
The health state of Biden seems to have started to worry even his supporters now.
This man seems completely disoriented as time goes, and all his public appearances are becoming more and more ridiculous.
On Thursday, while he was answering reporters’ questions, he stopped talking “normally” to whisper into his microphone about how much he is spending.
In an attempt to brag about how much money he was spending, Biden became increasingly creepy, as he was whispering into the microphone.
He loudly whispered:
“I got them $1.9 trillion relief so far. They’re going to be getting checks in the mail that are consequential.”
Watch below:
Biden's constant whisper may be weirder than Kamala's constant laugh
— Jesse Hunt (@JJHunt10) June 24, 2021
He claimed that he had reached a bipartisan deal on infrastructure. He said:
“We have a deal. We all agree that none of us got all we wanted. I clearly didn’t get all I wanted, they gave more than I think maybe what they were planning to give in the first place. But this reminds me of the days when we used to get an awful lot done up in the United States Congress.”
He continued:
“Bipartisan deals mean compromise.”
Fox News reports:
“His announcement followed an Oval Office meeting with a bipartisan group of senators, who were pitching a breakthrough pared-down agreement worth about $953 billion reached the night before. Their proposed framework includes about $559 billion in new spending that will be invested in roads, broadband internet, electric utilities, and other traditional infrastructure projects over the next five years.
One of the biggest points of contention was how to pay for the measure; according to a White House fact sheet, the financing sources include an assortment of options, such as reducing the IRS tax gap, redirecting unused federal unemployment money from the 26 states that are prematurely ending the relief program and repurposing other Covid relief measures.
Twenty-one senators – 11 Republicans and 10 Democrats – have endorsed the framework, although it will likely need to win the support of Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer in order to meet the 60-vote threshold needed to pass legislation in the Democratic-controlled Senate under regular order.”
This is the breakdown of the spending:
- Roads, bridges, major projects: $109 billion
- Safety: $11 billion
- Public transit: $49 billion
- Passenger and Freight Rail: $66 billion
- Electric vehicle infrastructure: $7.5 billion
- Electric buses / transit: $7.5 billion
- Reconnecting communities: $1 billion
- Airports: $25 billion
- Ports & Waterways: $16 billion
- Infrastructure Financing: $20 billion
- Water infrastructure: $55 billion
- Broadband infrastructure: $65 billion
- Environmental remediation: $21 billion
- Power infrastructure including grid authority: $73 billion
- Western Water Storage: $5 billion
- Resilience: $47 billion
Source: