Business & Economy

On The Money: House Democrats break internal impasse to adopt $3.5T budget plan

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THE BIG DEAL—House Democrats break internal impasse to adopt $3.5T budget plan: House Democrats on Tuesday rallied behind a new strategy to advance President Biden’s economic agenda shortly after Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) struck a deal with a small group of moderates that was threatening to blow up leadership’s carefully laid plans to pass trillions of dollars in federal spending.

What happened: 

What it means for the road ahead: The deal Pelosi reached Tuesday provides a brief detente between Democratic moderates and progressives as House lawmakers leave Washington to resume their summer recess. But the sniping over process, strategy and timing foreshadows just how difficult it will be for the party to stay united when it comes to turning its policy goals into law in the coming weeks as it seeks to show voters that they can govern. The Hill’s Cristina Marcos and Scott Wong tell us why here.

The next steps:

Pelosi added in a statement that she is “committing” to pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill by Sept. 27, shortly before current surface transportation programs expire.

LEADING THE DAY

New home sales tick higher as prices hit record highs: New home sales edged higher in July while prices climbed to another record high, according to data released Tuesday by the Census Bureau.

A surge of demand for new homes unleashed by the coronavirus pandemic drove both sales and prices to staggering levels in 2020. Sales cooled off slightly this spring as prices continued to surge, but a severe lack of inventory and building supply backlogs have kept costs for new homes high.

I break it down here.

Child tax credit payments would up average monthly income for HUD-assisted families by about 38 percent, report says: The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) says in a new report that advance payments of the expanded child tax credit would increase the average monthly income for families receiving its assistance by almost 38 percent. 

In an analysis of the credit’s impact on HUD-assisted families obtained by The Hill on Monday, the agency estimated that, over the course of the current six-month disbursement period, payments that total to an average of about $3,300 per household would account for nearly 27.5 percent of a family’s total income over that period.

The Hill’s Aris Folley has more here.

GOOD TO KNOW

ODDS AND ENDS