If the vote fails: The bipartisan talks could still
continue. "We’ve resurrected everything but Lazarus around here so
we can resurrect this one," Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV)
said after a Democratic lunch on Tuesday. Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) told reporters Tuesday that
a failed vote would still leave Schumer an opportunity to bring up
the bill again once the text is ready. "All that does is give him
the opportunity to move to reconsider and if at some other point
the bipartisan deal comes together, we can reconsider the vote,"
the GOP leader
said. "No time is lost by the very simple
principle that we’re not going to the bill until we know what the
bill is."
The bottom line: Schumer’s effort to impose a deadline on
negotiators after a month of bipartisan talks appears set to fail,
and with a crowded legislative calendar, that means the
infrastructure bill may not get done before the August recess, as
Democrats had hoped.
Dems Debate Lowering the Age for Medicare
Eligibility
Democrats are reportedly debating the possibility of
lowering the eligibility age for Medicare as part of their $3.5
trillion spending package currently under construction in
Congress.
Lowering the Medicare eligibility age to 60 was not
included in the budget blueprint Democrats released last week,
although the idea was endorsed by then-presidential candidate Joe
Biden in the spring of 2020. Progressive lawmakers, including
Senate Budget Committee Chair Bernie Sanders (I-VT), have long
supported the proposal.
Adding the age change would increase the cost of the
overall spending package by about $200 billion, Axios’s Hans
Nichols
reports, which could force lawmakers to find new
sources of revenue or cuts in other programs.
Determining the final cost will be difficult, though,
until lawmakers provide additional details, including how long they
plan to fund the program.
Americans’ Medical Debts Are Far Larger Than We
Thought
Collection agencies in the U.S. hold about $140 billion in
unpaid medical bills, according to a
study published Tuesday by JAMA: The Journal of the
American Medical Association.
The new analysis raises the estimate of the nation’s medical
debt held by collection agencies significantly, well above the $81
billion figure researchers produced in 2016.
The new study found that about 18% of Americans have medical
debt that is owned by collection agencies. Between 2009 and 2020,
medical debt became the largest type of debt that is owed to such
agencies, even as overall debt levels fell during the period.
"If you think about Americans getting phone calls, letters and
knocks on the door from debt collectors, more often than not it’s
because of the U.S. health care system," Neale Mahoney, a health
economist at Stanford University and the paper’s lead author, told
The New York Times.
More where that came from: The study looked
only at medical debt held by collection agencies, which means the
true total is much larger. Hospitals sometimes hang on to unpaid
bills and try to recover debts on their own, while some medical
expenses end up on credit cards.
A major Medicaid effect: The study also
found that medical debt is becoming more concentrated in states
that have not expanded their Medicaid systems under the Affordable
Care Act. Even before the ACA came along, people living in the
states that did not expand Medicaid owed more in medical debt. But
after the majority of states expanded Medicaid to cover millions of
additional low-income families, the debts of those living in
non-expansion states became a larger share of the total. By 2020,
the average medical debt in non-expansion states was about $375
higher than in the average debt in expansion states.
Economist Amy Finkelstein told the Times that health coverage
isn’t limited to matters of physical and mental health. "It’s a
misnomer — it’s not just to insure your health," she said,
referring to health insurance. "It’s actually to protect you
economically in the event of poor health."
Democrats eye expansion: Democrats
included the possibility of expanding Medicaid in the 12 states
that have declined to do so in the $3.5 trillion budget blueprint
released last week. Although the idea is still being debated, one
proposal would allow the federal government to offer Medicaid in
non-expansion states, bypassing the state health care systems.
Lawmakers still need to hammer out the details, though, including
how to pay for the cost of such a program.
Column of the Day: What Democratic Tax Reform Should Look
Like
Washington Post columnist Paul Waldman says that the
congressional back and forth about Democrats’ push to give the
Internal Revenue Service more money to crack down on tax cheats
"raises an important question Democrats should consider as they
make their policy plans for the next few years: What should real
tax reform look like?"
Waldman, a liberal, suggests that Democrats have an opportunity
to "seize the ‘tax reform’ mantle" and "unite around a number of
straightforward, easily understood ideas that are both good policy
and good politics."
Those policies, he says, include:
Boosting the IRS budge to enforce the law, even against the
rich: This effort to close the "tax gap" and collect more of
the hundreds of billions of dollars in taxes that go unpaid every
year "will increase fairness, improve the government’s bottom line
and leave Republicans arguing that rich people should be allowed to
cheat on their taxes."
End the stress and cost of tax filing: "Most Americans
don’t actually need to spend time and money filling out tax forms;
they have one source of income where taxes are deducted from their
paychecks, and they take the standard deduction. The government
already knows what they earned and what they paid," Waldman writes.
So the United States should do what many other countries already do
and have the government do your taxes for you, allowing you to make
changes if necessary.
"Why don’t we have such a system in the United States?" Waldman
asks. "One key reason is the lobbying power of Intuit, the
corporation that owns TurboTax, and the other tax software
companies. Democrats should relish a fight with them to create a
return-free system that tens of millions of families would benefit
from."
Tax all income the same: "It would be simpler and
fairer, and once again it would leave Republicans arguing for tax
advantages for the wealthy," Waldman argues.
Focus on fairness: "This should be the
guiding light for every Democratic proposal: Does it make the
system more fair?" Waldman says. Such a focus would mean tax higher
rates for corporations, more tax brackets for top earners,
eliminating loopholes for the rich — and raising more revenue
"We have one of the lowest tax-to-GDP ratios in
the developed world," Waldman argues, "but it doesn’t
have to be that way. With more tax revenue we could do more to
improve life for all Americans."
Read the full piece at The Washington Post.
News
Biden's Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill Hits Snag as GOP Pushes
to Delay Vote – USA Today
Senate Infrastructure Talks May Stretch Into Next Week as Failed
Vote Looms – Politico
Inside Schumer's Infrastructure Gamble –
Politico
DeFazio Blasts Bipartisan Senate Infrastructure Plan Biden
Backs – Bloomberg
Liberal House Democrats Urge Schumer to Stick to Infrastructure
Ultimatum – The Hill
Pelosi Pressed by Progressives to Move First on Budget
Plan – Bloomberg
GOP Split Over Infrastructure Messaging –
Axios
House Builds Infrastructure Alliances –
Axios
States and Cities Near Tentative $26 Billion Deal in Opioids
Cases – New York Times
White House Details Environmental Benefits Plan for
Disadvantaged Communities – The Hill
More U.S. Inflation Pressure to Come From Seniors’ Income
Boost – Bloomberg
Senior Democrat Proposes Cap on Trump-Era Business
Deduction – Bloomberg
Delta Variant Poses Major Risk to Biden’s Promises of Swift
Economic Comeback – Washington Post
Suddenly, Sean Hannity and Other Fox Hosts Are Urging Their
Viewers to Get COVID-19 Vaccines –
Insider
Views and Analysis
The Pandemic Has Changed Course Again. The Biden
Administration Urgently Needs to Do the Same – Leana S.
Wen, Washington Post
The Two Numbers That Could Get People to Take the
Vaccine – Kate Cohen, Washington Post
Covid-19, Vaccine Hesitancy and the Misinformation
Conundrum – Catherine Rampell, Washington Post
A Misplaced Sense of Virus Complacency Is Falling Into Place
in the U.S. – Hugh Hewitt, Washington Post
Hey Biden, Trump Could Be Your Best Vaccine Friend
– Karl W. Smith, Bloomberg
We Can Do Better Than 'C-' Infrastructure: Here's How to Fund
It – Mick Cornett and Michael Nutter, The Hill
Five Reasons to Pay for New Investments – Committee for
a Responsible Federal Budget
Why Is It So Hard for Moderate Democrats to ‘Do Popular
Things’? – Eric Levitz, New York
Progressives Around the Country Are Recalling Sewer
Socialism’s Proud History – Katrina vanden Heuvel,
Washington Post
State Republicans Are Bringing Back the Old Orthodoxy on Tax
Cuts – Henry Olsen, Washington Post
Good Riddance, TurboTax. Americans Need a Real ‘Free File’
Program – Binyamin Appelbaum, New York Times