Biden announces bipartisan infrastructure deal

BREAKING NEWS – ‘We have a DEAL’: Biden announces group of Republicans and Democrats have reached an agreement on a nearly $1 TRILLION infrastructure package after making ‘compromises at both ends’

  • 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. 

‘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.’ 

According to the Associated Press the deal will put $953 billion toward infrastructure.  

‘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.  

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

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. 

The senators vowed to give more details on the plan later this afternoon as they left the microphones. 

Biden will address the detail from the East Room at 2 p.m.  

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. 

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