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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHow Manchin and Sinema's status as Senate holdouts is proving lucrative
The Democratic senators have received a flood of money from conservative donors, leading some to raise concerns of corruptionhttps://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/nov/28/joe-manchin-kyrsten-sinema-build-back-better-plan
Two Democratic senators threatening to derail Joe Bidens agenda have been condemned by anti-corruption watchdogs for accepting a flood of money from Republican and corporate donors. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema present the last hurdle to the US presidents social spending and climate package after it was passed by Democrats in the House of Representatives earlier this month.
Having already pressured colleagues to cut the cost of the Build Back Better plan in half, the conservative duo continue to raise concerns about its $1.75tn price tag and sprawling ambition. Manchin and Sinemas status as holdouts in a Senate evenly divided between 50 Democrats and 50 Republicans has guaranteed outsized influence and attention. It also appears to be lucrative.
In September, Sinema received a cheque from Stanley Hubbard, a billionaire Republican donor who is considering a similar contribution to Manchin because of their work to reduce the bills price tag, the New York Times reported this week. Those are two good people Manchin and Sinema and I think we need more of those in the Democratic party, Hubbard was quoted as saying. The newspaper also revealed Manchin, of West Virginia, and Sinema, of Arizona, travelled to an $18m mansion in Dallas for a summer fundraiser attended by Republican and big business donors who have praised their efforts to pare down the Build Back Better bill.
Manchin, for example, opposed popular provisions such as paid family leave and a clean electricity programme that would boost wind and solar power while phasing out coal and gas, while Sinema rejected an increase of personal and corporate income tax rates. Their stances have not gone unnoticed by Wall Street and wealthy conservatives. The $3.3m raised by Manchins campaign in the first nine months of this year was more than 14 times his haul at the equivalent stage last year, the New York Times added, while the $2.6m taken in by Sinemas campaign was two and a half times what she netted over the same period in 2020.
Having already pressured colleagues to cut the cost of the Build Back Better plan in half, the conservative duo continue to raise concerns about its $1.75tn price tag and sprawling ambition. Manchin and Sinemas status as holdouts in a Senate evenly divided between 50 Democrats and 50 Republicans has guaranteed outsized influence and attention. It also appears to be lucrative.
In September, Sinema received a cheque from Stanley Hubbard, a billionaire Republican donor who is considering a similar contribution to Manchin because of their work to reduce the bills price tag, the New York Times reported this week. Those are two good people Manchin and Sinema and I think we need more of those in the Democratic party, Hubbard was quoted as saying. The newspaper also revealed Manchin, of West Virginia, and Sinema, of Arizona, travelled to an $18m mansion in Dallas for a summer fundraiser attended by Republican and big business donors who have praised their efforts to pare down the Build Back Better bill.
Manchin, for example, opposed popular provisions such as paid family leave and a clean electricity programme that would boost wind and solar power while phasing out coal and gas, while Sinema rejected an increase of personal and corporate income tax rates. Their stances have not gone unnoticed by Wall Street and wealthy conservatives. The $3.3m raised by Manchins campaign in the first nine months of this year was more than 14 times his haul at the equivalent stage last year, the New York Times added, while the $2.6m taken in by Sinemas campaign was two and a half times what she netted over the same period in 2020.
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How Manchin and Sinema's status as Senate holdouts is proving lucrative (Original Post)
Celerity
Nov 2021
OP
aocommunalpunch
(4,323 posts)1. It's a bidding war out there. n/t
FoxNewsSucks
(10,730 posts)2. I sure wish they'd support Biden, and Democratic policy
like the other Democratic Senators do, and the House Democratic Caucus does.
There's a word I'm trying to remember, applies to those who sell their integrity or honor or word. I'm sure it'll come to me later.
GemDigger
(4,312 posts)3. Around here, Joe is being used against us in an ad for the republican party.
That must be a good payout for Joe.