House Dems delay huge social bill, plan infrastructure vote
WASHINGTON (AP) — Top Democrats abruptly postponed an expected House vote Friday on a 10-year, $1.85 trillion social and environment measure, as leaders’ long struggle to balance demands from progressives and moderates once again dogged that pillar of President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda.
In a bid to hand him a needed victory, leaders prepared to try pushing an accompanying $1 trillion package of road and other infrastructure projects through the chamber and to his desk.
With lawmakers set to leave town for a week’s break, House leaders’ scrambled plans cast a fresh pall over a party that’s tried for weeks to find middle ground on its massive package of health, education, family and climate change initiatives. That’s been hard, in part because Democrats’ slender majorities mean they need the support of every Senate Democrat and no more than three defectors in the House.
Many had expected the House to approve both that measure and the infrastructure bill on Friday, producing twin triumphs for a president and party eager to rebound from this week’s deflating off-year elections and show they can govern.