Rep. Peter DeFazio on bipartisan infrastructure bill

House Transportation & Infrastructure Committee Chair and Representative Peter DeFazio (D) of Oregon, spoke with Yahoo Finance's Jessica Smith to discuss President Joe Biden's progress on infrastructure, managing climate change, and taxes.

Video Transcript

SEANA SMITH: Welcome back. Now $4 trillion in new government spending is being debated in Washington right now. Let's go back to Capitol Hill where our own Jessica Smith is standing by. Jess.

JESSICA SMITH: Yeah, Seana. I am here with Congressman Peter DeFazio. He is the chair of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. Thank you so much for joining us.

PETER DEFAZIO: Thanks for the opportunity.

JESSICA SMITH: Let's start talking about infrastructure. The House has already passed your plan, the Invest in America Act, that water and transportation infrastructure bill. You've been clear you're not a fan of this bipartisan deal. So do you think Senate democrats tomorrow should vote for it, vote to move ahead in this debate?

PETER DEFAZIO: Well we're expressing our concerns. We passed a transformative transportation bill that met the goals set by the White House, that is to deal significantly with climate change, create new programs for social equity for transit deserts, underserved communities, rejoining communities split asunder by freeways, major titles on safety, and significant increase in investment transit, significant increase in rail, and most of those things are lacking in the Senate proposal. In fact, they have no transit at this point in time.

Their rail title is way smaller than ours. It's not going to move us toward high and higher speed rail. And then the policies they have do not deal meaningfully with climate change, fossil fuel pollution. Their social equity programs are one sixth ours. They lack the policies. So we're very concerned about the lack of involvement and discussion with us and between us and the Senate.

JESSICA SMITH: So Politico quoted you saying the whole thing falling apart is probably the best thing. So to be clear, do you want this bipartisan plan to fail at this point?

PETER DEFAZIO: One of two things. They can pass it as a standalone bill and we go to conference and make it better and work out our differences. Or it fails. If this is a take it or leave it on the House side, I'm going to leave it.

JESSICA SMITH: So what specifically do you want to see? What changes do you want to see in order to make this passable in the House?

PETER DEFAZIO: Look, we've been living off the Eisenhower era for 70 years. It's the 21st century. We have built 30,000 lane miles of highways and our 100 largest cities in the last 25 years. Guess what? They're more congested than ever. It's called induced demand. You build it, there's more traffic. We have to look at transit alternatives, commuter rail alternatives, we've got to make it safe for people to cycle and use pedestrians and cycling. There's a 50% increase in fatalities last 10 years in cycling and pedestrians because it's not safe.