provide billions for electric vehicle charging stations, the largest transportation spending package in U.S. history.
The passage is a victory for Democrats and President Joe Biden, who had suffered a stinging defeat in Tuesday’s elections.
The bill, passed by the Senate in August, will now be sent to Biden who will sign it into law.
“Finally, infrastructure week! I’m so happy to say that,” a jubilant Biden said Saturday at the White House.
Biden called passage of the bill “a monumental step forward as a nation.”
“We did something that’s long overdue, that long has been talked about in Washington but never actually been done,” he said.
He said he would sign the bill soon but not this weekend.
The 228-206 vote followed bitter differences between Democratic progressives and moderates who clashed over the size and scope of Biden’s $1.85 trillion Build Back Better budget bill that would expand social safety net programs and enact sweeping climate programs. The deal Democrats struck allowed passage of the infrastructure bill Friday and a promise that the larger bill would get a vote later this month.
Thirteen Republicans voted for the bipartisan legislation while six progressive Democrats voted against due to lack of movement Friday on the Build Back Better Act.
Biden referenced lessons from Democratic losses in Tuesday’s elections, which some Democrats blamed on their failure to pass Biden’s infrastructure and social-spending plans after weeks of messy negotiations.
“They want us to deliver,” Biden said. “Last night, we proved we can. On one big item, we delivered.”
Progressives had wanted enough assurances that moderate Democrats would back the social and climate bill before voting on the infrastructure bill. Their concern was that some more moderate lawmakers would vote for one bill and not the other, a scenario that could imperil passage because Democrats hold a very small advantage in the House.
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The infrastructure bill was the result of weeks of negotiations over the spring and summer between Republicans, Democrats and Biden. In August, the bill was approved in the Senate on a bipartisan 69-30 vote.
The bipartisan infrastructure bill would provide the largest investment in transit and water projects in history, the biggest investment in passenger railways since the creation of Amtrak and the most bridge investment since the creation of the interstate highway system, according to the White House.
The infrastructure bill would provide:
Moderates on Friday postponed the vote on the Build Back Better Act after they wanted to wait until a Congressional Budget Office “scored” the bill’s true fiscal impact on spending and the debt.
The delay led to hours of behind-closed-door negotiations to get votes on the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
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Progressives and moderates within the Democratic party both released statements late Friday to signify they’d reached a deal, based on the commitment from moderates to vote on the Build Back Better Act “in no event later than the week of November 15th.”
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., on Friday said Democrats would give moderates the time and the assurances by waiting for those numbers and hope to pass it around the end of November, saying it would be a “Thanksgiving gift for the American people.”
Biden vowed that his Build Back Better legislation will move forward.
“Let me be clear,” Biden said. “We will pass this in House and we’ll pass it in the Senate.”
But Republican Rep. Michael Burgess, R-Texas, said Democrats did not learn from Tuesday’s elections when Republicans did surprisingly well in gubernatorial races in Virginia and New Jersey.
“No one seemed to pay attention to when the voters spoke earlier this week and said: ‘We don’t want big government. We don’t want this creeping socialism that we’re seeing’,” he said on the floor prior to the vote. “And yet, the response of this house was to double down on that and jam through this massive bill.”
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki tweeted the passage is “Proof that delivering for the American people is worth all the painful sausage making.”
“Clean drinking water for kids, broadband access, electric vehicles, biggest investment in public transit. It’s happening. And more to come,” she continued.
Contributing: Michael Collins and Joey Garrison