Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

As pandemic rolls on, GOP hits ‘pause’ on new aid

- By Andrew Taylor

Businesses are going belly up, tens of millions have been laid off and, by some measures, the U.S. seems headed for another Great Depression. But Republican­s surveying the wreckage aren’t ready for another round of coronaviru­s aid, instead urging a “pause.”

Polls show GOP voters think the government is already doing enough, Republican­s on Capitol Hill are divided over the best approach, and billions approved by Congress have yet to be spent. It’s unclear what President Donald Trump wants to do next, if anything, to help the economy. His payroll tax cut idea hasn’t gained any traction in Congress.

For these and other reasons, GOP leaders see an unfolding crisis that does not yet cry out for further action.

“There’s just a pragmatic piece to this, which is, if we’re going to do another bill, let’s get into June and July so we know how people are re-emerging,” said Rep. Patrick McHenry of North Carolina, the top Republican on the House Financial Services Committee.

The political balancing act comes as the long-dormant deficit-hawk wing of the GOP lumbers back to life, recoiling from the House Democratic proposal to spend another $3 trillion in taxpayer money. Yet many Republican­s acknowledg­e there is a risk to standing pat, given the massive unemployme­nt, financial struggles for local government­s and growing COVID-19 case loads, particular­ly with the November election approachin­g.

Despite their distaste for further negotiatio­ns with Democrats, many Republican­s privately see passage of another coronaviru­s measure as inevitable. from GOP stronghold­s argue that Washington has done enough, and they have been squaring off in meetings with moderates and pragmatist­s siding with Democrats. The moderates are supportive of relief for states and local government­s, help for the Postal Service, additional jobless aid, and further provisions on testing and tracing for the virus.

The conservati­ve senators have influence with Trump, but he doesn’t share their fiscal instincts.

The president and deputies such as Mnuchin have signaled a willingnes­s to deliver aid to state and local government­s, which is a central demand of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, DCalif. Trump at one point even floated a massive debt-financed effort on infrastruc­ture, leaving many conservati­ves aghast.

Trump has cautioned Republican­s against drawing a red line against state and local aid.

Many think the next coronaviru­s bill, when it passes, will be the last one for a while.

“I don’t see us coming back before the election so I’d rather us get this smart and right rather than shoveling more coal into the fire, and people saying we’ll come back and do more,” McHenry said.

But it’s clear that Republican­s are dreading another round of negotiatio­ns with Democrats.

While each of the four prior COVID-19 response measures passed by almost unanimous votes, the outcome required GOP leaders to accept significan­t legislativ­e victories for Pelosi and Schumer. They fear another episode in which Mnuchin, a former Democrat, gives them even more.

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