$109B for roads and bridges, $7.5B for electric vehicles and $25B for airports: Biden unveils his sweeping 'physical' infrastructure plan - but says Congress STILL needs to pass 'human' plan that could push spending to $6TRILLION

 President Joe Biden stepped out on the White House driveway Thursday afternoon and announced 'we have a deal' on an infrastructure package. 

The White House revealed the package will include $1.2 trillion in infrastructure spending over an eight-year period. Over a five-year period, there will be $973 billion in infrastructure spending.

It is mainly based on investment in traditional infrastructure including $109 billion in roads and bridges, $49billion in public transit, $7.5 billion for electric vehicles, $25 billion for airports and $65 billion for broadband.


But he warned that Congress also needs to sign a bill on human infrastructure with Democrats' social initiatives before both reach his desk.

'If this (bipartisan deal) is the only one that comes to me, I'm not signing it,' Biden said at the White House. 'It's in tandem'.

This means the President could end up signing two bills that account for up to $6trillion in spending, based on more negotiations between both parties.

'I'm not just signing the bipartisan bill and forgetting about the rest that I proposed,' 

He said the 'human infrastructure' aspect is equally important' to the physical infrastructure proposals.'

Biden spoke to reporters after he carved out a deal with 10 Senators - five Republicans and five Democrats - for the $1.2trillion package.

The huge proposal will need support from his own party - with the progressive wing saying it is too narrow - and the rest of the Republicans.  

President Joe Biden (right), flanked by Vice President Kamala Harris (left), expanded on his remarks during an East Room speech and Q&A with reporters later Thursday afternoon

President Joe Biden (right), flanked by Vice President Kamala Harris (left), expanded on his remarks during an East Room speech and Q&A with reporters later Thursday afternoon 


'We had a really good meeting and to answer your direct question, we have a deal,' the president told reporters. 'I think it's really important, we've all agreed that, none of us got all what we wanted, I clearly didn't get all I wanted, they gave more than I think maybe they were inclined to give in the first place.'   

The proposal would be paid for by reducing the IRS tax gap - essentially going after tax cheats - as well as redirecting  unemployment insurance relief funds and repurposing unused funds from the 2020 relief legislation. 

'We made serious compromises on both ends,' Biden said. 'This reminds me of the days we used to get an awful lot done in Congress,' the president also said. 

Biden was surrounded by a bipartisan group of senators led by Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema and Republican Sen. Rob Portman. 

Sen. Susan Collins, a moderate Republican from Maine, said the two parties agreed on the 'price tag, the scope and how to pay for it.' 

Other senators who etched out the deal included Republican Sens. Bill Cassidy, Mitt Romney, Lisa Murkowski and Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin, Jeanne Shaheen, Mark Warner and Jon Tester.  

At 2 p.m., Biden, flanked by Vice President Kamala Harris, gave an address and took questions about the fresh deal from the East Room before departing on a planned trip to North Carolina.   

The president said he didn't have a 'guarantee' that the deal etched would pass, but explained why he was optimistic. 

'I don't have any guarantee, but what I do have is a pretty good read over the years of how the Congress or the Senate works,' Biden said. 'And the idea that ... because someone's not going to be able to get every single thing they want, they're going to vote against some of things I just named, with nothing in here that's quote-'bad' for the environment, bad for the economy, bad for the transportation, is unlikely.' 

He added that while his party may be 'divided' - between a progressive and a more moderate wing - they're also 'rational.'  

Biden also talked about his lengthy relationship with members of the Senate, a body that he became a member of at age 30. 

President Joe Biden stepped out on the White House driveway Thursday afternoon and announced 'we have a deal' on an infrastructure package

President Joe Biden stepped out on the White House driveway Thursday afternoon and announced 'we have a deal' on an infrastructure package

President Joe Biden leads a bipartisan group of senators to the microphones on the White House driveway, announcing that they'd come together on a deal on an infrastructure package

President Joe Biden leads a bipartisan group of senators to the microphones on the White House driveway, announcing that they'd come together on a deal on an infrastructure package

President Joe Biden (right) puts his hand on the shoulder of Republican Sen. Rob Portman (left). Portman was one of the leaders of the effort

President Joe Biden (right) puts his hand on the shoulder of Republican Sen. Rob Portman (left). Portman was one of the leaders of the effort 

Reporters surround President Joe Biden and the bipartisan group of 10 senators on the White House driveway Thursday

Reporters surround President Joe Biden and the bipartisan group of 10 senators on the White House driveway Thursday 

President Joe Biden (left) puts his hand on the back of Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (right) of New Hampshire as they announce an infrastructure deal

President Joe Biden (left) puts his hand on the back of Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (right) of New Hampshire as they announce an infrastructure deal 

President Joe Biden (right) speaks with Sen. Jon Tester (left), a Montana Democrat, outside the White House Thursday

President Joe Biden (right) speaks with Sen. Jon Tester (left), a Montana Democrat, outside the White House Thursday 

President Joe Biden (right), flanked by Vice President Kamala Harris (left), delivered remarks in the East Room and then took questions about the bipartisan infrastructure deal Thursday before leaving for North Carolina

President Joe Biden (right), flanked by Vice President Kamala Harris (left), delivered remarks in the East Room and then took questions about the bipartisan infrastructure deal Thursday before leaving for North Carolina 

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg arrives at President Joe Biden's East Room event to tout the bipartisan infrastructure bill framework

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg arrives at President Joe Biden's East Room event to tout the bipartisan infrastructure bill framework 

President Biden announces $1.2 TRILLION infrastructure package
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'Where I come from and in my years in the Senate, the single greatest currency you have is your word, keeping your word,' Biden said. 

'Mitt Romney's never broken his word to me. The senator from Alaska, the senator ... from Maine, they've never broken their word - they're friends,' he said, referring to Republicans Murkowski and Collins. 'And so the people I was with today are people that I truth.' 

'I don't agree with them on a lot of things, but I trust them when I say this is a deal, we'll stick to the deal,' he added. 'Just like I doubt you'll find any one of them who will say they don't trust me when I say, 'OK, this is a deal, on these issues, this is a deal we'll stick with.'' 

Biden also said that just because the deal was worked out, he wouldn't try to push to get more of his priorities funded, including a large environmental tax credit. 

Biden's original 'American Jobs Plan' was to cost $2 trillion. 

The Democratic president wanted to pay for the plan by bumping back up the corporate tax rate, which was decreased in 2017 as part of the tax bill signed by then President Donald Trump and backed by Congressional Republicans. 

Biden wanted it hiked from 21 per cent to 28 per cent. 

Republicans, however, balked at eroding any of the Trump-era tax breaks. 

Biden also wanted to uphold a campaign promise of not upping taxes on any American making under $400,000 annually. 

He boasted that he had been successful during the East Room address. 

'We're going to do it all without raising a cent from earners below $400,000,' Biden said. 'There's no gas tax increase, no fee on electric vehicles.'

Republicans also touted their negotiating successes. 

In documents being shared by Portman's office, according to PBS Newshour, GOP wins included no changes being made to the 2017 tax bill and other 'responsible pay-fors,' including repurposing $125 billion in COVID stimulus dollars for infrastructure projects instead. 

The GOP also touted that the slimmed down bill would solely cover infrastructure priorities and not 'human' infrastructure like paid family leave.  


In order to make up for some of the spending Democrats wanted, lawmakers want to pair the infrastructure package with another bill, which would be pushed through using the Senate reconciliation process - meaning it can bypass a Republican filibuster if all 50 Senate Democrats are on board. 

'This is important,' House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said at her weekly press conference earlier Thursday. 'There ain't going to be a bipartisan bill without a reconciliation bill.'   

Biden told reporters in the East Room that he supported Pelosi's plan to have the Senate pass both the infrastructure bill and then a second bill via reconciliation before the House picked them up. 

'The bipartisan bill, from the very beginning, was understood there was going to be the second part of it. I'm not just signing the bipartisan bill and forgetting about the rest that I proposed,' Biden said. 'I proposed a significant piece of legislation in three parts. And all there parts are equally important.'  

If Biden gets the infrastructure deal passed, it will be the second significant piece of legislation he'll sign since coming into office in January. 

Biden signed the $1.9 billion American Rescue Plan - the COVID-19 economic relief bill - into law in March.   

He has also proposed an 'American Families Plan,' which tackles areas like childcare and early education.  

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