Biden wants Congress to vote on his multi-trillion infrastructure and social spending plans NEXT WEEK before he leaves for Europe as Democrats remain divided on family leave, climate and how to pay for it all Joe Biden wants the House to vote on his multi-trillion infrastructure and social spending plans next week before he leaves for Europe Biden going to Rome for G20 and Scotland for climate summit He wants to show world leaders a legislative win But Dems still working out key issues like paid leave, Medicare expansion, prescription drug pricing and climate Dems also arguing about taxes to pay for multi-trillion infrastructure deal and social spending program By Emily Goodin, Senior U.S. Political Reporter For Dailymail.com Published: 14:33 BST, 22 October 2021 | Updated: 14:35 BST, 22 October 2021 Viewcomments President Joe Biden wants the House to vote on his multi-trillion infrastructure and social spending plans next week before he leaves for Europe as Democrats remain divided on key issues like family leave and combatting climate change - while still arguing over how to pay for all of it. He has told Democrats he wants a legislative victory ahead of the Group of 20 leaders summit in Rome and the United Nations climate summit in Scotland next week, according to Bloomberg News, so he can show his fellow world leaders that America can still deliver. Biden told a CNN town hall Thursday night he thinks he'll get a deal before he leaves for Europe but he also conceded there are 'four or five issues' still being worked out among warring moderate and liberal Democrats. But with the clock ticking to the president's deadline, Democrats remain internally divided on key issues proving tricky for leadership to negotiate: paid leave, Medicare expansion, prescription drug pricing and climate. Democrats are also scrambling to come up with a way to pay for their massive federal spending project after moderate Senator Kyrsten Sinema said she wouldn't support raising corporate tax and income rates. Joe Biden wants the House to vote on his multi-trillion infrastructure and social spending plans next week before he leaves for Europe Biden conceded Thursday night he doesn't have the votes to raise taxes. In the evenly divided 50-50 Senate, he needs every Democrat on board. 'I don't think we're going to be able to get the vote,' he said when asked about it at a CNN town hall. 'Look, when you're in the United States Senate and you're president of the United States and you have 50 Democrats, everyone is the president.' Sinema has conceded to alternatives, according to reports, including raising tax revenue from companies and the wealthy. The new pay-for method could include increased funding for the IRS to collect taxes owed by corporations and high earners, and increased taxes on the income that multinational companies operating in the US earn overseas. Democrats argue that could raise at least $1 trillion over a decade. The Arizona Democrat also opposes a drug price negotiation measure. Meanwhile fellow moderate Senator Joe Manchin is opposed to Biden's inclusion of the Clean Energy Performance Plan, which does not go over well in his coal-producing home state of West Virginia. That has the White House looking at alternatives, including using executive action. 'We have had other ways of doing' reduced emissions, White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre Thursday afternoon. 'What we're saying is we don't need Congress. We can do it without Congress.' Meanwhile, Biden acknowledged that expanding Medicare benefits to cover dental, vision and hearing - a provision being pushed by liberals - was 'a reach' because of the two senators. Instead Biden said they were looking to provide an $800 voucher for dental work. He indicated a hearing benefit was a possibility but noted vision coverage remains an issue because of its price tag. And Biden also conceded Thursday night that two of his biggest priorities were being cut: paid family leave was parred down to four weeks from 12 while free community college was axed. Instead, the president said he was looking at expanding Pell grants. Democrats are negotiating over taxes to pay for Biden's social agenda after moderate Senator Kyrsten Sinema said she wouldn't support raising corporate tax and income rates Moderate Senator Joe Manchin is opposed to Biden's inclusion of the Clean Energy Performance Plan in the package Biden gave Democrats an end of the week deadline to come to consensus on a topline number for his social program. But to break the stalemate between the moderate and progressive wings of the Democratic Party, the $3.5 trillion plan will be cut nearly in half. That final figure is looking to be between $1.75 trillion and $2 trillion. Biden has been holding metings and phone calls all week with the key players in the drama - moderates, liberals, Manchin, Sinema, and leaders Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi - as he works to get a deal on the two bills that make up his Congressional agenda: a bipartisan infrastructure plan already passed by the Senate, and a larger budget package of social programs that focuses on education, health, childcare and climate change. 'I do think I'll get a deal,' he said. Read more: Share or comment on this article: All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility