Wherein Kyrsten Sinema is singlehandedly blowing up the entire Democratic agenda
Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia isn’t exactly helping the White House forge a compromise between the liberal and centrist wings of the Democratic party. But let’s be real, Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona is almost single-handedly blowing up the entire Democratic agenda along with any chances of the party keeping its congressional majorities next year.
So after Sinema made several trips to the White House to meet with President Joe Biden in recent days, White House staffers were headed to her office on Wednesday.
Why? Because exactly no one can figure out what she wants or how to get her to say what she wants.
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“Literally, one senator—one Senator—Kyrsten Sinema, is holding up the will of the entire Democratic party,” Rep. Ro Khanna of California told CNN’s John Berman Tuesday night.
“The president keeps begging her—tell us what you want, put a proposal forward,” added Khanna.
Khanna, a member of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, noted that progressives have been open to compromise all along the way—coming down from a $6 trillion budget bill to a $3.5 trillion budget bill, offering to front-load the benefits and shorten their life in order to get the measure within reach of Democratic moderates. But how do you compromise, Khanna wondered, when Sinema won’t lay down a marker?
“What’s mindboggling is you have unanimity in the House—tomorrow the Speaker could get a deal in the House on a number,” Khanna said, adding that he believed at least 48 Democratic senators could also back that deal, and probably Manchin too.
“This is not progressive versus moderates,” he said, “this is the entire Democratic Party and Joe Biden versus Kyrsten Sinema.”
Khanna went on to say that no one appears to know what Sinema wants—not her colleagues, not the president, not even House moderates.
Strong words, but they also appear to be totally on target.
As Politico reported, Sinema has refused to go into detail on the budget bill until the bipartisan infrastructure plan she helped negotiate clears the House.
“During a private meeting with the president, Sinema made clear she’s still not on board with the party’s $3.5 trillion social spending plan and is hesitant to engage on some specifics until the bipartisan infrastructure package passes the House,” wrote Politico.
Meanwhile, House progressives are committed to downing that infrastructure bill unless a firm agreement can be reached between the House, the Senate, and the White House on the Democrats-only budget bill.
“They need to come up with their counteroffer and then we sit down and negotiate from there,” Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington State told NBC News’ Sahil Kapur Wednesday afternoon.
As TPM’s Josh Marshal points out, it’s entirely possible that Sinema simply isn’t enough of a policy savant to articulate what she wants done to the $3.5 trillion budget bill and why.
But armed with just enough talking points from powerful corporate lobbyists, Sinema could easily tank everything.
Whatever Sinema thinks she’s doing, she appears to have already secured a primary challenge in her state. A group of Democratic Arizona organizers launched an effort on Wednesday to fund a would-be primary challenger to Sinema in 2024.
“Either Sinema votes to end the filibuster, or we fund a primary challenger,” warned a fundraising page set up by a group called the “Future Primary Challenger of Kyrsten Sinema.”
“If the existential stakes for working families, our democracy , and our planet don’t move her, maybe existential political stakes will,” tweeted Kai Newkirk, founder of the progressive grassroots organization For All.