US senators finalise details of $1.35 trillion infrastructure plan, predict passage this week

The massive infrastructure package is a top legislative priority for US President Joe Biden. PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - United States senators on Sunday (Aug 1) finalised details of a sweeping US$1 trillion (S$1.35 trillion) plan to invest in roads, bridges, ports, high-speed Internet and other infrastructure, with some predicting passage of the bipartisan legislation later this week.

The massive infrastructure package, a goal that has eluded Congress for years, is a top legislative priority for US President Joe Biden, who has billed it as the largest such investment in a century.

Senators said the 2,702-page bill included US$550 billion in new spending over five years for items such as roads, rail, electric vehicle charging stations and replacing lead water pipes on top of US$450 billion in previously approved funds.

"I believe we can quickly process relevant amendments and pass this Bill in days," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, said of the legislation after it was announced by a bipartisan group of senators.

"This is a really important Bill because it takes our big, aging and outdated infrastructure in this country and modernises it. That's good for everybody," said Senator Rob Portman, the lead Republican negotiator.

However, the Bill also drew criticism from some Republicans, who believe it costs too much.

"I've got real concerns with this Bill," Republican Senator Mike Lee said in a floor speech. "All is not well with the way we spend money."

It was not yet clear whether senators outside the bipartisan group that negotiated the Bill will offer amendments that could pass and possibly upset the delicate coalition that was cobbled together.

If the Bill passes the Senate, it must be considered in the House of Representatives, where some Democrats have blasted it as too small and the Democratic leadership has paired it with a US$3.5 trillion "human infrastructure" Bill to pour money into education, child care, climate change and other priorities.

Democrats want to offset that social spending with tax increases on corporations and wealthy Americans earning more than US$400,000 a year - measures that Republicans oppose - leaving the fate of both Bills up in the air.

Sunday night's developments capped months of negotiating, and infighting, among several groups of senators and the White House.

Initially, Mr Biden said he was seeking about US$2 trillion in a bipartisan Bill, an amount that Republicans rejected as wasteful and unnecessary.

A group of Republican senators then worked on a plan to spend far less, an effort that eventually died, raising questions if Congress could fashion a deal allowing the Democratic president to fulfill his Jan 20 inauguration promise of working cooperatively with Republicans.

A bipartisan group of senators, led by Arizona Democrat Kyrsten Sinema, a moderate, and the conservative Mr Portman toiled for months, adding input from House centrists, on a new plan closer to what Mr Biden would accept.

Late in June the group said it had reached a US$1.2-trillion deal, but filling in details took more than a month.

With prodding from Mr Schumer and Mr Biden, the negotiators put their staffs to work, nearly around-the-clock, culminating in Sunday's final deal.

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