Mitch McConnell said delayingBiden 's agenda is "the best Christmas gift" for working families.- Senate Democrats seem to be focusing on passing voting rights legislation before Christmas instead.
Senate Majority Leader
This news angered a number of House progressive lawmakers, but it was music to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's ears.
"Yesterday, we got indications that the far left's slapdash sprint may be hitting the pause button," McConnell said during Thursday remarks on the Senate floor. "Well, that would certainly be great news for the American people. The best Christmas gift Washington could give working families would be putting this bad bill on ice."
McConnell and his Republican colleagues have long opposed Democrats' plan to spend $1.75 trillion on Biden's sweeping climate and social-spending bill, saying they're concerned it would add to the already spiking
That's a concern that centrist Democrat of West Virginia
Manchin later denounced those reports as "bullshit," but his Democratic colleagues in the Senate said they felt blindsided there was even a discussion surrounding cutting the benefit for families; the credit was included in the House version of the bill that recently passed.
"I'm very, very surprised because I thought that there was an agreement on this," Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet, an architect of the program, told Insider.
Regardless of what makes it into the final version of the Senate's bill, a number of House progressives came out in opposition to the idea that passing voting rights legislation should take Build Back Better's place.
"It is unacceptable that discussion of further delays to the passage of the Build Back Better Act is being framed as a choice between this legislation and voting rights," Missouri Rep. Cori Bush said in a statement. Bush was one of the six Democrats who voted against the infrastructure bill's passage because she wanted the social-spending bill to be passed at the same time.
New York Rep. Jamaal Bowman expressed a similar sentiment on Wednesday, saying "there is not good enough reason" to delay the bill's passage.
"It has now been 26 days since the House did its job to deliver on President Biden's full agenda and passed the Build Back Better Act," Bowman said in a statement. "Now, we are faced with a false choice between saving our democracy from the existential threat of fascism and meeting the immediate needs of the people."