Republicans plan to block vote on bipartisan infrastructure bill
But lawmakers said their negotiations will intensify over the next few days with the goal of trying again to advance the measure by early next week.
“There’s no reason it should fail,” said Schumer on Tuesday. “What is the reason? They say they need the whole bill text, they haven’t asked for that on bill after bill after bill.”
In June, the White House and a bipartisan Senate group agreed to a $579 billion in new spending to build roads, bridges, railroads and airports, along with water, power and broadband infrastructure projects.
But lawmakers have since struggled over how to pay for the massive investment. They made their task even harder by agreeing to scrap a provision that would have strengthened the Internal Revenue Service’s ability to collect unpaid taxes, which would’ve raised up to $100 billion in government revenue. They also haven’t resolved other issues, including how much transit funding to provide, according to a Senate GOP source.
Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, one of the Republican negotiators, said Tuesday that senators had “resolved probably three-quarters” of their issues in the last two days, and predicted that they could work out the rest “by the end of the week.”
Romney said that he wanted the vote to be pushed back to the beginning of next week.
“I am hoping that Sen. Schumer will have the vote on Monday when we’ve had a chance to resolve any remaining, outstanding issues,” Romney said.
CNN’s Morgan Rimmer contributed to this report.