Polls show that most Americans don’t even know the law was enacted, and it may be years before voters see improvements in their communities. Politico By TANYA SNYDER, JORDAN WOLMAN, ANNIE SNIDER, JOHN HENDEL and ELEANOR MUELLER November 6, 2022 Democrats facing voters on Tuesday can boast of a landmark achievement from their two years of running Washington — a $1.2 trillion infrastructure law that promises to rebuild the nation’s roads and bridges, expand broadband service, put more electric vehicles on the road and provide millions of Americans with cleaner drinking water.
But nearly a year after President Joe Biden signed the biggest infrastructure bill in decades, decisions about how to spend all that money are just getting underway. And his party is struggling to reap the electoral rewards.
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