KEY POINTS
  • Democrats and Republicans in the House Problem Solvers Caucus endorsed the bipartisan infrastructure framework agreed to by President Joe Biden and senators.
  • The additional GOP support allows House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to lose some Democratic votes for the bill.
  • The caucus also called for a vote on the plan separate from a Democratic proposal to expand child care and fight climate change, complicating Pelosi's strategy to pass both plans.
U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) holds her weekly news conference with Capitol Hill reporters in Washington, D.C., May 20, 2021.

A group of Democratic and Republican House members on Tuesday endorsed the bipartisan infrastructure framework crafted by senators and the White House, but potentially complicated its path to passage along the way.

The 58-member Problem Solvers Caucus said in a statement that it "strongly supports" the Senate proposal. If the group's 29 GOP members vote for the plan, House Democrats have room to lose support from skeptical progressives and still pass the roughly $1.2 trillion infrastructure framework.