Rebel senator suddenly backs Biden’s climate billon July 28, 2022 at 4:38 am

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Joe Manchin stuns Washington by announcing support for a measure to raise taxes and fight climate change.

Joe ManchinImage source, Getty Images

A US Democratic senator who has proved a political thorn in the White House’s side has stunned Capitol Hill by announcing sudden support for President Joe Biden’s top agenda item.

Joe Manchin said he now backs a bill to raise corporate taxes, fight climate change and lower medicine costs.

The West Virginian previously objected to the proposal, citing fears more spending could worsen inflation.

Passage of the bill would be a major legislative victory for Mr Biden.

Salvaging a key plank of his domestic agenda could also grant a much-needed electoral boost for his fellow Democrats, who are battling to retain control of Congress as midterm elections loom in November.

“If enacted, this legislation will be historic,” said the president.

In a joint statement on Wednesday evening with Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, Mr Manchin provided few specifics.

But the newly agreed bill is said to be much more modest than the $3.5tn (£2.9tn) version Democrats originally put forward.

Climate breakthrough

Mr Manchin and Mr Schumer said it would help the US lower its carbon emissions by about 40% by the year 2030.

The bill would devote $369bn to climate policies such as tax credits for solar panels, wind turbines and electric vehicles, and tackling the impact of pollution on low-income communities.

“By a wide margin, this legislation will be the greatest pro-climate legislation that has ever been passed by Congress,” Mr Schumer said in a statement.

Mr Manchin and Mr Schumer also maintained the measure would pay for itself by raising $739bn (£608bn) over the decade through hiking the corporate minimum tax on big companies to 15%, beefing up Internal Revenue Service tax enforcement, and allowing the government to negotiate prescription drug prices.

President Biden needs the unanimous support of all 50 Democratic senators, along with Vice President Kamala Harris’s tiebreaking vote, to get the bill through the Senate and send it to the House of Representatives – where Democrats hold a razor-thin majority.

If passed, the legislation would mark a major breakthrough for the president, enshrining a number of his major policy goals into law and offering to salvage a domestic economic agenda that has in recent months stalled under failed negotiations.

The bill still amounts to significantly less than what the White House had hoped to achieve in its original $1.9tn (£1.4tn) Build Back Better agenda – an ambitious plan to comprehensively rewrite the US’s health, education, climate, and tax laws.

That earlier plan, which for months has floundered in the Senate with an uncertain future, is now “dead,” Mr Manchin said on Wednesday.

Change of heart

It is not clear what has prompted the West Virginia senator’s dramatic reversal to support the new bill. He is something of a political anomaly, representing a conservative state that voted overwhelmingly for former President Donald Trump.

Barely a fortnight ago, the senator exasperated the White House by saying he could only back the portions of the proposal relating to pharmaceutical prices and healthcare subsidies.

“I have worked diligently to get input from all sides,” Mr Manchin said on Wednesday evening.

Mr Schumer hopes to pass the bill with 51 votes through a budgetary manoeuvre that would allow him to circumvent rules requiring support from 60 out of 100 senators. If every Democrat backs the measure in the evenly split chamber, it would go through.

However, Senator Kyrsten Sinema, a moderate Arizona Democrat who has in the past acted as a roadblock to President Biden’s agenda, could still scupper the plan. She declined to comment on news of the agreement on Wednesday night.

Republicans, who have previously tried to woo Mr Manchin to join their party, slammed him.

“I can’t believe that Senator Manchin is agreeing to a massive tax increase in the name of climate change when our economy is in a recession,” Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said.

Mr Schumer said the Senate would take the bill up next week. The House of Representatives could then take it up later in August.

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