Bipartisan Meeting on Infrastructure ‘Substantive’
President Biden met with a small group of bipartisan senators recently to discuss the contours of a potential infrastructure package, warning that if the U.S. does not invest in the issue, China is āgoing to eat our lunch.ā
āIāve been around long enough ⦠that it used to be that infrastructure wasnāt a Democrat or a Republican issue. There are not many Republican or Democratic roads and bridges,ā Biden said in the Oval Office.
Biden said he hoped to come to āsome kind of generic consensusā on how to move forward with the group.
The president said his call a day earlier with Chinese President Xi Jinping underscored the urgent need for an infrastructure package that invests in rail, roads and labor. He cited Chinaās progress on rail initiatives and the countryās bid to be a major player in the future of the automobile industry.
Four senators attended the meeting: Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.); ranking member Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.); Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.); and Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.).
After the meeting, Capito and Inhofe said it was productive.
āWe agreed on a lot of things because the president and I have been working together on transportation since 1987,ā Inhofe said, referencing Bidenās time in the Senate.
Capito said the meeting was āpositive and substantiveā and those in attendance agreed to continue working toward a more defined legislative package.
Source: The Hill

