Public infrastructure in the U.S. is in bad shape and has been so for many years. Washington has fingered the importance of doing something about the decrepit state of America's infrastructure for decades. It's the bipartisan thing to do.
President Obama's Council of Economic Advisers devoted a lengthy chapter in its 2016 Annual Report to the Nation's infrastructure problems. Enter President Trump in 2017. The first thing out of his box was infrastructure. But, the “i” word faded away as rapidly as it entered President Trump's lexicon. There was a little problem: the White House didn't really have a fully developed infrastructure plan and most certainly had no legislative action plan. With last week's elections, President Trump once again trotted out infrastructure, as did Nancy Pelosi—the most likely Speaker of the House, which will be controlled by the Democrats in the 116th Congress.
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