WaPo is reporting that Trump has informed lawmakers that he now does NOT want the private sector to help pay for his infrastructure package and now wants to force states and localities to foot most of the bill: https://www.washingtonpost.com/powe...isrc=al_alert-COMBO-politics%2Beconomy&wpmk=1
President Trump told lawmakers Tuesday that he was abandoning a key element of his planned $1 trillion infrastructure package, complaining that certain partnerships between the private sector and federal government simply dont work.
Trumps comments, described by a House Democrat who met with Trump and confirmed by a White House official, reveal an infrastructure plan that appears to be up in the air as White House officials have struggled to decide how to finance many of the projects they envision to rebuild Americas roads, bridges and tunnels.
Now the administration wants to force states and localities to foot most of the bill. The previous strategy a push that has taken a back seat to other Republican priorities in Washington was aimed at luring private investors with promises of federal backing. Some of that thinking appears to be changing.
The president acknowledged the new approach during a Tuesday meeting with Democrats from the House Ways and Means Committee, who came to the White House to discuss the administrations tax code rewrite set to be unveiled Wednesday,
During the meeting, Trump emphatically rejected what everybody assumed was his position relative to financing infrastructure, said Rep. Brian Higgins (D-N.Y.), who attended and asked Trump about the proposal. He dismissed it categorically and said it doesnt work.
A White House official said there are legitimate questions about a public-private approach to revamping the nations infrastructure. The official said that although the administration has researched such approaches, they are certainly not the silver bullet for all of our nations infrastructure problems and we will continue to consider all viable options.
Trump campaigned on a pledge to lead a massive rebuilding effort that would rely on private-sector funding to overhaul the nations crumbling infrastructure. His administration talked up the concept in which private investors would underwrite projects in exchange for a share in future profits in the budget it rolled out in May. Working with states, local governments and private industry, we will ensure that these new federal funds are matched by significant additional dollars for maximum efficiency and accountability, he said in a June speech on infrastructure.