Joe Biden and his new czar Mitch Landrieu will tout the administration's infrastructure plan in New Hampshire on Tuesday as the White House is warning the president's next big ticket item - his massive budget packet of social safety net programs - may not be fully paid for. The backdrop for Biden's remarks will be the NH 175 Bridge in Woodstock, New Hampshire - an aging iron bridge over the Pemigewassett River that is on the 'red list' of state bridges needing repair. New Hampshire will receive $225 million for bridges from the infrastructure bill, the White House said. It's Biden's first visit to New Hampshire since February 2020 when he left the state in the late afternoon before the primary polls closed. He finished fifth in the first-in-the-nation presidential primary but he did beat Donald Trump there in the general election. He has an underwater approval rating in the state. A University of New Hampshire Survey Center poll in October found Granite Staters viewed him unfavorably by 48 per cent and favorably by 38 per cent. Joe Biden and his new czar Mitch Landrieu will tout the administration's infrastructure plan in New Hampshire - above the two men leave the White House on Tuesday Trip kicks off a week-long road trip by administration officials to tout infrastructure bill's local benefits - Biden will go to Detroit on Wednesday The trips kicks off a week-long administration-wide effort to promote the bipartisan infrastructure law, which Biden signed at ceremony in the White House on Monday, surrounded by Democratic and Republican lawmakers. Biden will be in Detroit on Wednesday and, on Friday, Vice President Kamala Harris will go to Columbus, Ohio, while Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg goes to Arizona. Expect Democrats to tout its benefits and the major legislative victory as part of their re-election message in next year's midterm election. As the president tours the country, he will talk about 'how the benefits of these packages will impact people's everyday lives and what they talk about at their kitchen tables,' White House press secretary Jen Psaki said on Monday. But as the president and his top officials hit the road to tout infrastructure benefits, staff are quietly briefing lawmakers to expect a disappointing estimate from the Congressional Budget Office on Biden's next agenda item: his $1.85 trillion spending package of social programs that addresses education, family leave and climate change. The House is expected to begin debate on the Build Back Better package on Wednesday with an eye to passing it at the end of the week. It is expected to undergo several changes in the Senate, where moderate Democratic Senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema have expressed concern about its price tag. The latest report won't ease their fears. The CBO is likely to find that the cost of the overall package will not be fully paid for with new tax revenue over the coming decade, The New York Times reported. To pay for the plan the Biden administration is depending on having a strengthened Internal Revenue Service crack down on tax evaders, which the White House says will raise hundreds of billions of dollars in revenue. The director of the nonpartisan CBO said on Monday that inceasing the power of the IRS to go after tax evaders will yield far less than what the White House was counting on to help pay for its bill - about $120 billion over a decade versus the $400 billion the administration estimated. A formal tally is expected to be released on Friday. Senior administration officials are advising lawmakers to disregard the CBO assessment, saying the budget agency is being overly conservative in its calculations. 'There has been wide agreements on the part of everyone involved - moderates liberals, etc. - that CBO does not have experience analyzing revenue amounts gained from cracking down on wealthy tax cheats, who are taking advantage of every honest taxpayer,' deputy White House press secretary Andrew Bates said duing a briefing with reporters on Tuesday. President Joe Biden will hold an event near this red-listed bridge over the Pemigewassett River in Woodstock Lawmakers rely on the CBO 'score,' as its known, to determine how much a bill will cost tax payers. Manchin, in particular, has voiced concerns the package could add to the national debt and spike inflation. Democrats cannot lose a single vote in the 50-50 Senate. Republicans are opposed to Biden's plan to give the IRS an additional $80 billion over the next ten years to increase their power, warning it will weaponized against conservatives and target ordinary taxpayers. All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility