Joe Manchin rejects climate, tax proposals in blow to Biden agenda – USA TODAY

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WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden vowed Friday to take “strong executive action” to address climate change after Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., doomed the president’s efforts to revive major pieces of his domestic legislative agenda. 
Declaring he “won’t back down,” the president said he would use executive authority after Manchin on Thursday rejected proposals to combat climate change and raise taxes on the wealthy in negotiations for a spending package with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. 
More:Sen. Joe Manchin cools on spending negotiations, citing fears of an ‘inflation fire’
Biden and Democrats had lofty ambitions to transform the economy and social safety net and to engineer the most significant climate provisions in U.S. history. But what began last year as a $3.5 trillion spending bill – dubbed Build Back Better by the president – is now gutted almost entirely. It’s been reduced to a health care bill. Omitted long ago were proposals for universal prekindergarten, free community college, national paid family leave, extending child tax credits, affordable housing and dental and vision coverage for seniors.
After Manchin torpedoed a slimmed-down $2.2 trillion Build Back Better bill last year, Schumer revived talks with the West Virginia senator in a last-ditch push to save some of the president’s agenda, particularly addressing climate, before the November midterm elections. The White House hoped to pass legislation via reconciliation, which would allow Democrats to bypass a potential Republican filibuster with a simple majority, but doing so would require all 50 Democratic senators to be on board.

Manchin, citing 40-year-high inflation, said he won’t support anything “that causes more problems.” He also balked at efforts to scale back fossil fuels, characterizing it as unrealistic to shift to renewable energy in a decade. “I’m not going to be part of eliminating what this country needs to run the economic engine and the lives of human beings throughout America.”
Biden, asked by a reporter whether Manchin is negotiating in good faith, said, “I didn’t negotiate with Joe Manchin. I have no idea.” The White House took a back seat during the latest round of talks with Schumer taking the lead. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre declined to say whether Manchin gave the administration a heads up about his position. 
Progressives blasted Manchin. “It seems odd that Sen. Manchin would choose as his legacy to be the one man who single-handedly doomed humanity,” said John Podesta, a former senior advisor to Barack Obama and founder of the Center for American Progress think tank. “But we can’t throw in the towel on the planet. Now it’s more important than ever that President Biden use all his authority to fiercely fight for the future.”
More:Inflation hits another 40-year high. What does that mean for shoppers and the next Fed rate hike?
Reach Joey Garrison on Twitter @joeygarrison

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