https://townhall.com/columnists/patb...draft-n2596935
      
  
   
       
 
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  "We've got the president of the United States on our side," said Sen. Bernie Sanders Sunday on ABC's "This Week."
"Got  96% of the members of the Democratic caucus in the House on our side.  We got all but two senators at this point in the Democratic caucus on  our side. We're going to win this thing."
The socialist senator  from Vermont may be overly optimistic about how the party deadlock on  Capitol Hill unfolds. But about the balance of forces inside the party,  and the direction where it is headed, Sanders is probably not wrong.
Progressive Democrats won the week.
President  Joe Biden confirmed it by casting his lot with the liberal-left on the  sequencing of the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill and $3.5 trillion  social safety net bill pending in Congress.
        When Biden went  to the Hill Friday, it was thought he was coming to rescue and liberate  the Senate-passed infrastructure bill being held hostage by progressives  until they got their way on the larger bill.
        Progressives  had threatened to sink the roads-and-bridges bill in Speaker Nancy  Pelosi's House, unless they received solid assurances that both houses  would simultaneously take up and approve the $3.5 trillion bill.
         When Biden reached the Hill, however, he threw in with the  hostage-takers. He asked for a delay in House passage of his own  infrastructure bill, until the demands of the progressives were  addressed and met.
   
  
CARTOONS | 
Al Goodwyn
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Pelosi agreed and has put off any House vote on the infrastructure bill until the end of October.
Biden  had ditched the Biden Democrats and cast his lot with Sanders & Co.  Let's hold off voting on my own infrastructure bill, until we can also  deliver what the progressives demand of us, he was saying.
The  real impediment blocking progress, Biden said, was two senators, Joe  Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema, who are blocking the resolution of the  issue, which is that all Democrats should agree to enact both bills.
By  capitulating to the progressives' demand – which translates to, "Both  bills or no bill!" – Biden revealed where he thinks the power in the  party resides, where the future is, and what he wants as his legacy.
This  is not the first time Biden has moved left to accommodate a rising  consensus. As vice president, though a self-proclaimed devout Catholic,  Biden stepped out in front of Barack Obama to endorse same-sex marriage.
During  the 2020 campaign, Biden abandoned a lifetime belief about abortion and  pledged to remove the Hyde Amendment -- a restriction on federal  funding of abortions -- from federal law.
Cradle Catholic Joe has become our most pro-abortion president.
But  while the moderate-versus-progressive faceoff could still end in a rout  for the left, the probability is that the infrastructure bill becomes  law and the social safety net bill ends up between Manchin's $1.5  trillion ceiling and its current $3.5 trillion price tag.
   
 
One way to solve the sticker-price problem is through  subterfuge -- reduce the duration from, say, 10 years to five, in the  expectation that no future GOP administration would terminate an  entitlement program upon which millions of Americans had come to depend  for half a decade.
As Milton Friedman reminded us, "Nothing is so permanent as a temporary government program."
Nevertheless,  this is truly the "transformative" legislation that The New York Times  depicted as providing "a cradle-to-grave reweaving of a social safety  net."
This Build Back Better bill would provide family and medical  leave for illness and the birth of a child, affordable child care  during infancy, two years of universal pre-kindergarten, child credits  and federal income tax credits, and two years in a community college.
   

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 Turns Out Manchin Wasn't Serious About His Top-line Number For Spending Package   Leah Barkoukis 
 
 
 
 If passed in its present form, government will have an ever-present  role in the life of a child, almost from conception until his or her  early 20s.
This would also include established programs of  welfare, Medicaid, aid to education, subsidized housing, rent  supplements, school breakfasts and lunches, and food stamps.
If this bill does not die in the fall, what will America look like a few years hence?
   
 
Government will have expanded in both size and the numbers of  employees, and in relation to a shrinking private sector. A panoply of  new programs will expand eternally with the cost growing inexorably. The  dependency of U.S. citizens on their government will grow.
And this doesn't even touch upon another aspect.
The  IRS is to be expanded, and corporate taxes, estate taxes and capital  gains taxes are to rise. Government will also step in to force a shift  away from coal and oil and gas, with which the country is hugely  endowed, to wager America's future on solar and wind.
Hopefully,  Manchin and Sinema will employ the leverage they have to prevent the  worst of the damage this historically high level of spending – with  inflation already rising above 5% – will do.
But as to whether the Democrats are a Bernie party or a Biden party, Joe settled that Friday with his capitulation.
Comment - radical marxist idiotology lovers are the leadership/nomenklatura of teh marxist ,racist DPST party. 
Bernie/AOC-Squad are radical marxist revolutionaries - intent on destroying our America and Constitution
After winning teh cold war - Bernie and DPST marxists are intent on destroying our freedoms from withing
In favor of a marxist totalitarian dictatorship of the marxit racist nomenklatura. 
buck fiden
From my cold hands - racist, marxist DPSTs