- Manchin sketched out what could get him aboard a new social and climate bill.
- It would start with prescription drug reforms and repairing a tax code that favors the wealthy.
After tanking the vast majority of President
On Wednesday, the West Virginia senator laid out what could be Biden's last shot at enacting swaths of his stalled domestic agenda before the November midterms.
In an interview with Politico, Manchin said he can give a thumbs-up to a Democrat-only package that starts off with prescription drug savings and an overhaul of the tax code. He hasn't budged on pushing for a bill that establishes a few permanently-funded programs, rather than the cocktail of short-term initiatives in the original Build Back Better legislation. He's also frequently spoken in favor of a plan that reduces the federal deficit, or the gap between what the federal government spends and takes in.
"If you do that, the revenue producing [measures] would be taxes and drugs. The spending is going to be climate," Manchin told Politico, adding that "social issues" would be addressed separately from such a plan.
It amounts to a big signal that Manchin is willing to return to the negotiating table after quitting talks with the
Biden sought to restart his stalled domestic agenda at Tuesday evening's
He outlined a handful of his chief priorities to combat decades-high inflation, including establishing prescription drug controls, affordable
Still, some of these measures may not pass muster with Manchin. He told Insider last month that he believed affordable childcare was a "social issue" that had to be dealt with through committee hearings. Manchin has also objected to the monthly child tax credit program, which expired last year.
"We have to have 50 votes," Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts told reporters. "There's no way around the math."
She said that she believed every Senate Democrat backed universal- pre-K, in-home and community-based care for seniors and the elderly, and establishing a 15% minimum tax on corporations.