KEY POINTS
  • President Joe Biden held his second meeting about infrastructure with members of Congress from both parties.
  • Biden's proposal carries a price tag of more than $2 trillion, and Republicans are starting to back a plan that costs roughly a third of that.
  • The president's proposal calls to upgrade transportation, utilities, broadband, housing and job training, but the GOP has taken issue with proposed investments in care for elderly and disabled people and in electric vehicles.
U.S. President Joe Biden holds a bi-partisan meeting on the American Jobs Plan at the White House in Washington, U.S., April 19, 2021.

President Joe Biden held his second infrastructure meeting with Democratic and Republican members of Congress on Monday, as GOP lawmakers push to shrink the president's more than $2 trillion plan.

Biden aims to approve a package in the coming months that revamps U.S. roads, bridges, airports, broadband, housing and utilities, and invests in job training along with care for elderly and disabled Americans. Republicans have signaled they could support a scaled-back bill based around transportation, broadband and water systems.