Baltimore Sun

With scant progress, virus relief talks could collapse

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump huddled Thursday at the White House with the Senate’s top Republican over a vital COVID-19 rescue package, but hopes on Capitol Hill for a deal were souring and there was increasing worry that GOP negotiatio­ns with Democrats might collapse.

The impasse in the negotiatio­ns is putting at risk more than $100 billion to help reopen schools, a fresh round of $1,200 direct payments to most people, and hundreds of billions of dollars for state and local government­s to help them avoid furloughin­g workers and cutting services as tax revenues shrivel.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is a key player in the troubled talks and possesses far more experience than the Trump administra­tion’s negotiatin­g team, which is publicly frustrated by the inflexible tactics of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. The Democratic duo has not yielded much ground from an unpreceden­ted $3.5 trillion House-passed rescue package.

McConnell seemed to downplay the significan­ce of the Trump meeting, telling a reporter “we talked a little bit about everything.”

Pelosi and Schumer were still exuding confidence in a political and legislativ­e landscape tilted in their favor. Trump and McConnell both want an agreement, but Democrats control the House and may provide the lion’s share of votes in the Senate.

The Democratic duo has stayed in sync throughout the talks — which they demanded — reminding reporters Thursday that their relationsh­ip dates to Schumer’s time as a House member in the 1980s and early 1990s.

They say the federal coronaviru­s aid package needs to be huge to meet the moment — a surge in cases and deaths, double-digit joblessnes­s and the threat of poverty for millions of the newly unemployed.

“We believe the patient needs a major operation while Republican­s want to apply just a Band-Aid,” Schumer said. “We won’t let them just pass the Band-Aid, go homeand leave America bleeding.”

After a Wednesday session that produced no progress, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin were returning to Pelosi’s Capitol suite to confront the gulf in their negotiatin­g stances. Both sides have set a goal of agreeing on a deal by week’s end — though that is appearing increasing­ly out of reach.

The White House is also promising Trump will attempt to use executive orders to address elements of the congressio­nal package involving evictions and jobless benefits. But there’s no evidence the strategy would have much impact or be anything close to what’s necessary, and Pelosi appeared unimpresse­d at a morning news conference.

“I don’t think they know what they’re talking about,” Pelosi said.

Addressing reporters, Pelosi and Schumer staked out a firm position to extend a lapsed $600-per-week bonus jobless benefit, demanded generous child care assistance and reiterated their demand for food stamps and assistance to renters and homeowners facing eviction or foreclosur­e.

“Don’t nickel-and-dime our children,” Pelosi said. “Don’t say we want to give a tax break to a business lunch and not give more money for children to have food stamps.”

Pelosi was referring to a GOP proposal to increase the deduction for business meals from 50% to 100%. The idea seems likely to die, along with Trump’s efforts to cut the Social Security payroll tax. But Schumer and Pelosi continue to push to restore a tax break for state and local taxes paid mostly by wealthier people.

McConnell, R-Ky., is likely to have to assume a higher profile if the talks are to come to a successful close, but he issued a grim assessment of the situation Thursday, again complainin­g that Pelosi and Schumer are not negotiatin­g in good faith.

“Day after day, they’ve stonewalle­d the president’s team. Day by day, they’ve tried to invent new euphemisms to create the illusion of progress,” McConnell said Thursday.

Frustratio­n was palpable among Republican senators shuttling in and out of a GOP lunch session, some of whomsay Schumer is intent on using the situation as a hammer against Republican­s.

“As long as they calculate that they’re better off politicall­y doing nothing, it’s going to be hard for us to move forward,” said Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla. “And that’s the calculatio­n they’ve made, it appears.”

McConnell is sending the Senate home rather than forcing impatient senators to bide their time while Democrats play hardball. That suggests a vote won’t come until late next week.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP ?? Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi have not yielded much ground from a virus rescue bill.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi have not yielded much ground from a virus rescue bill.

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