A month after President Biden and a group of senators reached a bipartisan agreement on an infrastructure package, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) tried to advance the debate last week. Republicans refused, saying they needed more time to wrap up the details of the deal.
GOP senators were surprisingly specific about the timeline: Democratic leaders could expect a completed compromise by Monday, July 26.
That was yesterday. There’s no completed compromise.
The bipartisan infrastructure deal appeared to be on shaky ground Monday as Democratic and Republican negotiators struggled to reach agreement on lingering disputes, most notably how much money to spend on public transit.
Yesterday morning, Democratic senators presented Republicans with a revised framework — what was called a “global” agreement — that sought to resolve each of the outstanding issues. GOP senators rejected that, too.
As the exasperating talks continue, a nagging question has lurked in the background: what happens if the negotiations fail to produce a result?
In theory, Democrats have long enjoyed some leverage: if Republicans refused to accept a bipartisan compromise and a series of concessions, Democrats could simply pursue their own bill through the budget reconciliation process. Indeed, it’s been a key GOP motivation for participating in the talks in the first place: Republicans know that Dems can govern without them and a GOP filibuster wouldn’t stand in the way.








