Joe Manchin has firmly said that he will not vote for President Biden’s infrastructure bill unless he can trim it down to $1.5M. Congress already renews a small group of expiring tax policies each December, and this is expected to become an expensive addition to that list. In fact, Democrats purposely selected for “expiration” a popular middle-class benefit that they know even a future Republican Congress or president would not dare take away from voters. Of course, no one believes that Congress will actually allow the child tax credit to be reduced at the end of 2025, and progressives have declared this policy one of the cornerstones of their long-term antipoverty agenda. This made the 10-year cost of the proposal appear $750 billion smaller. Then, in order to cut the bill’s “official” cost closer to $4 trillion, the bill’s authors included a December 2025 expiration of the $130 billion annual expansion of the child tax credit to $3,000 per child (or $3,600 for children under the age of 6).
They began with a reconciliation proposal that would cost nearly $5 trillion over the decade. Progressives have been abusing these gimmicks from the start. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) openly discussed their use of budget gimmicks over the weekend when she told CNN that “our idea now is to look at how you make them funded for a little bit of a shorter time.” That is the approach that congressional Democrats are brazenly employing to make their spending bonanza appear smaller than it is. How does Congress cut a $3.5 trillion spending bill down to $1.5 trillion? By using gimmicks to hide its true cost. McCarthy won’t make Boebert apologize further for Omar joke, slams Pelosi and ‘Squad’ congressman posts family Christmas picture with guns, days after school shooting
Max Rose to run for House seat in 2022 in rematch with Malliotakis Devin Nunes to retire at month’s end, will head Trump social media ventureįormer Rep.