Your guide to how Washington shapes business and the economy
| FRI, JAN 21, 2022 | | | Good morning, President Biden accepted defeat on his Build Back Better plan, but suggested a path forward. The Supreme Court dealt a heavy blow to former President Trump. And the U.S. made another bid to prevent Russia from invading Ukraine. Here are some of the stories we're following at CNBC Politics: -
Build Back Better breakup: Biden conceded this week that he will likely have to break up his sprawling climate change and social safety net bill into "chunks" in order to get some priorities passed in Congress. The president's shift comes after conservative Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin effectively sunk the bill, which bore a price tag of about $1.75 trillion. Specifically, Biden said in a press conference that "he believes he can win support for more than $500 billion in spending to combat climate change," CNBC Politics reporter Jacob Pramuk writes.
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Ukraine tension: The U.S. has spent much of the past few weeks trying to keep Russia from invading Ukraine. While the Kremlin denies it is looking to attack its ex-Soviet neighbor, American intelligence believes the 100,000 Russian troops near the Ukraine border indicate otherwise. On Friday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with his Russian counterpart, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, in the latest U.S. bid to press Moscow to pull back. "If Russia wants to begin to convince the world that it has no aggressive intent toward Ukraine, a very good place to start would be by deescalating by bringing back and removing these forces from Ukraine's borders," Blinken said. Read CNBC Politics reporter Amanda Macias' story here.
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Jan. 6 committee can get Trump docs: The Supreme Court this week rejected Trump's attempt to block the House panel investigating the January 6 Capitol riot from getting hundreds of pages of White House documents. Investigators believe the documents will shed light on what Trump and his aides said and did while a mob of the former president's supporters invaded the Capitol and held up Congress's confirmation of Biden's victory in the 2020 election. The top court's ruling "also represents a sharp loss for the Republican former president, given that he appointed three of the Supreme Court's six conservative justices, with none of those three indicating support for his effort," writes CNBC Politics reporter Dan Mangan. Thanks for reading CNBC Politics. Thoughts? Tips? Email us at CNBCPolitics@nbcuni.com. Have friends or colleagues who might like this newsletter? They can sign up here. |
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