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Biden Promotes Infrastructure Plan Amid GOP Opposition
Senior Reporter
President Joe Biden and his team are galvanizing public support for their multitrillion-dollar infrastructure proposal as Congress prepares to debate both the plan and the administration鈥檚 budget request for federal agencies.
The president on April 7 touted proposals in his $2.25 trillion American Jobs Plan that would invest in climate change programs, freight and passenger corridors, and electric vehicle technology, among other infrastructure elements.
Biden said his team will ramp up negotiations with congressional leaders over the next few weeks. 鈥淲e鈥檒l be listening,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檒l be open to good ideas and good-faith negotiations. But here鈥檚 what we won鈥檛 be open to. We will not be open to doing nothing. Inaction simply is not an option. I鈥檇 like to tell you my view. We are America. We don鈥檛 just fix for today; we build for tomorrow.鈥
Whatever partisan divisions there are around other issues 鈥 there don鈥檛 have to be on infrastructure.
We鈥檙e one nation 鈥 united and connected.鈥 President Biden (@POTUS)
Specifically, the plan calls for $115 billion for highways and bridges, $85 billion for transit, $80 billion for Amtrak, $25 billion for airports and $17 billion for inland ports. The funding element of the plan consists of raising the corporate tax rate to 28% from the current 21%.
鈥淎bove all, infrastructure is about meeting the needs of a nation and putting Americans to work and being able to do and get paid for doing [and] having good jobs,鈥 Biden added.
A recent review of the country鈥檚 infrastructure system received a 鈥淐-鈥 grade from the American Society of Civil Engineers.

American Society of Civil Engineers' report card gives a grade to 17 infrastructure-related categories (ASCE)
The president鈥檚 remarks came as Republican leaders in Congress continue to express their opposition to the plan鈥檚 size and funding mechanism.
Congress resumes its legislative session the week of April 12 and Republicans remain largely opposed to the proposal.
They suggest Democrats focus instead on traditional infrastructure policy, such as roads and bridges. Republicans also take issue with the proposed increase in the corporate tax structure to pay for the plan.
鈥淭his proposal appears to use 鈥榠nfrastructure鈥 as a Trojan horse for the largest set of tax hikes in a generation. These sweeping tax hikes would kill jobs and hold down wages at the worst possible time, as Americans try to dig out from the pandemic,鈥 said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). 鈥淒emocrats should stop worrying about pleasing the far left and work across the aisle on bipartisan solutions that could pass with big bipartisan majorities.鈥
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo emphasized the plan鈥檚 potential benefits related to the freight industry and the manufacturing sector, and argued approving massive investments in infrastructure programs would enhance supply chains, and lead to job creation.
鈥淭he American Jobs Plan also is about strengthening our supply chains, making things in America, making critical goods in America, creating good jobs in the process, and increasing the security that we have, knowing that we aren鈥檛 overly dependent on other countries for critical supplies,鈥 Raimondo told reporters April 7.
A preview of the president鈥檚 fiscal 2022 budget request is听scheduled to be unveiled April 9. In a few weeks, the White House will unveil a more detailed budget request. The administration鈥檚 funding request is meant to guide the congressional appropriations process, as well as help to elucidate the infrastructure plan鈥檚 funding proposal.
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