WASHINGTON, D.C. — The House of Representatives finally passed a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure package late Friday.
The bill had been held up since August—when it passed the Senate with a 69-30 vote.
In the House, the vote was 228-206— with more than a dozen Republicans joining Democrats in voting for the bill.
President Joe Biden plans on signing the bill, which will provide money to improve roads, bridges and expand access to broadband.
Democrats had wanted to pass the infrastructure bill and a social spending bill at the same time.
However, moderates and progressives spent months going back and forth over the price and scope of the bill, known as the Build Back Better Act.
The two wings of the Democratic party said they entered into a commitment to vote on the Build Back Better Act no later than Nov. 15, which will provide enough time for the Congressional Budget Office enough time to score the bill.
Moderates said they wanted assurance that the bill will not add to the deficit.
The social spending package contains provisions intended to fight climate change, expand Medicare, provide housing and immigration reform.
Should the social spending bill pass the House, it would then move to the Senate, where Democrats control the chamber by the slimmest of margins. In order for the bill to reach the president, it would likely need the support of every Democratic senator — even moderates like Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Sen. Krysten Sinema, who have raised concerns about the package’s price tag.
Manchin and Sinema have already pushed the Democrats to remove some provisions from the social spending bill, including tax breaks and penalties that would incentivize power companies to seek renewable energy sources. They’ve also reduced the size of some aspects of the bill, like the child tax deductions.