The House Sabotage Squad’s promise to vote next week on Build Back Better might already be broken
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Speaker Nancy Pelosi remains firm on a timeline for passing the $1.75 trillion budget reconciliation bill that contains President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better plan. She reiterated in a press conference Tuesday from Glasgow, where she is attending the UniteThe House Sabotage Squad’s promise to vote next week on Build Back Better might already be broken
Speaker Nancy Pelosi remains firm on a timeline for passing the $1.75 trillion budget reconciliation bill that contains President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better plan. She reiterated in a press conference Tuesday from Glasgow, where she is attending the United Nations Climate Change Conference, that the House will vote sometime next week on the bill. The conservative Democrats in the House who have been holding up progress on that bill vowed last week that they would agree to for Build Back Better “in no event later than the week of November 15th” in an agreement made with Rep. Pramila Jayapal, leader of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. That agreement resulted in the CPC agreeing to help pass the hard infrastructure bill and delinking the two bills. The conservatives’ agreement, however, was predicated on receiving “fiscal information” from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). That part of the commitment from the group could be dicey, as the CBO released a statement Tuesday, giving no definite timeline for a full cost estimate beyond “as soon as practicable.” They do, however, “anticipate releasing estimates for individual titles of the bill as we complete them, some of which will be released this week.” So that “fiscal information” will start coming this week, but will that be enough for the Sabotage Squad (thanks again Greg Sargent, for that nickname), or will they hold out for the full cost estimate? They do say they “remain committed to working to resolve any discrepancies in order to pass the Build Back Better legislation,” but that could mean anything. Like continuing to delay its passage to give Senate Democrats Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema time to carve more good stuff out of it in the name of “resolving discrepancies” in cost estimates. Read more