[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 174 (Monday, October 4, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Page S6880]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




              INFRASTRUCTURE AND BUILD BACK BETTER AGENDA

  Mr. SCHUMER. Madam President, on the day that this majority commenced 
its work, I promised that this Chamber would meet the challenges that 
face our Nation ``not with timid solutions but with boldness and [with] 
courage.'' Now the 117th Congress stands at a pivotal moment in our 
pursuit of this goal.
  Over the past few months, both Chambers have dedicated themselves to 
passing two transformative, once-in-a-generation pieces of legislation: 
the bipartisan infrastructure bill and the Build Back Better agenda.
  Doing big things in Congress is always hard, but we didn't choose 
elected office just to pursue the easy things. In the days and weeks to 
come, Senate Democrats will remain focused on passing the agenda we 
promised no matter how hard the task.
  All last week, I held extensive talks with the Speaker, the 
President, and my Senate colleagues to bring us closer to a final 
agreement on our Build Back Better agenda. We made important progress, 
but there is more work to do.
  So, this week, I will continue meeting with my colleagues in an 
effort to produce a bill that all of us can get behind.
  Last Friday, President Biden spoke to House Democrats about the path 
forward for passing our ambitious agenda into law. His message was 
simple: If we stick together, if we work to find a legislative sweet 
spot that we can all support, then we will succeed.
  He is right, and that is exactly what we are going to do.
  As I explained this morning in my ``Dear Colleague,'' our new 
legislative goal must be to get both the infrastructure bill and the 
Build Back Better agenda done by the end of October.
  The reason is simple: The infrastructure bill, for all its historic 
investments, is also a reauthorization of the highway trust fund. We 
passed a 30-day patch over the weekend to keep vital programs going. 
But as it stands, the trust fund is set to run out of money by the end 
of October.
  If we are going to meet this deadline, Democrats must arrive at a 
final agreement on the details of the Build Back Better agenda as soon 
as possible, preferably within a matter of days, not weeks. It is the 
only way we can give committees enough time to draft legislation to 
ensure its privileged status in our Chamber and complete the 
reconciliation process before the end of the month.
  Now, none of this is going to be easy. It will require sacrifice, 
compromise, and finding common ground. Nobody is going to get 
everything they want.
  But no matter what, our final proposal will deliver the core promise 
we made to the American people: We will take bold action on climate 
change, while creating millions of jobs; we will expand healthcare 
opportunities and lower costs for working Americans; and we will cut 
taxes for the working and middle class, while asking the wealthy to pay 
their fair share.
  I am confident we will be proud of the end result: a bill that will 
dramatically improve the lives of every single American not just for 
today but for generations; a bill that will rebuild ladders for working 
people to get to the middle class, help people stay in the middle class 
who are there already, and rekindle--rekindle--that sunny American 
disposition so central to our national identity but seems to be fading 
a bit in the last while.
  This is worth a couple of hard days. This is worth many hard days. 
Again, we didn't come to Washington to take the easy way out. We came 
here committed to work every day, to reward the faith that the American 
people have placed in us. We came here to get big things done, and that 
is exactly what we will do in the weeks ahead.

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