The Senate’s top Republican said Monday he wants to avoid a “trillion-dollar stimulus” to fund an infrastructure plan, setting down a marker for the next Congress as lawmakers prepare to work with President-elect Donald Trump.

Trump pledged in his victory speech that his administration would put “millions of our people to work” by rebuilding highways, bridges, tunnels and other infrastructure. During the campaign, Trump’s advisers floated a plan to pump $1 trillion of new infrastructure spending into the economy — but done in a way that would not cost taxpayers.