Biden To Sell Child Care And Free University In Speech To Congress
US President
Joe Biden is expected to call for free pre-school and community college in his
first speech to a joint session of Congress.
Speaking on
the eve of his 100th day in office, the Democrat will call for the most
sweeping revamp of US social benefits since the 1960s.
His plan
includes $4tn (£2.9tn) of spending on education and family leave.
History will
also be made as two women sit behind the president for the first time during a
speech to Congress.
US
Vice-President Kamala Harris and House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi
will both wear masks at the rostrum during Wednesday night's primetime address.
The US
president's State of the Union-style remarks will be followed by the
traditional rebuttal speech from the opposing party - delivered on this
occasion by Senator Tim Scott, a South Carolina Republican.
Mr Scott, a
potential 2024 White House contender who is African American, is a leading
voice in his party on race.
Mr Biden
will speak at 21:00 EDT (02:00 BST on Thursday) from a US Capitol that is still
ringed by security fencing and guarded by hundreds of National Guard troops
following the storming of the complex on 6 January by pro-Trump protesters.
Ahead of his
speech, he will meet congressional staff who were trapped in the building
during the riot, the White House said.
Around 1,600
guests usually attend a president's address to a joint session of Congress. But
this time only about 200 people will get invitations because of
virus-prevention protocols.
Buoyed by
solid approval ratings, Mr Biden will look to the tens of millions of Americans
that the White House hopes will tune in from home.
The
president will seek to build public support for two massive packages -
the American Jobs Plan and the American Families Plan - which analysts
project would entail the most far-reaching reform of the US social safety net
since the 1960s.
The White
House says both proposals if passed by Congress would be "fully paid
for" by tax hikes on the richest Americans and corporations.
The American
Families Plan, with a price tag of $1.8tn, aims to provide free pre-school for
US children aged three to four, paid family leave and free community college,
the White House said on Tuesday.
It would
also extend until 2025 a child tax credit that was expanded during the
pandemic, offering monthly payments to lower-income parents of around $300 per
child. Democrats reportedly hope to establish these payments as a permanent government
programme.
The White
House has indicated the package would be funded by almost doubling the capital
gains tax rate on incomes above $1 million to 39.6% and hiking the top income
tax bracket for households earning more than $400,000 to the same level.
Reports of
Biden plans for an increase in capital gains taxes sparked a stock market
sell-off last week.
The
president will also pitch his $2.3tn American Jobs Plan, which the White House
unveiled last month.
Billed as an
infrastructure package, it seeks to invest in public transit, rail, airports,
water pipes, high-speed broadband, roads and bridges, veterans' hospitals,
childcare centres and combating racial disparities.
The proposal
also seeks to steer the US economy towards electric cars - which today make up
barely 2% of vehicles of America's roads - and clean energy.
It would be
paid for by raising the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28% and other taxes on
multinational corporations, says the White House.
During his
speech, Mr Biden is also expected to address cultural flashpoints such as
police reform, gun violence and the crisis at the US-Mexico border.
Last month
he signed the American Rescue Plan, a $1.9tn coronavirus stimulus package that
included direct cheques to most Americans.
Senator
Scott has been a leading voice in his party on race and has talked about times
he has been racially profiled by police.
He has
hinted that his rebuttal speech will not just be about ripping into the
president's agenda.
"We
face serious challenges on multiple fronts, but I am as confident as I have
ever been in the promise and potential of America.
"I look
forward to having an honest conversation with the American people and sharing
Republicans' optimistic vision for expanding opportunity and empowering working
families."
But among
his colleagues in Congress there has been widespread opposition to the Biden
agenda.
The US president's
party narrowly controls the House and Senate for the first time in a decade,
enabling Democrats to pass that relief bill without a single congressional vote
from Republicans.
Top
Republican Senator Mitch McConnell said on Tuesday: "President Biden ran
as a moderate, but I'm hard pressed to think of anything at all that he's done
so far that would indicate some degree of moderation."
In addition
to three packages totalling around $6tn, Mr Biden last week also unveiled plans
for a $1.5tn federal budget that would significantly expand spending on
domestic programmes.

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