Democratic Split on Taxes, Spending Imperils Deal Deadline

Congressional Democrats are at odds over both the tax and spending sides of a bill to enact the bulk of President Joe Biden’s economic agenda, putting in question the goal of party leaders to strike a deal by the end of the week.

The chances for agreement -- which seemed in reach late Tuesday -- have receded as Democrats intensified a search for alternatives to the corporate and individual tax hikes they’d worked on for months, in the face of opposition from Senator Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona. Democrats also are reworking the bill’s climate provisions, after Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia said he can’t support a clean power program favored by Biden, and they are still struggling to come to terms on a host of other provisions.

The eleventh-hour moves to appease the two senators -- whose crucial votes are seen as the hardest to win -- demonstrate the massive changes that lawmakers must make to the tax and spending plans the White House unveiled in the spring.

“This is not going to happen anytime soon,” Manchin told reporters Thursday. “Until you see the text and the fine print, it’s pretty hard to make final decisions.”

Should Democrats nix a proposed corporate tax hike to 26.5% from 21%, they would set aside a promise to make the largest businesses shoulder more of the tax burden. It also would leave Democrats with a more than $540 billion hole in the roughly $2 trillion total they need to raise to offset the cost of spending plans that include climate, health care and early-childhood programs.