The Senate is now in Democratic hands.....let's see what the hell they're gonna do? Senate Watch Thread

Because they try to cater to everyone but they promote the lowest on the totem pole when it comes to voting power (which is different than economic power). The LGBT promotion does nothing but hurt the local and state Democrats because it increases the voter apathy. That’s why you see cities like Ferguson or Memphis or Atlanta have white leadership despite being majority black populations. People don’t vote because they have no incentive to. Our people are so broken, they would rather see a token face than someone actually able to get stuff done and just like in Memphis and Atlanta, once the so-called black leaders turn the cities around, the whites swoop in, gentrify and take over. I’m sick of it.

Brotha, Im sick of the non-sense also!!
 
The Progressive Left Is Going to Have to Push Out the Corporatist Boomer Left

Bruh, you can put that corporate democrat left title on billy clinton lap!! Floodin our neighborhoods and cities with coc and flooding the private prisons complex with copper color people!! By him holding up his end of the deal, he got rewarded with the title of ceo of the corporation!! Like I said, nothing just happens in this corporation!! Everything is well planned and thought out!!
 
51298930_2166786186733312_3006270055416594432_n.jpg
 
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing...structure-investment-and-jobs-act-nationwide/ Passed the Senate 69-30

REPUBLICAN
DEMOCRATIC




 
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing...structure-investment-and-jobs-act-nationwide/ Passed the Senate 69-30

REPUBLICAN
DEMOCRATIC




What's your favorite part about this bill?
 
Bruh, you can put that corporate democrat left title on billy clinton lap!! Floodin our neighborhoods and cities with coc and flooding the private prisons complex with copper color people!! By him holding up his end of the deal, he got rewarded with the title of ceo of the corporation!! Like I said, nothing just happens in this corporation!! Everything is well planned and thought out!!
He was running cocaine through Arkansas and now he is pushing cannabis growth and distribution. All while changing the laws to make it legal (but not releasing the prisoners he set up with the crime bill)

The Clinton Cartel has been running since the 80s.
 
He was running cocaine through Arkansas and now he is pushing cannabis growth and distribution. All while changing the laws to make it legal (but not releasing the prisoners he set up with the crime bill)

The Clinton Cartel has been running since the 80s.

Right on, write on bruh.... Your absolutely right our first so-called first black president!! Im not sure how many times Ive pointed the damage that guy did to the people with all those laws he passed in 1996 or so!!
 

Wait. I missed this shit. Keeping tabs on these corrupt fucks is really a full-time job. No wonder why the average American is mindfucked.

So Joe Grizzly(manchin) didn't even have to lay the law down? it was 99 zip.

Speaking of Joe Grizzly, he ain't shit but Biden's avatar. Biden so happy he got Grizzly to check the progressives so he don't have to look like a bad guy. Meanwhile, all the shills can blame the Grizz while hanging from Bidens nuts.

Remember, we are in the 'that's not how government' works phase of politics. When republicans take control, we get the 'talk is soooooo powerful' phase of politics. We need a political chart similar to the wall street cheat sheet. :smh:
 
Either they don't want to or they are a bunch of pussy's!!!!

A lot of it has to do with Senator Schumer.

He doesn’t have the leadership skills it takes to be Majority leader of the Senate.

There are more than 10 Republicans who will vote with the Democrats. The issue is Senator McConnell got their ass in check and in line and verbally threatens them if they don’t follow him.

Schumer needs to get Manchin and Sinema in line. No reason why they should be following and obeying McConnell instead of their own party’s interest.
 
A lot of it has to do with Senator Schumer.

He doesn’t have the leadership skills it takes to be Majority leader of the Senate.

There are more than 10 Republicans who will vote with the Democrats. The issue is Senator McConnell got their ass in check and in line and verbally threatens them if they don’t follow him.

Schumer needs to get Manchin and Sinema in line. No reason why they should be following and obeying McConnell instead of their own party’s interest.


Any threat they give to Manchin, He can respond thusly "McConnell said whatever you threaten to take from me, he will give me back double if I switch to being a Republican. And if I switch, you immediately lose your majority. So I suggest you get the fuck out of my face"
 
Biden meets with more than a dozen key Democrats as infrastructure and budget bills hang in the balance

Christina Wilkie
September 22, 2021


WASHINGTON — After weeks of rising tensions among congressional Democrats, President Joe Biden is stepping in Wednesday to personally attempt to resolve divisions that are threatening to tear the Democratic caucus apart and tank the president's first-term domestic agenda.

Biden is hosting key members of at least four warring factions of congressional Democrats on Wednesday afternoon: moderates in the House, progressives in the House, moderates in the Senate and progressives in the Senate.

Biden's goal is to broker a compromise between the different groups and to find common ground on a $1 trillion infrastructure bill and a $3 trillion-plus climate and social safety net bill.

These delicate intraparty negotiations are taking place against the backdrop of two more looming but unrelated deadlines: a Sept. 30 deadline to fund the government or risk a shutdown, and a likely mid-October deadline to raise the debt ceiling or risk the United States defaulting on its sovereign debt.

Each of these issues, the debt ceiling and the annual government funding bill, has traditionally required high-wire negotiations between Congress and the White House. But neither of them will be Biden's priority on Wednesday.

While the specifics change hour by hour, at the heart of the tension within the Democratic caucuses is that House moderates don't want to vote for a huge green energy and education bill until their priority — a bipartisan infrastructure bill — passes the House first.

But House progressives don't want to vote in favor of the bipartisan infrastructure bill until their top priority, the social safety net legislation, passes the Senate.

The schedule of Biden's meetings Wednesday is also relevant. Biden is meeting with moderate Democrats first, and then progressives later on in the day.

This suggests that moderates will get a chance to explain to Biden what their red lines are. And then after that, Biden will work with progressives to determine what other ways they might incorporate progressive priorities into the huge bills, such that enough progressives can come to see the bills as a victory for their priorities.

It also signals that the progressives, who outnumber moderates in the House, will get the last word.

After a career spent negotiating bills in the Senate, Biden is no stranger to tough talks and compromise. But his style of negotiating typically relies on personal trust and long-term friendships.

After he helped to broker a compromise between Republicans and Democrats on infrastructure this summer, Biden explained that he and the senators involved "go back a long way, where we're used to doing one thing: Give each other our word and that's the end."

But when it comes to key progressives in the House, Biden does not have that kind of trust.

On the contrary, many House progressives are privately skeptical of Biden's progressive bona fides. They view him as fundamentally a centrist, someone who talks about progressive principles but who eventually compromises on those principles in order to make a deal and pass a watered-down bill.

First, the centrists

Starting at 2 p.m. ET, the president huddled with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

Pelosi's meeting with Biden came as she was weighing whether to uphold a pledge to centrists to schedule a vote on the infrastructure bill for Monday, Sept. 27.

House progressives have threatened to sink that vote if the Senate doesn't pass their social safety net and climate policy bill by Monday.

But given the complicated rules governing a big social safety net bill, which needs to be written in the style of a budget bill, Senate Democrats see no way that they could finish crafting the bill and vote on it before Monday.

Following their meeting Wednesday, Pelosi declined to say whether she still planned to hold the Monday vote.

"I will not be talking about that right now. We are on schedule, that's all I will say. And we're calm, and everybody's good, and our work is almost done. So we're in good shape," she told reporters in the Capitol.

"We made some good progress," Schumer said, describing the huddle as a "very good meeting."

"We're working hard, and we're moving along," he added.

Following the Pelosi and Schumer meeting, Biden met with a group of moderate Democrats from the House and Senate.

These moderates included Rep. Josh Gottheimer, the New Jersey Democrat who insisted that Pelosi schedule the Monday infrastructure vote.

The two most-watched Democratic members of the Senate, centrist Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, also attended this meeting, which began shortly after 3:30 p.m.

Both Manchin and Sinema have taken issue with the social safety net bill's proposed $3.5 trillion price tag. Manchin has even urged his party to wait for months to pass the bill — something that infuriates House progressives. They worry that if they vote to pass the centrists' infrastructure bill now, without seeing the reconciliation bill pass first, then party leaders will water down the bill containing their priorities in order to win Manchin's approval.

If either Sinema or Manchin votes against the big budget reconciliation bill, it would doom the plan.

This is likely part of the reason the president included two other centrist Democrats in this big meeting: Sens. Jon Tester of Montana and Mark Warner of Virginia.

Warner and Tester both helped to craft the bipartisan infrastructure bill with Republicans earlier this summer and are known for their skill at negotiating different interests within the party.

Then, the progressives

Later in the day, Biden will huddle with key progressives.

One of them will be Democratic Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington, the chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. Jayapal leads the House faction demanding the Senate vote on the big House budget bill before she and her fellow progressives will come together to pass the infrastructure bill in the House.

On Tuesday evening, Jayapal met with Pelosi for more than an hour, and emerged confident Pelosi would not move forward with the infrastructure bill — something to which Pelosi has not publicly agreed.

"I don't think the speaker is going to bring a bill up that is going to fail," Jayapal told reporters, adding, "Our position has not changed." Jayapal will be joined at the White House by several other House progressives.

Also at the meeting will be key progressives in the Senate, including Budget Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chair Patty Murray, D-Wash.

Sanders and Wyden are both playing pivotal roles in crafting the spending and taxing provisions in the Democratic bill. But they are also leading voices for the progressive wing of the Democratic Party across both chambers in Congress.

Murray leads the committee with jurisdiction over several key provisions in the budget bill that matter most to House progressives: Child care subsidies, health insurance affordability, early education and free community college.

As Biden was meeting with lawmakers Wednesday, 11 liberal senators put more pressure on Pelosi to delay the infrastructure vote until the Senate passes the party's budget bill.

"We strongly support the Congressional Progressive Caucus and other members in the House who have said they intend to vote for the bipartisan infrastructure bill only once the Build Back Better Act is passed," the lawmakers wrote. "That is what we agreed to, it's what the American people want, and it's the only path forward for this Congress."

The senators who signed on to the statement include Sanders and Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey and Brian Schatz of Hawaii, all of whom will meet with Biden on Wednesday. The other Democrats who urged Pelosi to delay the infrastructure vote were Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Mazie Hirono of Hawaii, Ed Markey of Massachusetts, Jeff Merkley of Oregon, Alex Padilla of California, Tina Smith of Minnesota, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island.

Below is a complete list of attendees on Wednesday, provided by the White House.

Leadership meeting, approximately 2 p.m.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Afternoon meeting, approximately 3:30 p.m.

Rep. Suzan DelBene, D-Wash.

Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J.

Rep. Steven Horsford, D-Nev.

Rep. Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla.

Rep. Mike Thompson, D-Calif.

Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev.

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H.

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz.

Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont.

Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va.

Evening meeting, approximately 5:30 p.m.

Rep. Katherine Clark, D-Mass.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash.

Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif.

Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass.

Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Wisc.

Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J.

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.

Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.
 
Activists who helped elect Kyrsten Sinema launch CrowdPAC to fund a primary challenger


Organizers say if Sinema doesn't vote to end filibuster and back Biden they'll “replace her with someone who will”
 
Activists who helped elect Kyrsten Sinema launch CrowdPAC to fund a primary challenger


Organizers say if Sinema doesn't vote to end filibuster and back Biden they'll “replace her with someone who will”

Stop talking and start moving to primary her ass now. After that bitch did her thumbs down vote, folks in AZ should have been activem
 
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