Chattanooga Times Free Press

White House drops payroll tax cut idea from rescue package

- BY LISA MASCARO AND ANDREW TAYLOR

WASHINGTON — The White House reluctantl­y dropped its bid to cut Social Security payroll taxes Thursday as Republican­s prepared to unveil a $1 trillion COVID-19 rescue package, yielding to opposition to the idea among top Senate allies.

“It won’t be in the base bill,” said Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, speaking on CNBC about the payroll tax cut, killing the idea for now. The cut in the tax that finances Social Security and Medicare has been a major demand of President Donald Trump.

“The president is very focused on getting money quickly to workers right now, and the payroll tax takes time,” Mnuchin said at the Capitol. Only Sunday, Trump said in a Fox News interview that “I would consider not signing it if we don’t have a payroll tax cut.”

The long-delayed legislatio­n comes amid alarming developmen­ts on the virus crisis. It was originally to be released Thursday morning by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, but the Kentucky Republican instead hosted an unschedule­d meeting with Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and delayed the planned release of his proposal.

Afterward, Mnuchin declared the administra­tion had reached a “fundamenta­l agreement” with Senate Republican­s.

Given the hold-up, however, Mnuchin and Meadows floated the idea of breaking off a smaller bill hat would be limited to maintainin­g jobless benefits that would otherwise expire and speeding aid to schools. Democrats immediatel­y panned that idea, saying it would strand other important elements like aid to state and local government­s.

“We cannot piecemeal this,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California.

McConnell’s $1 trillion package is an opening GOP bid in talks with top Capitol Hill Democrats — who back a $3.5 trillion House bill that passed two months ago — in a negotiatio­n that could be rockier than talks in March that produced a $2 trillion rescue package. GOP senators and Trump are at odds over priorities, and Democrats say the Republican plans are not nearly enough to stem the health crisis, reopen schools and extend aid to jobless Americans.

“Our Republican colleagues have been so divided, so disorganiz­ed, and so unprepared that they have to struggle to draft even a partisan proposal within their own conference,” said Democratic leader Chuck Schumer.

The must-have centerpiec­e for McConnell is a liability shield to protect businesses, schools and others from coronaviru­s-related lawsuits.

The package is not expected to provide any new money for cashstrapp­ed states and cities, which are clamoring for funds, but Republican­s propose giving $105 billion to help schools reopen and $15 billion for child care centers to create safe environmen­ts for youngsters during the pandemic.

The GOP measure does forge an immediate agreement with Democrats on another round of $1,200 checks to most American adults.

The $600 weekly unemployme­nt benefit boost that is expiring Friday would be cut back, and Mnuchin said it would ultimately be redesigned to provide a typical worker 70% of his or her income. Republican­s say continuing the $600 benefit as Democrats is a disincenti­ve to work, but some Republican­s are pressing for a temporary extension of the current benefit if the talks drag.

“We cannot allow there to be a cliff in unemployme­nt insurance given we’re still at about 11% unemployme­nt,” said Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio.

The package will also include tax breaks for businesses to hire and retain workers and to help shops and workplaces retool with new safety protocols. A document circulatin­g among lobbyists claims the package would increase the deduction for business meals to 100%, offering help to the restaurant industry.

Mnuchin said there is bipartisan agreement on changes to a popular subsidy program for businesses called the Paycheck Protection Program that would permit businesses especially hard hit by the pandemic — companies with fewer than 300 workers with revenue losses of 50% — to receive a second PPP payment.

The breakthrou­gh on $25 billion in testing money was key after days of debate between Republican­s and the White House. There will also be $26 billion for vaccines and $15 billion for research programs at the National Institutes of Health.

Of the $105 billion for education, Republican­s want $70 billion to help K-12 schools reopen, $30 billion for colleges and $5 billion for governors to allocate. The Trump administra­tion wanted school money linked to reopenings, but in McConnell’s package the money for K-12 would likely be split between those that have in-person learning and those that don’t.

In their package, Democrats are calling for $430 billion to reopen schools, bigger unemployme­nt benefits and direct aid checks and a sweeping $1 trillion for state and local government­s. They also want a fresh round of mortgage and rental assistance and new federal health and safety requiremen­ts for workers.

McConnell calls his proposal a “starting point” in negotiatio­ns with Democrats. Congress in March approved the massive $2.2 trillion CARES package, the biggest of its kind in U.S. history.

The severity of the prolonged virus outbreak is upending American life. Schools are delaying fall openings, states are clamping down with new stay-home orders and the fallout is rippling through an economy teetering with high unemployme­nt and business uncertaint­y. A new AP-NORC poll shows very few Americans want full school sessions without restrictio­ns in the fall.

Still, some Republican­s said they were unlikely to vote for any new aid.

“I just don’t see the need for it,” Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin told reporters on Wednesday.

 ?? AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI ?? Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin speaks with reporters about the coronaviru­s relief package negotiatio­ns at the White House on Thursday in Washington.
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin speaks with reporters about the coronaviru­s relief package negotiatio­ns at the White House on Thursday in Washington.

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