Current:Home > MarketsVance criticized an infrastructure law as a candidate then embraced it as a senator -Ascend Finance Compass
Vance criticized an infrastructure law as a candidate then embraced it as a senator
View
Date:2025-04-12 06:22:21
WASHINGTON (AP) — As he campaigned for the Senate two years ago, JD Vance harshly criticized a bipartisan 2021 law to invest more than $1 trillion in America’s crumbling infrastructure, calling it a “huge mistake” shaped by Democrats who want to spend big taxpayer dollars on “really crazy stuff.”
That hasn’t stopped the first-term Ohio senator and Republican vice-presidential nominee from seeking more than $200 million in federal money made available through the law for projects across his state, according to records reviewed by The Associated Press.
Vance is hardly alone among Republicans who have condemned spending enacted under Democratic President Joe Biden, only to later reap the benefit when government funds flow to popular projects back home. In this case, he also was criticizing the achievement of one of the bill’s authors — former Sen. Rob Portman, the Ohio Republican he succeeded.
“I believe you should campaign how you govern so that you are consistent in your message and voters know what they are going to get,” said Ohio state Sen. Matt Dolan, one of Vance’s 2022 Republican primary rivals, who was the only GOP candidate to support the bill.
Parker Magid, a spokesperson for Vance said, “Senators are elected by their constituents to fight for them in Washington, regardless of the party in charge. The fact is that this bill was a wish list of destructive Biden-Harris policy proposals and over 1,000 pages long, but as his constituents expect of him, Senator Vance successfully advocated for full and fair consideration of legitimate expenditures on Ohio projects by the federal government.”
To the man Vance defeated in the general election, former Democratic congressman Tim Ryan, Vance’s pivot “fits the general pattern of him being two-faced on just about everything.”
“Look at the Trump stuff,” Ryan said. “He was ‘America’s Hitler’” in Vance’s estimation, ”then when it didn’t benefit him anymore to have that view, he changed it.”
Trump had vowed to pass an infrastructure bill when he was president, but did not offer a plan, and “Infrastructure Week” became something of a punch line.
That changed after Biden became president. A bipartisan group of senators including Portman and Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, then a Democrat, hashed out a roughly $1 trillion package that passed with 19 Republicans joining Democrats.
Vance criticized the bill as a boondoggle tainted by Democrats’ preoccupation with racial justice.
“I’m reading through this new infrastructure bill, and it includes all these ridiculous references to things called transportation equity, which is basically just importing critical race theory into our nation’s infrastructure programs,” Vance tweeted in August 2021. “It’s totally ridiculous and it’s obvious that Republicans have been had in supporting this bill.”
During a September 2021 interview with CBS News, Vance said that the “mistake that Republicans have recently made on bipartisanship is that we gave Democrats a huge win.”
“We do have infrastructure problems, but I don’t think this bill actually spends the money on the things that we need,” he said of the legislation, which Trump opposed.
Portman, who cited “partisan gridlock” as a reason he retired from the Senate, was unavailable for comment.
What to know about the 2024 Election
- Today’s news: Follow live updates from the campaign trail from the AP.
- Ground Game: Sign up for AP’s weekly politics newsletter to get it in your inbox every Monday.
- AP’s Role: The Associated Press is the most trusted source of information on election night, with a history of accuracy dating to 1848. Learn more.
After taking office in January 2023, Vance appears to have warmed to the legislation his predecessor helped write — though not publicly.
In 10 letters addressed to Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg that were sent between 2023 and 2024, Vance requested more than $213 million made available through the law for Ohio projects, according to copies of his correspondence obtained by the AP. At least four of those projects were approved and are slated to get about $130 million, federal records show.
Toledo received nearly $20 million to revitalize a majority Black area that was isolated from the city’s downtown when Interstate 75 was built in the 1960s. Toledo officials described the planning decision behind the location of the freeway as “discriminatory” in their federal application for the funding.
“These once-thriving communities now suffer from some of the city’s highest rates of poverty, unemployment, and blight,” the application states. “Historically, this majority-Black area has been disproportionately impacted by harmful transportation policy decisions.” The application said those policies “caused displacement from which the area has never fully recovered.”
Vance had previously mocked a journalist who asked Buttigieg about bias that went into decades-old planning decisions. “Nothing in our country works,” he tweeted in November 2021. “And our reporters ask about the racism of our roads?”
As a senator he wrote that the project in Toledo had potentially “far-reaching” benefits, though he did include a disclaimer that he opposed “the Biden Administration’s emphasis on diversity, equity, and inclusion over outcomes of meaningful infrastructure improvements.”
In another instance, Vance sought $29 million for low or no emissions buses. Vance has repeatedly railed against Democratic efforts to reduce emissions. In a recent opinion article in The Wall Street Journal, he singled out Vice President Kamala Harris and the Biden administration’s support for zero-emission efforts, arguing that they were “stifling investment in the coal, natural gas, and nuclear plants that Americans rely on.”
Dolan, Vance’s 2022 primary rival, said he’s glad the senator seems to have changed his mind about the bill.
“The talking points during a campaign sometimes don’t match the responsibility of governing,” Dolan said. “I think the two should be indistinguishable. That’s what it means to be a public servant.”
He said if lawmakers were to “reject those dollars for political reasons, Ohio would suffer.”
veryGood! (37212)
Related
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Starbucks introduces caffeinated iced drinks. Flavors include melon, tropical citrus
- GOP lawmakers in Wisconsin appeal ruling allowing disabled people to obtain ballots electronically
- Film and TV crews spent $334 million in Montana during last two years, legislators told
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Two Texas jail guards are indicted by a county grand jury in the asphyxiation death of an inmate
- Lakers reveal Bronny James' new jersey number
- Argentina, Chile coaches receive suspensions for their next Copa America match. Here’s why
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- 4 Missouri prison guards charged with murder, and a 5th with manslaughter, in death of Black man
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Olympics 2024: How to watch, when it starts, key dates in Paris
- Parents’ lawsuit forces California schools to track discrimination against students
- A San Francisco store is shipping LGBTQ+ books to states where they are banned
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Mount Everest's melting ice reveals bodies of climbers lost in the death zone
- Trial judges dismiss North Carolina redistricting lawsuit over right to ‘fair elections’
- Ten Commandments. Multiple variations. Why the Louisiana law raises preferential treatment concerns
Recommendation
Could your smelly farts help science?
Yellowstone officials: Rare white buffalo sacred to Native Americans not seen since June 4 birth
Lighting strike on wet ground sent 7 from Utah youth church group to hospital
Delaware Supreme Court reverses ruling invalidating early voting and permanent absentee status laws
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Fossil of Neanderthal child with signs of Down syndrome suggests compassionate care, scientists say
Film and TV crews spent $334 million in Montana during last two years, legislators told
Nicole Scherzinger Explains Why Being in the Pussycat Dolls Was “Such a Difficult Time