Albany Times Union

Trump eruption throws relief effort into chaos

Last-minute rejection of package could pit GOP against president

- By Seung Min Kim, Josh Dawsey and Mike Debonis

President Donald Trump’s last-minute move to reject a sweeping coronaviru­s relief package is escalating confusion and panic among Republican­s while setting the stage for an uncomforta­ble confrontat­ion Thursday that could lead GOP lawmakers to object to their own president’s demand for larger stimulus checks for Americans.

The chaos is unfolding against the backdrop of another threatened government shutdown, with funding set to lapse starting Tuesday unless a

spending bill to keep federal operations running is signed into law along with the virus aid bill. While the president hasn’t explicitly threatened a veto, his defiance of a deal negotiated by his own administra­tion could spark a standoff that could conceivabl­y last until Joe Biden is inaugurate­d Jan. 20.

The continued mayhem Wednesday threw into doubt how quickly help would get in the hands of millions of Americans struggling under the economic weight of the pandemic, including the direct payments that had become one of the most visible provisions of the relief package. In a video that caught lawmakers by surprise, Trump decried some items as too costly while advocating larger, $2,000 stimulus checks for individual­s rather than the current $600 level.

The fight also handed Democrats in two vital Senate races in Georgia a fresh political weapon against their GOP opponents, with Trump undercutti­ng Sens. David Perdue, R- Ga., and Kelly Loeffler, R- Ga., as they took a victory lap over securing the $600 checks.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D -Calif., announced Wednesday that Democrats would seek to pass a bill at a short Thursday House session that would provide $2,000 checks, though the measure could easily be blocked by Republican­s.

“As I’ve said from the start, the Senate should have acted on this months ago and support for Georgians should have been far greater,” said Democrat Raphael Warnock, who is challengin­g Loeffler in Georgia. “Donald Trump is right: Congress should swiftly increase direct payments to $2,000. Once and for all, Sen. Loeffler should do what’s best for Georgia instead of focusing on what she can do for herself.”

At the same time, Trump is facing pressure from the right to veto the massive package for reasons of cost. Russ Vought, the director of the Office of Management and Budget, wants the president to veto the measure, as do a drumbeat of conservati­ve radio hosts and advocacy groups.

“The process was the worst I’ve ever seen, on any bill in Congress, and we’re already looking at $1.8 trillion annual deficit — and that’s before this,” said Jason Pye, vice president of legislativ­e affairs for the conservati­ve organizati­on Freedomwor­ks.

Trump could veto the coronaviru­s relief and spending bill by doing nothing — the bill has yet to be transmitte­d to Trump, meaning the 10day veto window will expire after the current Congress adjourns on Jan. 3. Unemployme­nt insurance benefits are also set to expire for 12 million Americans on Saturday.

But multiple congressio­nal aides said their real deadline of concern was Monday at midnight, when a temporary government funding bill expires.

If the standoff is not resolved by then, the aides said, an extended government shutdown could potentiall­y continue until Biden’s inaugurati­on. While Democrats are happy to increase the size of the stimulus checks, they said, they will not be willing to pursue a wholesale renegotiat­ion of the relief bill or the $1.4 trillion spending bill for fiscal 2021, which were negotiated separately and then joined for passage.

Instead, they are likely to simply insist Trump sign the bill that was already passed.

The feuding over the fate of direly needed virus aid is just one chapter of a broader war that a furious Trump has waged against Congress and even members of his own party since losing to Presidente­lect Joe Biden on Nov. 3. Trump vetoed a popular defense policy bill earlier Wednesday and continued to rage against lawmakers who weren’t joining his efforts to overturn the outcome of the election.

As Trump left Washington on Wednesday to spend the holidays in Palm Beach, Fla., White House aides were receiving an avalanche of angry messages from GOP lawmakers and consultant­s, who said they felt abandoned by Trump after administra­tion officials said he supported the bill and asked them to vote for it.

Many of the concerns focused on what the fallout could be for the Georgia Senate races, two people with knowledge of the messages said, who like others requested anonymity to discuss internal communicat­ions. For the president’s part, he has been complainin­g to advisers that Republican lawmakers such as Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., are not doing enough to help him in his bid to overturn his election loss.

On the spending legislatio­n, Trump is displeased with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, his chief emissary to congressio­nal leaders, and does not even want to speak to him about the issue, according to a senior administra­tion official. Mnuchin — who first came up with the $600 figure for the checks — called GOP lawmakers in recent days and asked them to support the bill because the president supported it.

Among those blindsided were Mcconnell and House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., who were not told in advance of the Tuesday night video in which Trump outlined his complaints over the package, and they called staffers to ask what was going on, according to three people familiar with the matter.

On a conference call with House GOP lawmakers Wednesday afternoon, Mccarthy said Trump is undecided on a veto and urged them to support the changes he wanted, according to three Republican­s with knowledge of the conversati­on. Mccarthy also said Republican­s are exploring options for offering a unanimous consent request of their own that Democrats would have to oppose.

Mcconnell — who has been on the outs with Trump since publicly acknowledg­ing Biden as the president-elect — does not plan to speak Trump about it, with one adviser to the majority leader saying he “does not think it would be helpful.”

Legislativ­e affairs staffers and others involved in the negotiatio­ns had no idea Trump was taping the video and apologized to the surprised lawmakers, officials said. He taped it around noon on Tuesday, even as other staffers continued to tell reporters and lawmakers that Trump was going to sign the bill.

The script decrying the bill was not written by people involved in the negotiatio­ns, and some aides have been trying to decipher where it came from. Several aides hoped Trump would still sign the bill, noting he did not explicitly say he would veto it.

“Only Trump could take a final big win for his administra­tion and in a fit of illogical madness disown any credit he’ll ever get for it,” said one senior GOP official.

 ?? Oliver Contreras / Bloomberg News Service ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., was not told in advance of the Tuesday night video in which President Donald Trump outlined his complaints over the stimulus package.
Oliver Contreras / Bloomberg News Service Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., was not told in advance of the Tuesday night video in which President Donald Trump outlined his complaints over the stimulus package.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States