President Biden’s $2 trillion dollar infrastructure proposal dominated the Sunday morning political talk shows.
Biden last Wednesday unveiled his $2 trillion infrastructure proposal, branded “The American Jobs Plan.” It includes funding for transportation infrastructure and modern infrastructure like broadband and upgrading buildings, and investments in the care economy to assist health workers and innovation and research and development of future technologies.
“We think we can not only have a strong job rebound this year, but we can sustain it over many years. That’s the goal,” Brian Deese, the head of the National Economic Council, said.
Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) said Sunday that a smaller infrastructure package focusing on physical needs such as roads and bridges would quickly pass the upper chamber and represent an “easy win” for the Biden administration.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on Sunday called President Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure plan a “serious proposal,” but signaled that “a lot more work has to be done” in what he is calling “human infrastructure.”
Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves (R) on Sunday weighed in on President Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure proposal, saying it looks more like the Green New Deal, an ambitious climate proposal touted by progressives.
Cecilia Rouse, the chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, on Sunday said it is important to “upgrade our definition of infrastructure” when discussing President Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure proposal.
Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm on Sunday suggested that the White House is open to passing its $2 trillion infrastructure plan using reconciliation if no Republican lawmakers support the legislation.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said Sunday that the Biden administration’s plan for infrastructure reform would pay for itself and begin chipping away at the deficit 16 years after it is passed.
Michael Osterholm, a top epidemiologist and member of President Biden’s COVID-19 advisory board, acknowledged that a messaging “problem” exists surrounding whether Americans are completely safe from contracting COVID-19 after being vaccinated and if they should travel.
Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) suggested on Sunday that the fencing around the Capitol should still be removed in the wake of an attack on Friday in which a car was rammed into a barricade.
“We have seen justice not delivered in our community for many years. I think that there is a lot of confidence in Attorney General Keith Ellison and the prosecutors in this case, but we are all eagerly awaiting to see how this trial shakes out,” Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) said.