Follow Us on Google News
WASHINGTON: President Joe Biden proposed a sweeping new $1.8 trillion plan in a speech to a joint session to Congress, pleading with Republican lawmakers to work on divisive issues and to meet the stiff competition posed by China.
The Democratic president urged Republicans who have so far resolutely opposed him to help pass a wide array of legislation from taxes to police reform to gun control and immigration.
Biden, who took office in January, also made an impassioned plea to raise taxes on corporations and wealthy Americans to help pay for his $1.8 trillion “American Families Plan”. “It’s time for corporate America and the wealthiest 1% of Americans to pay their fair share – just pay their fair share,” Biden said.
He made his plea in the House of Representatives at an event scaled back this year because of the pandemic to a group of about 200 hundred lawmakers, other officials and guests.
Biden said he was willing to work with lawmakers on both sides of the aisle to come to an agreement, and will meet top Democratic and Republican lawmakers at the White House on May 12 to try to find common ground.
Speaking less than four months after demonstrators loyal to then-President Donald Trump stormed the US Capitol in a bid to overturn the election results, Biden said America was “on the move again.”
“We have stared into an abyss of insurrection and autocracy — of pandemic and pain — and ‘we the people’ did not flinch,” he said. “At the very moment our adversaries were certain we would pull apart and fail, we came together – united.”
Biden argued that his proposals for families and infrastructure, which together total about $4 trillion, represent a once-in-a-generation investment vital to America’s future.
“Tonight, I come to talk about crisis — and opportunity,” he said. “About rebuilding our nation — and revitalizing our democracy. And winning the future for America.”
Biden said the spending plans were needed to keep up with China, which he and his administration sees as a major strategic challenger. “China and other countries are closing in fast,” he said, adding that he has spent a lot of time talking to Chinese President Xi Jinping.
“He’s deadly earnest about becoming the most significant, consequential nation in the world. He and others, autocrats, think that democracy can’t compete in the 21st century with autocracies. It takes too long to get consensus.”
Biden’s plan includes $1 trillion in spending on education and childcare over 10 years and $800 billion in tax credits aimed at middle- and low-income families. It also includes $200 billion for free, universal preschool and $109 billion for free community college regardless of income for two years.
The American Families Plan and the infrastructure and jobs plan the White House introduced earlier this month could represent the most significant government transformation of the economy in decades.
To pay for the plans, Biden has proposed an overhaul of the US tax system, including raising the top marginal tax rate for the wealthiest Americans to 39.6% from its current 37%.
Biden has proposed nearly doubling the tax on investment income – known as capital gains – for Americans who earn more than $1 million. The $2 trillion-plus infrastructure plan is funded by an increase in corporate taxes.