KEY POINTS
  • President Joe Biden sought to refocus public attention on how his domestic agenda will improve average Americans' lives during a visit to Michigan on Tuesday.
  • "These bills are not about left versus right, or moderate versus progressive, or anything that pits Americans against one another," Biden said of his dual-track infrastructure upgrade bill and social safety net expansion bill.
  • As Democrats in Washington squabble over the cost, Biden and the White House want people to focus on the bills' individual elements, each of which tends to be popular with voters on its own.
US President Joe Biden speaks about the bipartisan infrastructure bill and his Build Back Better agenda at the International Union of Operating Engineers Training Facility in Howell, Michigan, on October 5, 2021.

President Joe Biden sought to refocus public attention on how his domestic agenda will improve average Americans' lives Tuesday in Michigan, as an intraparty fight among Democrats back in Washington threatened to drown out the message Biden has spent months hammering home.

"Look, I know there's a lot of noise in Washington; there always is," said Biden. "But it seems to me there's a little more than usual. ... I'm here today to try to set some things straight if I can."