The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US Congress passes key step, allowing Democrats to pass Biden’s relief package

- — Bernama

WASHINGTON: Both chambers of US Congress on Friday passed a budget resolution, a key step which would allow Democrats to push through President Joe Biden’s US$1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief package without Republican support, Xinhua news agency reported.

The Senate approved the budget resolution early Friday morning, with senators voting along party lines, leading to a 5050 tie. Vice-President Kamala Harris cast the decisive vote to make it 51-50.

The Democrats-held House of Representa­tives passed the measure in the afternoon, with one Democrat voting against it.

The congressio­nal approval of the budget resolution paves the way for Democrats to use a process called “budget reconcilia­tion” to pass the relief package with a simple majority in the Senate, avoiding a Republican filibuster and allowing Democrats to pass the legislatio­n on their own.

“It gives us hope. It is a reconcilia­tion bill, which means we can pass it with just 51 votes in the Senate,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Friday on the House floor.

“I hope we will have a very strong vote in favour of crushing the virus, money in the pockets, people back to work and children, children, children safely in school,” said the Democratic leader.

Some Republican­s, meanwhile, want a much smaller relief package, arguing that Congress just passed a US$900 billion relief bill in December, and voicing concerns over the already ballooning deficit.

Michael Burgess, a congressma­n from Texas, said it has been “disappoint­ing” that Democrats are using a “partisan process” to pass a major relief package, just days after Biden called for unity in his inaugurati­on speech.

“President Biden’s call for unity was a simple talking point and instead of working with House GOP and Senate GOP, Democrats are pushing forward a partisan agenda that doesn’t represent all Americans,” Burgess said.

The US president, however, said Friday that what Republican­s have proposed is “either to do nothing or not enough.”

“The biggest risk is not going too big, if we go – it’s if we go too small,” said Biden, who reflected on his time as vice president during the Obama administra­tion, which rolled out the US$800 billion rescue package in 2009.

“But it wasn’t enough. It wasn’t quite big enough. It stemmed the crisis, but the recovery could have been faster and even bigger,” he said. “Today, we need an answer that meets the challenge of this crisis, not one that falls short.”

Biden’s remarks came a few hours after the Labor Department released the monthly employment report, which showed that US employers added just 49,000 jobs in January, after slashing downwardly revised 227,000 jobs in December.

“And while we are grateful for everyone who found work and is earning a paycheck, it is very clear our economy is still in trouble,” Biden said, noting that more than 10 million people remain out of work.

“A once-in-a-century virus has decimated our economy, and it’s still wreaking havoc on our economy today,” said the president.

“I’m going to act, and I’m going to act fast.”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? People walk through a Manhattan neighborho­od in New York City.
— AFP photo People walk through a Manhattan neighborho­od in New York City.

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