INFRASTRUCTURE SWEEPS WEEK — Members of Congress — and I promise this isn't just flattery — have a lot in common with business tycoons and sports coaches. All three spend a fair share of their time closing deals, inspiring teams, and at times knifing their rivals. So perhaps it's no accident that, as the Senate's group of 10 bipartisan negotiators keeps plugging away at a long-sought infrastructure deal, some of them are starting to resemble TV characters who work in business and sports. These parallels between senators and fictional pop-culture personalities are not exact, of course. But this lighthearted window into negotiating strategies, hopefully, offers a little relief from the intensity of Hot Infrastructure Summer. Jon Tester is Ted Lasso. Just like the mustachioed head coach of the A.F.C. Richmond footballers (your Nightly author respects the U.K. parlance), Tester is trying to advance the ball by remaining resolutely positive. "You've got to talk about success if you're going to achieve success," he told our reporters last month after the group of 10 won a televised attaboy from President Joe Biden. Tester kept the high spirits going last week, saying that Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is "totally bought in to getting this across the finish line" even as Republicans tried to cast doubt on the Democratic leader's seriousness about letting a cross-aisle agreement happen. Not to mention that the Montana moderate often operates in a Lasso-like mode in the Senate hallways, freely offering folksy insight and quips designed to motivate his colleagues (even if he's a bit more profane than Ted). Rob Portman is Johnny Rose. The silver-haired former video store magnate endured a lot of hiccups before he rose again at the end of "Schitt's Creek," and the silver-haired Ohio veteran of the George W. Bush administration is hoping to walk a similar path as he shepherds a potential infrastructure deal. Portman, like Johnny, is an earnest and well-dressed straight man. Portman's roots in the pre-Trump GOP, like Johnny's roots in the pre-digital world of marketing, help explain a great deal of his effectiveness. When Johnny rebranded the Rosebud Motel as a destination chain, he leaned on his experience marketing the homey experience of video rentals. When the retiring centrist Portman talks about infrastructure, he can remind his colleagues that Republicans once built congressional majorities by funding such home-state projects. Kyrsten Sinema is Shiv Roy. The Arizona senator and the daughter of Logan Roy on HBO's "Succession" are both cool-headed under pressure, prone to the occasional wry quip and comfortable asserting themselves in a traditionally male-dominated environment. Rather than playing to the press or the peanut gallery, Shiv and Sinema prefer to focus their formidable intelligence on the goals in front of them. "The question was always, 'What do we have to do to get it done?'" Sinema said one month ago when the bipartisan group took their plan from a framework to the pressure-cooker of the legislative process. She and Portman played central roles in getting the talks to this point, but her willingness to trust her Republican allies might come back to haunt her, just as Shiv suffered for trusting her back-biting father Logan. Just to be super-clear, each of these three characters have serious flaws and character traits that are not shared by their Senate counterparts. But all three fictional examples I cite are ascendant in their respective worlds when we last saw them, and there's a reason for that: They know how to use their individual talents to get what they want. So do these three senators. If they fail to strike a deal that can get to Biden's desk, it will almost certainly be thanks to circumstances outside their control and not their own personal failures. Now let's settle in for the season finale. Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas for us at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight's author directly at eschor@politico.com or on Twitter at @eschor.
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