- A former Carter-era official is calling on Biden to abandon any effort to revive
Build Back Better . - W. Michael Blumenthal told the Times that the president should take "painful steps" to combat
inflation .
A Carter administration official is offering President
"Inflation fighting comes first," W. Michael Blumenthal, a former treasury secretary for President
"President Biden faces this dilemma, and it's certainly my hope that he will choose clearly, choose decisively and be very clear not only about the fact that he recognizes that inflation has to be dealt with, but that he is really willing to support painful steps to do that," Blumenthal said.
It comes as
Today's surge in energy prices are the result of Western sanctions knocking out Russian oil from global markets, coupled with huge demand outstripping the available supply of oil. Biden and Democrats are blaming Russian President Vladimir Putin for driving up inflation, along with oil companies that are currently restraining domestic production.
Democrats have pitched a range of measures aimed at providing financial relief, but they're dead on arrival in
The main linchpin of the Democratic agenda remains a scaled-back version of the party's Build Back Better legislation from last year that seems likely to center on clean energy tax credits and cutting the federal deficit. Democrats are hoping to woo Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, a holdout, into backing a smaller package by the start of August.
"They're still playing around with BBB," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said in Paducah, Kentucky on Tuesday, referring to the stalled Build Back Better plan carrying the bulk of the Democratic agenda. "If they bring that back, it will only make all of this considerably worse."
An analysis from the Penn Wharton Budget Model at the University of Pennsylvania from late last year indicated the House-approved bill — which Manchin killed in December citing increasing inflation — wouldn't significantly worsen rising prices.