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Republicans, please save your party | TheHill – The Hill

President TrumpDonald TrumpUS, South Korea reach agreement on cost-sharing for troops Graham: Trump can make GOP bigger, stronger, or he 'could destroy it' Biden nominates female generals whose promotions were reportedly delayed under Trump MOREs address last weekend to the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), in which he publicly identified his opponents, had all the charm and grace of another speech given in 1979, by Saddam Hussein, in Baghdad.

If you have not seen that speech, let me set the scene. On July 22, 1979, Hussein, who had just been installed as Iraqs president, addressed senior officials of the Baath Party. Address is actually too delicate a description. It was a verbal (and afterwards, literal) firing squad. After announcing he had uncovered a conspiracy to overthrow him, he had a Baath leader take the stage and identify 50 people by name in the audience who he claimed were co-conspirators. One by one, each man was escorted from the room by uniformed guards.

Give Hussein credit he knew how to hold his audience. When he dramatically dabbed the faux tears from his eyes with a handkerchief, a flurry of white handkerchiefs rippled across the audience. At one point, someone rose to his feet, chanting Long live Saddam! The entire audience what was left of it anyway erupted in a heartfelt chorus.

I am not comparing Trump to Hussein. But the former presidents speech in Florida was built on the same principles: publicly purge your opponents from the ranks, use fear to erase doubt and demand slavish loyalty from your followers.

Trump called out Sen. Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellDemocrats near pressure point on nixing filibuster We need a voting rights workaround Biden takes victory lap after Senate passes coronavirus relief package MORE (R-Ky.), questioning his own endorsement of the Senate Republican leader. He called Rep. Liz CheneyElizabeth (Liz) Lynn CheneyGOP senator defends Cheney, Murkowski after Trump rebuke Marjorie Taylor Greene's delay tactics frustrate GOP Paul Ryan to host fundraiser for Cheney amid GOP tensions MORE (R-Wyo.) "a warmonger, a person that loves seeing our troops fighting"; and Sen. Mitt RomneyWillard (Mitt) Mitt RomneyGraham: Trump can make GOP bigger, stronger, or he 'could destroy it' Democratic centrists flex power on Biden legislation Ron Johnson grinds Senate to halt, irritating many MORE (R-Utan) grandstander. His list also included Sens. Ben SasseBen SasseIs nonpartisan effectiveness still possible? Senators introduce bill creating technology partnerships to compete with China Garland's AG nomination delayed by GOP roadblocks MORE (R-Neb.), Richard BurrRichard Mauze BurrRick Scott caught in middle of opposing GOP factions Bipartisan bill would ban lawmakers from buying, selling stocks Republicans, please save your party MORE (R-N.C.), Bill CassidyBill CassidyTrump was unhinged and unchanged at CPAC Republicans, please save your party Senate panel splits along party lines on Becerra MORE (R-La.), Susan CollinsSusan Margaret CollinsSenate rejects Sanders minimum wage hike Murkowski votes with Senate panel to advance Haaland nomination OVERNIGHT ENERGY: Interior reverses Trump policy that it says restricted science | Collins to back Haaland's Interior nomination | Republicans press Biden environment nominee on Obama-era policy MORE (R-Maine), Lisa MurkowskiLisa Ann MurkowskiGOP senator defends Cheney, Murkowski after Trump rebuke Trump promises to travel to Alaska to campaign against Murkowski GOP votes in unison against COVID-19 relief bill MORE (R-Alaska), Pat ToomeyPatrick (Pat) Joseph ToomeySasse rebuked by Nebraska Republican Party over impeachment vote Philly GOP commissioner on censures: 'I would suggest they censure Republican elected officials who are lying' Toomey censured by several Pennsylvania county GOP committees over impeachment vote MORE (R-Penn.), Reps. Tom RiceHugh (Tom) Thompson RiceMarjorie Taylor Greene's delay tactics frustrate GOP Republicans, please save your party Republican Party going off the rails? MORE (R-S.C.), Adam KinzingerAdam Daniel KinzingerMarjorie Taylor Greene's delay tactics frustrate GOP Republicans, please save your party House GOP campaign chief: Not helpful for Trump to meddle in primaries MORE (R-Ill.), Dan NewhouseDaniel (Dan) Milton NewhouseRepublicans, please save your party Six ways to visualize a divided America Here are the GOP lawmakers censured by Republicans for impeaching Trump MORE (R-Wash.), Anthony GonzalezAnthony GonzalezTrump promises to travel to Alaska to campaign against Murkowski Trump presses GOP to stop using name for fundraising Trump announces new tranche of endorsements MORE (R-Ohio), Fred UptonFrederick (Fred) Stephen UptonBiden convenes bipartisan meeting on cancer research Republicans, please save your party Democrats snipe on policy, GOP brawls over Trump MORE (R-Mich.), Jaime Herrera BeutlerJaime Lynn Herrera BeutlerRepublicans, please save your party Wray says no evidence of 'antifa' involvement in Jan. 6 attack Arizona rep to play leading role in GOP women's group ahead of midterms MORE (R-Wash.), Peter MeijerPeter MeijerRepublicans, please save your party Biden sparks Twitter debate over pronunciation of Midwest supermarket chain Will the post-Trump GOP party be coming anytime soon? MORE (R-Mich.), John KatkoJohn Michael KatkoHouse-passed election bill takes aim at foreign interference Biden to meet with bipartisan lawmakers on infrastructure Federal agencies ordered to patch systems immediately following flaw in Microsoft app MORE (R-N.Y.) and David ValadaoDavid Goncalves ValadaoRepublicans, please save your party Democrats snipe on policy, GOP brawls over Trump Six ways to visualize a divided America MORE (R-Calif.).

Conservatives such as Kinzinger, Sasse and others worry many Democrats.

I will confess: from an entirely partisan perspective, the toughest opponents for Democrats are the Kinzingers, Romneys and Cheneys. They are true conservatives who remind American voters that they are in politics not for power alone but the power of their ideas, including balanced budgets, the dignity of work, the power of innovation in free markets. They are conservatives who support traditionally conservative approaches to policy incremental and thoughtful and partisan but not populist.

Watching Trumps speech last Sunday may have delighted Democrats. It may be in my own partys long term electoral interests to stand back during an ugly Republican purge; to watch a GOP fratricide that induces ugly primaries and alienates moderate voters; to sit in the stands and hoot at the gladiatorial combat between Trump and McConnell and the 16 others on his enemies list. On the other hand, America will be worse off. We need two parties competing on rational ideas; not one party and one nihilistic movement steeped in conspiracy theories and based on idol worship rather than ideas. You know what I mean the kind who would display a six-foot golden statue in Trumps image at the CPAC event.

A two party system needs, well, two parties. And a political party requires leaders who can instill discipline in the ranks to advance the set of ideas that attract voters. Trumps speech on Sunday confirms that he does not seek to rebuild the GOP; instead, he seeks to remake it in his craven image. To borrow a republican phrase, he wants to repeal and replace jettison any Republican who questions him and replace them with those who promise an unquestioned loyalty to his persona. It may have worked for Hussein and the Baath Party in 1979 it should not work for Trump in America in 2021. Republicans, please save your party.

Steve IsraelSteven (Steve) J. IsraelRepublicans, please save your party How Democrats can ensure Trump never runs again Biden doubles down on normal at White House MORE represented New York in the House over eight terms and was chairman with the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee from 2011 to 2015. He is now the director of the Institute of Politics and Global Affairs at Cornell University. You can follow his updates @RepSteveIsrael.

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Republicans, please save your party | TheHill - The Hill

Maine lawmakers wrangling over PPP taxes as Republicans object to exemptions for certain business – The Center Square

(The Center Square) Maine lawmakers are moving to exempt certain businesses from paying state taxes on federal pandemic loans, but the plan is drawing criticism from Republicans who say it unfairly leaves some companies on the hook for taxes.

A supplemental budget, narrowly approved by the Legislature's Appropriations and Financial Affairs Committee on Thursday, would eliminate state taxes on the federal Paycheck Protection Program for more than 28,000 small businesses that received the disaster loans. The 8-5 vote went along party lines, with the committee's Democratic majority supporting the plan.

But the spending package wouldn't eliminate state tax obligations for 251 businesses that received more than $1 million in loans through the federal program.

That drew criticism from Republicans, who pushed for those businesses to be included in the tax plan and ultimately voted against the supplemental spending bill.

In a statement, Maine House Republicans said the budget plan "misses an opportunity to recognize that all Maine taxpayers are trying to overcome the pandemic together."

"The COVID-19 pandemic and resulting economic collapse has been tough on all Mainers," the statement read. "From those who lost their jobs, to those who showed up every day to work under extremely stressful conditions, and to employers on the brink of shuttering their doors."

The Paycheck Protection Program was approved as part of the $2.2 trillion CARES Act passed by Congress in March 2020 to help keep small businesses afloat during the current pandemic.

Under the law, borrowers are eligible for PPP loan forgiveness if at least 60% of the proceeds go toward payroll expenses.

A second pandemic relief package approved by Congress in December provided another round of forgivable PPP loans, and allowed businesses to claim tax deductions for the expenses they covered with forgiven loan proceeds.

More than 28,000 Maine businesses received about $2.2 billion through the first round of the loan program, according to data from the U.S. Treasury.

Congress exempted forgiven PPP loans from federal taxes, but Maine is one of 18 states where loans are taxed, according to the Washington, D.C.-based Tax Foundation.

Exempting the 28,000 businesses that received PPP loans will cost the state about $100 million in the lost tax revenue, according to the appropriations committee.

The supplemental spending plan, which is meant to keep the state government running until June, also includes a tax deduction for Maine workers who collected unemployment benefits last year. The committee said it will benefit about 100,000 workers, saving them an estimated $300 or more on their income taxes this year.

The budget is expected to go before the Legislature for a vote next week. Republicans point out the measure needs a two-thirds vote and will require their support to be approved.

"We hope there will be ongoing conversations to provide beneficial tax relief to all Mainers in the biennial budget," Republican lawmakers wrote. "We are all in this together and it is unfortunate that Republicans were left sitting alone at the negotiating table by Democrats."

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Maine lawmakers wrangling over PPP taxes as Republicans object to exemptions for certain business - The Center Square

Scoop: Inside the GOP’s plan to retake the House – Axios

House Republicans will reclaim their majority in 2022 by offering candidates who are women, minorities or veterans, a memo obtained by Axios says.

Why it matters: The document, drafted by a super PAC blessed by House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, names top Democrats to target Jared Golden of Maine, Matt Cartwright of Pennsylvania and Ron Kind of Wisconsin and the type of Republican candidates to beat them.

The details: The memo, written by CLF President Dan Conston, singled out Golden, Cartwright and Kind because they live in Trump-friendly rural and working-class districts.

The memo is blunt about candidate recruitment.

Between the lines: House Republican candidates performed substantially better than Donald Trump did in suburban districts. The suburbs don't need to be the GOP killing fields that they were under Trump.

The big picture: The memo sounds the alarm about insufficient Republican candidate fundraising, calling it the "single biggest threat to Republicans taking back the majority."

Be smart: Conston predicts redistricting will bring on "painful member-vs.-member primaries," but he expects redistricting to ultimately help Republicans pick up seats in Texas, Florida, Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina and Montana.

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Scoop: Inside the GOP's plan to retake the House - Axios

Republicans in charge of Legislature unlikely to give voters the option of raising their sales tax – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

MADISON -Republicans who control the Legislature won't let the sales tax go up and will substantially pare back Democratic Gov. Tony Evers' plans to spend $2.4 billion on building projects, Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said Wednesday.

"There is no chance this is going to happen. It is dead on arrival. Never going to happen," the Rochester Republican said of Evers' proposal to let local officials raise the sales tax with the permission of voters.

Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu of Oostburg concurred, saying at a Wisconsin Counties Association forum that he saw no need to let the sales tax go up. He called the prospect of an increase "very doubtful."

Evers last month recommended allowing counties and larger municipalities to raise the sales tax by half a percentage point if voters approved their plans. The sales tax is 5.5% in most parts of the state and under his plan it could rise to as much as 6.5% in some places if both a municipality and a county in the same area approved increases.

But that proposal is on its way out, according to Vos.

He and LeMahieu said they would toss aside much of Evers' $91 billion two-year spending plan, though they said they supported parts of it.

Both said they wanted to put more money toward broadband, though perhaps not the $200 million Evers has proposed. LeMahieu said he thought Republicans would largely stick by the governor's transportation plan and said he backs Evers' proposal to expand I-94 in Milwaukee between the Zoo and Marquette interchanges.

The Legislature's budget committee will spend the next few months rewriting the budget. Evers can remove parts of their version of the budget using his line-item veto powers.

As part of his budget, Evers wants to borrow nearly $2 billion to fund $2.4 billion worth of building projects. Of that, $1 billion would go toward buildings on University of Wisconsin campuses, $163 million toward a new state office building in Milwaukee and $40 million toward a new facility for the Milwaukee Public Museum and Betty Brinn Children's Museum.

Vos implied he didn't want to fund constructing the long-planned office building in Milwaukee or approving initial work on one in Madison. Heotherwise did not specify which projects he wanted to put off.

He said it didn't make sense to build more buildings when state employees have been working from home during the coronavirus pandemic.

"There is nowhere near that level of appetite for borrowing to build office buildings and things like that," Vos said. "The very idea that the governor does not have a plan to return workers back to the buildings we already own but were going to propose to build a brand new office building in Milwaukee, a brand new office building in Madison, have all kinds of additional office space,but were not even sure what the worlds going to look likeI cannot imagine those going through."

Assembly Minority Leader Gordon Hintz, a Democrat from Oshkosh, praised much of Evers' budget and said Republicans need to start saying what they'll do differently.

"Hopefully we can move the needle but Ido think we're going to need answers on which investments aren't a priority from Republicans if we're going to see criticism of the governor's investments," Hintz said.

Alex Roe, UW Systems senior associate vice president for capital planning and budget, said in their budget request system officialsprioritized academic facilities and maintenance work over student-fee funded projects such as new dining halls, dorms and student unions.

Essentially, to be sensitive to the fact that we want to take another look at what happens once we finish with COVID, Roe said of the decision to focus on academic buildings. But I will tell you that every project that we put in this budget reflects a high-priority need.

Devi Shastri of the Journal Sentinel staff contributed to this report.

ContactPatrick Marley at patrick.marley@jrn.com. Followhim on Twitter at @patrickdmarley.

Read or Share this story: https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/politics/2021/03/03/wisconsin-republican-leaders-cool-evers-building-sales-tax-plans/6902499002/

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Republicans in charge of Legislature unlikely to give voters the option of raising their sales tax - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Fate of Republican Mike Simpson’s plan to remove Snake River dams lies with Democrats and Biden infrastructure package – The Spokesman-Review

WASHINGTON The first time someone approached Rep. Mike Simpson with the idea of breaching dams on the Snake River to save Idahos salmon, he started laughing.

I thought, thats just crazy, Simpson recalled. I said at the time, You need to do everything you can to try to restore salmon runs, every alternative, before you look at taking out dams.

That was about 25 years ago, when the Republican lawmaker was serving as speaker of the Idaho House of Representatives. Over the more than two decades since he was elected to represent the eastern half of the state in Congress, Simpson gradually came to what he describes as a clear-eyed conclusion.

The reality, he said in an interview with The Spokesman-Review, is weve tried everything else.

After three years and more than 300 meetings with stakeholders in the region, Simpson unveiled a proposal Feb. 6 to end the decadeslong salmon wars between tribes, farmers, conservationists, businesses and electric utilities over the fish and the dams that threaten their continued existence.

While reactions from the regions congressional Democrats have so far been lukewarm with key senators calling for more deliberation Simpson insists there is no time for further delay.

In a curious set of political circumstances, the veteran GOP lawmaker is planning to hitch his wagon to a multi-trillion-dollar infrastructure package President Joe Biden and his allies plan to move forward in a matter of weeks.

Simpsons plan clearly banks on a big federal infrastructure package, said Justin Hayes, executive director of the Idaho Conservation League. The region has gotten together and talked about this for years, but the region has never had the resources to do this. Never has the region said, Lets go find $33.5 billion.

Simpsons proposal outlines $33.5 billion in federal spending to breach four dams on the lower Snake River in 2030 removing earthen berms to restore the rivers flow and to replace the transportation, irrigation and power generation the dams provide.

Its the first proposal that looks at the big picture, Simpson said. Not just the question of take dams out or dont take dams out, but if you take dams out, what are the consequences? Were the first to admit those dams are valuable, and so if youre going to take them out, how are you going to make the stakeholders whole?

Dam power: Snake River dams are not big power producers, but play an important regional roleAfter nearly two decades of politicking, controversy and dispute, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers completed the Cascade Locks on the Columbia River, near The Dalles, Oregon, allowing boats laden with goods to pass by once unnavigable rapids. | Read more

Other provisions in his plan would give agriculture a bigger role in watershed improvement and transfer fish management responsibility from the Bonneville Power Administration to a joint council of states and tribes.

The remaining major dams in the Columbia River Basin would get license extensions of 35 to 50 years, along with a 35-year moratorium on lawsuits related to the dams. Simpson cites $17 billion from taxpayers and BPA ratepayers spent on fish recovery efforts since Idahos salmon and steelhead were listed under the Endangered Species Act in 1991.

A judge cant order you to take the dams out only Congress can do that, Simpson said. But the reality is a judge can make it so damned expensive to keep the dams that the only alternative is to remove them.

After a federal study recommended against breaching the four lower Snake River dams last year, a coalition of environmental and fishing groups went to court in January to ask a judge to intervene.

Four dams on the Klamath River along the Oregon-California border are slated for removal after years of litigation over dwindling salmon runs. Pointing to the lack of compensation for those on the losing side of that legal fight, Simpson said his plan aims to ensure a fair resolution for all the regions stakeholders.

In addition to keeping those stakeholders whole, a fundamental part of Simpsons plan is a recognition of what the dams already have taken from tribes throughout the Columbia Basin.

The impacts of the dams as a whole have affected our people economically, culturally, spiritually and physically as well, said Shannon Wheeler, chairman of the Nez Perce Tribe.

Wheeler said the Nimiipuu people the members of the Nez Perce Tribe traditionally followed the salmon runs upstream, relying on the fish for food and developing their culture around the seasonal migration.

In the 1855 Treaty of Walla Walla, they ceded most of their land to the United States in exchange for the exclusive right of taking fish in the streams running through and bordering the Nez Perce Reservation.

If you look throughout history, Simpson said, the United States has not always kept its treaty obligations with tribes. In fact, you could say we rarely have kept our treaty obligations. One of the treaty obligations we have with tribes is to maintain the fishing rights that they have. You cant do that if you dont have fish.

Wheeler points to Article VI, Clause 2 of the U.S. Constitution known as the Supremacy Clause which stipulates that treaties shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby.

We made a bargain, Wheeler said. It secured our way of life and granted the United States rights in our areas, and thats enshrined in the Constitution. Were confident that we would be successful in court, but we would rather have this issue solved by everyone thats involved in it.

Other tribes in the region have hailed Simpsons proposal, including the Spokane and Shoshone-Bannock tribes and the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, Yakama Nation and Umatilla Reservation. Conservationist and fishing groups have similarly welcomed it, but so far Simpson hasnt received the support from other members of Congress he will likely need for his plan to succeed.

In a joint statement released Feb. 5, a day before Simpson even unveiled his plan, GOP Reps. Russ Fulcher of Idaho and Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Dan Newhouse and Jaime Herrera Beutler of Washington endorsed the regions hydroelectric dams and issued a dire warning.

The hydropower developed in the Pacific Northwest benefits every resident, family, and business in our region, the Republicans wrote. The clean, renewable power generated by the dams along the Columbia and Snake Rivers supplies half of the Pacific Northwests energy and is critical for a reliable power grid. Without it, life as we know it in our region would cease to exist.

Simpson is quick to point out his plan aims to shore up the bulk of the regions hydropower generation, ensuring the most productive dams continue to operate. The four lower Snake River dams together generate less than one-tenth of the Columbia Basin dams power output, and dam-breaching proponents argue the electricity they generate is getting increasingly costly relative to other energy sources.

Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, said he has been hearing from farmers, ranchers and other Idahoans who staunchly oppose Simpsons proposal.

To his credit, Simpson has said that he doesnt know if doing this is going to save the salmon, Risch said in an interview. Im not chiding Congressman Simpson for doing this. Hes doing it in good faith. He strongly, strongly believes he wants to save the salmon, and I think we all do.

But if youre going to do that, what you really ought to do is pursue something where you can stand up, beat your chest and say, Look, do this with me and were going to save the salmon. And he starts off from the proposition that, yeah, theres a lot of pain here, but it still might not save the salmon.

Risch also questioned the lack of specifics in Simpsons plan for replacing the power generated by the four dams. In the proposal, a section on energy replacement lists three possibilities: 1. BPA owns and operates the firm power replacement; 2. A third-party Northwest entity owns and operates the replacement power; 3. Other Ideas?

Simpson said his concept is open-ended by design. Im open to anything, but give me some idea of what you would do that we havent already tried.

Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, has expressed skepticism while welcoming Simpsons proposal as a catalyst for ongoing regional talks over saving anadromous fish like salmon and steelhead. As the top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, the Idaho senator could play a key role in deciding what ends up in the infrastructure package.

I commend Mike for trying to bring people to the table to discuss this and find these solutions, Crapo told Idaho radio host Neal Larson on Feb. 24. But we havent got that kind of consensus yet. I think that we should use Mikes suggestion here to jump-start and maybe give some additional fuel to the efforts to build that kind of collaborative solution.

Simpson said all he asks is that his fellow Northwest lawmakers read his whole proposal before forming an opinion.

I knew when we did it that there would be the hell no people, he said, and there would be people who think that they had reached nirvana and this was the solution to everything. Its neither of those things. Its a compromise that we think will save salmon and make the stakeholders whole.

In response to Simpsons proposal, four Democratic senators who will play key roles in crafting the infrastructure package Maria Cantwell and Patty Murray of Washington, and Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley of Oregon released a joint statement calling for a measured approach.

All communities in the Columbia River Basin and beyond should be heard in efforts to recover the Northwests iconic salmon runs while ensuring economic vitality of the region, the senators wrote. Any process needs to balance the needs of communities in the Columbia River Basin, be transparent, be driven by stakeholders, and follow the science.

The question of whether to breach the Snake River dams has been a top political issue in Eastern Washington for decades. In that time, Murray and Cantwell have never supported breaching dams. But theyve also faced intense criticism from Republicans for never ruling out the possibility.

Spokespeople for Cantwell, Murray and Wyden declined to elaborate on the joint statement. Merkley spokeswoman Sara Hottman said the Oregon Democrats initial reaction was that its the first serious effort hes seen to look at all of the effects in this massively complicated issue, so hes having his team look at it.

Sen. Merkley has compared his immersion in the effort to remove four Klamath River dams to removal of the Snake River dams, Hottman wrote in an email. With the Klamath dams, the impacts are modest, but its still been incredibly difficult to move forward. The Snake River dams, however, have massive impacts on transportation, power, flood control, recreation, etc.

Simpsons plan drew more praise from Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee of Washington, who said in a Feb. 9 statement his state welcomes Rep. Simpsons willingness to think boldly about how to recover Columbia and Snake River salmon in a way that works for the entire region and invests at a potentially transformative level in clean energy, transportation and agriculture.

Gov. Kate Brown of Oregon, also a Democrat, said in a Feb. 8 statement Simpsons proposal will help us to build on the economic opportunities of the Columbia Basin and invest in a clean energy future.

Idaho Gov. Brad Little, a Republican, said in a Feb. 18 statement breaching the dams is not a silver bullet for salmon recovery and would have devastating impacts on Idahoans and vital segments of Idahos economy.

All three governors pointed to an October 2020 agreement between Washington, Idaho, Oregon and Montana to define a future collaborative framework to rebuild salmon and steelhead stocks, but Simpson said the time for those plodding deliberations has passed.

Weve been debating this for 25 years, he said. I would like to think we could discuss this for the next two or three years, but I dont think salmon have that much time.

The key to Simpsons plan for swifter action is the infrastructure package the White House has dubbed the Build Back Better plan, borrowing a Biden campaign slogan.

After the president met with Republican and Democratic lawmakers about the plan on Thursday, Rep. Peter DeFazio of Oregon, the top Democrat on the House Transportation Committee, said Biden is very, very set on getting it done, and getting it done pretty damn soon.

Pressed by reporters, DeFazio said he plans to have the bill ready for a vote in the House in May.

Biden has said he wants Congress to craft a bipartisan infrastructure package, but prospects for wide GOP support are grim. Democrats see the legislation as a chance to enact Bidens campaign promise of a massive investment to create jobs in clean energy industries.

Before the meeting, DeFazio told CNBC he would propose splitting the legislation in two, with one bill designed to attract GOP support for specific infrastructure projects and another to appropriate trillions to pay for them, which Republicans are unlikely to back.

The White House has so far declined to say how expensive the infrastructure package will be, but Simpson said he has heard rumors of $2 to $3 trillion. Even at the low end of that range, he pointed out, his $33.5 billion proposal would account for less than 2% of the total cost.

I dont think thats too much to ask for the Pacific Northwest, he said.

The second part of DeFazios plan would require Senate Democrats to use a process called budget reconciliation, which would allow them to pass the spending bill with just 51 all-Democratic votes rather than the bipartisan 60-vote majority required to pass most legislation in the Senate.

Asked how he feels about the prospect of funding his proposal through a Senate process likely to have no Republican support, Simpson said, Well, you gotta do what you gotta do. Its important to me, I think its important to the Pacific Northwest, and its important to my district, thats for sure.

While Simpsons proposal had been in the works for years, he saw an opening when Democrats gained a narrow majority in the Senate after two unlikely victories in Georgias runoff election in January. While budget bills take shape in the House, a GOP-controlled Senate would have been likely to block most of Bidens spending priorities.

Several Northwest lawmakers are also in key positions. In addition to DeFazios lead role in crafting the infrastructure package, Cantwell chairs the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee. Wyden and Crapo are the top Democrat and Republican, respectively, on the Senate Finance Committee, and Murray is the third-ranking member of Senate Democratic leadership.

The stars are kind of aligning, Simpson said. Were probably stronger as a Pacific Northwest delegation than weve ever been.

Simpson said he will work to make sure the funding for his proposal gets into the House version of the infrastructure package. As the top Republican on the House Appropriations Subcommittee for Energy and Water Development, he is well positioned to do so.

Spokespeople for the four Washington and Oregon senators did not respond directly when asked whether the senators would attempt to block funding for Simpsons plan if it makes its way to the Senate. Despite any misgivings they may have about the aggressive timeline of the Idaho Republicans plan, stripping the funding from the infrastructure bill would draw the ire of tribes and conservationists.

Wheeler said the Nez Perce Tribe is gearing up to start meeting with lawmakers in the coming weeks.

We are at such a critical juncture, we cant let this pass us by, the chairman said. I think if we have forward-looking senators, they can see that this is the future. We have confidence that will happen, because it is the right thing to do.

For his part, Simpson said he is just asking everyone to get past their first impressions of his proposal and think outside the box.

Think about not just what we currently do, but what do we want the Pacific Northwest to look like in 20 or 30 or 50 years? he said. Everything we do on the lower Snake and Columbia rivers we can do differently. Its our choice. Salmon need a river. They dont have a choice, and right now they dont have a river.

The lower Snake River is not a river anymore, it is just a series of pools that are ever-warming, that endanger the salmon, and theyre going to go extinct if we dont do something. To some people, thats OK. Its not to me.

Orion Donovan-Smith's reporting for The Spokesman-Review is funded in part by Report for America and by members of the Spokane community. This story can be republished by other organizations for free under a Creative Commons license. For more information on this, please contact our newspapers managing editor.

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Fate of Republican Mike Simpson's plan to remove Snake River dams lies with Democrats and Biden infrastructure package - The Spokesman-Review