In wake of pandemic’s economic devastation, “…human infrastructure cannot
be secondary to the physical infrastructure needs or languish under Republican
obstructionism”
Washington
(May 25, 2021) – As Republican senators continue to lowball President Biden’s
ambitious infrastructure investment plans, Oregon’s U.S. Senator Jeff
Merkley—along with U.S. Senators Edward J. Markey (D-MA), Alex Padilla (D-CA),
Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), , Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD),
and Bernard Sanders (I-VT)—are pushing congressional leaders to deliver a bold
and comprehensive federal infrastructure investment package, and to lay out a
strategy to ensure that the legislation is delivered to President Biden’s desk
by August 2021.
“President
Biden has made a compelling case to the American people that government can and
should be a force for good in this country and we agree that bold investments
in good-paying union jobs, climate action, and caregiving are essential to
uplifting families and building back better,” the senators wrote in their letter. “We believe it is imperative we
build on this initial proposal and use this uniquely historic opportunity to
harness our governing majorities to decisively tackle the climate crisis;
deliver immediate job growth and long-overdue wage growth for American workers;
ensure equity and fairness for marginalized communities as part of this
economic recovery; and reshape vital sectors of our economy—such as caregiving,
clean energy, and manufacturing—so that they produce good, family-sustaining,
union jobs with benefits.”
“Physical
and human infrastructure needs are inextricably linked. People—especially women
and people of color who have suffered disproportionate job losses during this
recession—cannot get back to work without childcare, long-term care, paid
leave, or investments in education and job retraining. This human
infrastructure cannot be secondary to the physical infrastructure needs or
languish under Republican obstructionism,” the
senators continued. “We look forward to meeting our constituents to
champion the improvements in their daily lives and strengthen their faith in a
government that works for working people, an economy that provides security and
opportunity to all, and a planet that their children and grandchildren can
enjoy for generations to come.”
A
copy of the letter can be found
HERE.
The
senators’ letter emphasized the lawmakers’ strong support for President Biden’s
previous campaign proposal for health, energy, infrastructure and child-care
investments totaling roughly $7 trillion, which included a four-year “$2
trillion accelerated investment” on climate-focused infrastructure, and
recognized the success of the robust investments included in the American
Rescue Plan. In light of that proposal and success—coupled with the scale of
unemployment, caregiving, health care, climate and the inequality crisis and
historically low cost to make the necessary investments our country needs—the
senators urged the congressional leaders to pursue a larger upfront investment
than that outlined in initial proposals from the White House.
The
senators also underscored the urgency of delivering an effective infrastructure
investment package, and while they welcomed potential bipartisan support, they
strongly urged congressional leaders not to sacrifice popular programs or
necessary investments in pursuing Republican votes.
Lastly,
the letter urged the leaders to develop a rapid legislative timeline to enact
an ambitious and comprehensive proposal before the August recess, and to
prepare avenues that would guarantee Congressional action in the event of
partisan delays and obstruction.
Endorsement
Quotes
###
Dear
Madam Speaker and Leader Schumer:
We
applaud your leadership in uniting the Democratic Caucus in both chambers to
enact President Biden’s visionary $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, which
provided both the resources and direction for our country to crush COVID-19 and
provide urgent economic relief to the American people. We wish to commend you
on a generational legislative accomplishment, which enjoys overwhelming and
bipartisan popularity across the country, lays the foundation for a just and
equitable recovery, and restores Americans’ faith in government. We write to
share our priorities on the size, scope, and speed of the next legislative
package, and to share our concerns that passing a reduced package first to
garner bipartisan support will sacrifice our chance to secure the broad
investment for racial, climate, and economic justice that voters backed in the
2020 elections. We urge you not to decrease the scope of ambition, but to
instead use this window of opportunity to make the down payments we urgently need
to tackle the intersecting crises facing our nation.
As
we reflect on the tragedy of more than half a million Americans who died as a
result of this pandemic, the tens of millions who lost their jobs and health
care, and the millions more who experienced food and housing insecurity, we are
grateful for the fierce and unrelenting ambition of President Biden,
Congressional Democratic leaders, and our committee chairs in crafting a rescue
plan whose scope matched the enormity of the economic and public-health crisis
we faced.
In
that spirit, we look forward to partnering with you to develop and enact as
robust and comprehensive a Build Back Better package as possible, building on
the Biden Administration’s American Jobs Plan and American Families Plan. This initial
framework made significant strides toward achieving clean transportation and
clean water for all, 100% carbon pollution-free power by 2035, growth in clean
manufacturing, protection of our lands, and a robust care economy. President
Biden has made a compelling case to the American people that government can and
should be a force for good in this country and we agree that bold investments
in good-paying union jobs, climate action, and caregiving are essential to
uplifting families and building back better.
We
believe it is imperative we build on this initial proposal and use this
uniquely historic opportunity to harness our governing majorities to decisively
tackle the climate crisis; deliver immediate job growth and long-overdue wage
growth for American workers; ensure equity and fairness for marginalized
communities as part of this economic recovery; and reshape vital sectors of our
economy—such as caregiving, clean energy, and manufacturing—so that they
produce good, family-sustaining, union jobs with benefits.
We
respectfully wish to share three priorities for your consideration as Congress
develops Build Back Better legislation:
Size:
We strongly support the president’s previous campaign proposal for health,
energy, infrastructure and child-care investments totaling roughly $7 trillion,
including a four-year “$2 trillion accelerated investment” on climate-focused
infrastructure, setting America on “an irreversible course to meet the
ambitious climate progress that science demands.”
The
initial size of the American Jobs Plan—roughly $2 trillion over eight years, or
1 percent in annual GDP investments—encompasses both physical infrastructure,
caregiving, housing, workforce development, and other vital priorities. But
this framework invests half the annual resources originally proposed by
President Biden on climate action alone.
President
Biden’s original $7 trillion campaign investments align more closely with the
$9.5 trillion THRIVE Agenda, cosponsored by over 100 members of Congress, to
create 15 million good jobs, curb racial inequity, and cut climate pollution in
half by 2030—a framework supported by over 250 labor, racial justice and
environmental organizations.
Given
the success enjoyed by Congress and the White House in passing the overwhelmingly
popular American Rescue Plan to direct roughly 9 percent of annual GDP in rapid
assistance to the American people, we urge our colleagues to maintain an
ambitious infrastructure size.
As a
tool for recovery in the wake of the pandemic, public infrastructure—particularly
green infrastructure—can “also create millions of jobs directly in the short
term and millions more indirectly over a longer period,” according to the
International Monetary Fund.
Given
the scale of our unemployment, caregiving, health care, climate and inequality
crises; the historically low cost to make the necessary investments our country
needs; and the singular governing opportunity presented to us, we urge our
colleagues in Congress to pursue a larger up-front investment that truly meets
this historic moment.
Scope:
We appreciate the White House’s interest in reaching across the aisle to seek
Republican support for overwhelmingly popular infrastructure priorities to
invest in caregiving, workforce development, the environment, housing, and
education, and to make the very wealthy and large corporations pay their fair
share in taxes to reduce inequality.
While
bipartisan support is welcome, the pursuit of Republican votes cannot come at
the expense of limiting the scope of popular investments. We note that
widespread climate denial among Republican lawmakers poses a threat to the
bold, necessary action on climate that President Biden and Congressional
Democrats have long championed. Republicans also enacted President Trump’s
massive tax giveaway—80 percent of which will flow to the wealthy and large
corporations in the long run—and have made it clear that they plan to remain a
major obstacle to any opportunities to secure fair, progressive tax revenues to
curb income and wealth inequality.
Furthermore,
Republicans have consistently opposed the high-road labor and equity standards
that President Biden rightly included in the American Jobs Plan to ensure the
creation of high-paying unions jobs with benefits, equitable hiring for women,
people of color, and investments in Indigenous and marginalized communities
that have endured decades of underinvestment.
On a
host of priorities that can be delivered by this Congress, the trade-offs for
Republican votes are stark. We ask that you work with the White House to
prioritize moving transformative legislation that our voters were promised,
which and not compromise to conform the scope of our necessary ambition to fit
the limited paradigm of legislation that will be acceptable to the
Republicans. This may require reforming
or even eliminating the Senate filibuster, as well as wielding the full powers
available of the presidency, vice presidency, and relevant federal agencies to
achieve these goals.
Speed:
In light of the urgency to secure a broad-based and equitable economic
recovery, as well as the previous unanimity of Congressional Republican
opposition to the American Rescue Plan, we believe that robust legislation
comprising the American Jobs Plan and American Families Plan must be enacted as
rapidly as possible, preferably as a single, ambitious package combining
physical and social investments hand in hand.
Physical
and human infrastructure needs are inextricably linked. People—especially women
and people of color who have suffered disproportionate job losses during this
recession—cannot get back to work without childcare, long-term care, paid
leave, or investments in education and job retraining. This human
infrastructure cannot be secondary to the physical infrastructure needs or
languish under Republican obstructionism.
We
hope to work with you and our committee chairs to develop a rapid legislative
timeline to enact an ambitious and comprehensive proposal before the August
recess, including a potential springtime budget resolution to guarantee
Congressional action in the event of Republican delays. This will allow us to
use the legislative recess to engage with our constituents in our districts to
celebrate, highlight, and guide community members through the concrete measures
that Congress has enacted. We look forward to meeting our constituents to
champion the improvements in their daily lives and strengthen their faith in a
government that works for working people, an economy that provides security and
opportunity to all, and a planet that their children and grandchildren can
enjoy for generations to come.
Thank
you for your consideration,