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US Senate votes to advance bipartisan infrastructure bill

Xinhua | Updated: 2021-07-29 09:14
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The US Capitol Building is seen on July 26, 2021 in Washington, DC. [Photo/Agencies]

WASHINGTON - The US Senate on Wednesday voted to proceed with a bipartisan infrastructure deal that was struck earlier in the day, clearing the first hurdle toward adopting a long-waited and hotly debated spending package.

In a key procedural vote, senators voted 67-32 to push the bill forward, meeting the 60-vote threshold. All 50 Democrats and 17 Republicans voted in favor.

The vote starts the process to debate and amend the proposal, and the final version still needs approval from both chambers.

The vote came just a few hours after Senator Rob Portman from Ohio, the top Republican negotiator, told reporters that a bipartisan group of senators has reached an agreement on the major issues of the infrastructure plan.

The agreement was reached after months of strenuous negotiations between Senate Democrats and Republicans. Last month, US President Joe Biden announced that he reached a deal with a bipartisan group of senators on a roughly 1.2-trillion-US dollar infrastructure plan.

Over the past few weeks, senators have been trying to nail down details of the infrastructure package. About a week ago, Senate Republicans blocked a procedural vote to advance the infrastructure bill, calling for more time to negotiate the bill and finalize the details.

The bill includes $550 billion in new spending on infrastructure projects such as roads, bridges, passenger rails, drinking water and waste water systems. The rest of the package involves previously approved spending.

In a statement, National Retail Federation President and CEO Matthew Shay said the federation is "encouraged by tonight's quick and decisive action" in the Senate to invoke cloture to end filibuster on the bipartisan infrastructure deal, clearing the path for a full Senate vote.

"We look forward to swift passage in the Senate and encourage the House to follow suit," Shay said.

Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a budget watchdog group, said, "It is very encouraging that our leaders have put partisanship aside and come together to make important investments in the economy," but "we are deeply concerned that this legislation does not appear to be fully paid for."

Noting that the offsets appear to be a combination of real pay-fors and "budget gimmicks," MacGuineas urged policymakers to identify additional offsets to fully cover the costs and ideally -- as Biden proposed -- reduce long-term deficits.

Between income tax revenue, user fees, and spending reforms, there are plenty of offsets available, she added.

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