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Manchin: No Talks on Build Back Better Plan

Manchin: No Talks on Build Back Better Plan

Tuesday, 04 January 2022 01:26 PM EST

Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin on Tuesday said there were no current discussions on President Joe Biden's Build Back Better plan after talks recently collapsed with the White House.

"There is no negotiations going on at this time," he told reporters.

He added that he was more interested in pushing projects that had bipartisan support, unlike Build Back Better.

"There’s an awful lot of things, a lot of things that were very, I think, well intended. And there was a lot of things that was a pretty far reach," he explained, referring to Biden's signature effort. "Our country is divided and I don’t intend to do anything that divides our country anymore."

Manchin did say he was interested in backing more federal support for renewable energy sources and technologies, raising the possibility that he might be able to vote for a smaller climate-focused package.

"There’s a lot of good things in there," he added, when asked about the climate-related provisions in the Build Back Better bill. "We got a lot of money in there for innovation, technology, tax credits for basically clean technologies and a clean environment and I think we have to continue."

Manchin was also skeptical on Democrats' plan to change the filibuster along party lines, warning that his "preference" is for any rules changes to be bipartisan.

"Being open to a rules change that would create a nuclear option. It's very, very difficult. It's a heavy lift," Manchin said. The "nuclear option" refers to a plan in which Democrats would change the 60-vote legislative filibuster on their own.

"I'm talking. I'm not agreeing to any of this. ... I want to talk and see all the options we have open," Manchin said, adding that it was his "preference" that any rule changes have Republican support.

Senators have continued intensive discussions with Manchin and Sen. Krysten Sinema of Arizona, throughout the holiday break, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer told CNN, and seven or eight of them will discuss the different proposals in the meeting with Manchin.

"The bottom line is this: They must allow us to pass these two vital pieces of legislation, even if not a single Republican joins us," Schumer said.

On Monday, Schumer said the narrowly Democrat-controlled chamber needed to consider a change to its filibuster rule.

Senate Democrats tried to bring the voting-rights bill to a floor vote four times last year, and were repeatedly blocked by Republicans, who made use of the filibuster rule that requires 60 of the 100 senators to agree to advance most legislation.

Democrats could change the chamber's rules with just a simple majority, but two centrist members of their party — Manchin and Sinema — have repeatedly voiced objection to doing so.

"We're exploring a variety of ways to change the rules [that would] allow us to pass these two important pieces of legislation," Schumer said. There are definitive proposals out there, he said without elaborating.

Material from Reuters wire service was used in this story.

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Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin on Tuesday said there were no current discussions on President Joe Biden's Build Back Better plan after talks recently collapsed with the White House. "There is no negotiation...
manchin, biden, no talks, build back better
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2022-26-04
Tuesday, 04 January 2022 01:26 PM
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