East Bay Times

Congress grasps for stimulus deal as Fed dispute poses final hurdle

- By Emily Cochrane and Jeanna Smialek

WASHINGTON >> Congressio­nal leaders worked feverishly Saturday to resolve an impasse over a Republican push to curtail the powers of the Federal Reserve that was threatenin­g to derail a compromise $900 billion stimulus plan, racing against tonight’s deadline to avoid a government shutdown.

After a monthslong impasse on a pandemic aid package, Democrats and Republican­s were tantalizin­gly close to completing the emergency plan to rush direct payments, unemployme­nt benefits and food and rental assistance to millions of Americans, relief to businesses and funds for vaccine distributi­on.

But with time running out for a deal, they remained divided over a proposal by Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., to ensure the terminatio­n of a series of pandemic relief programs created this year by the Fed and potentiall­y curtail the central bank’s ability to fight financial crises in the future.

“We’re r ight within reach,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi privately told House Democrats in a party conference call Saturday. But she said Toomey’s latestage demands to rein in the Fed were slowing the process.

By Saturday evening, Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the second-ranking Democrat, said the dispute had cost negotiator­s another day in their efforts to cement a deal.

“It won’t be tonight,” Durbin said. “It really is up to Mr. Toomey at this point, what he will accept.”

Everything else, he said, is “pretty close.”

The emerging deal would send direct payments of $600 to many Americans and provide enhanced federal jobless payments of $300 per week until early spring. It also would provide hundreds of billions of dollars to prop up small businesses, schools and other institutio­ns struggling amid the pandemic.

But Democrats said that Toomey’s proposal, which has been embraced by Republican­s, amounted to an attempt to undercut President- elect Joe Biden and his administra­tion’s ability to continue supporting the country’s economic recovery.

As drafted, it would prevent the Fed and the Treasury Department from reestablis­hing programs that have helped to keep credit flowing to municipal borrowers, medium-sized businesses and corporatio­ns during the pandemic recession. It also would bar the creation of “similar” programs going forward.

Lawmakers and aides in both parties acknowledg­ed that the Fed provision presented the most significan­t hurdle to a f ina l ag reement, even though negotiator­s were still haggling over a number of outstandin­g technical details, including how to provide for food assistance and the scope of unemployme­nt benefits.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., the minority leader, said on the Senate floor that Toomey’s language was the “No. 1 outstandin­g issue.”

With government funding set to lapse tonight

and both chambers hoping to merge the stimulus package with a catchall measure to cover all federal spending for the remainder of the fiscal year, time was dwindling to find a resolution.

Without action by Congress, two programs designed to expand and enhance unemployme­nt benefits are set to expire in the coming days, leaving about 12 million Americans without federal support. A number of other benefits are set to expire at the end of the year.

Toomey and his Republican allies argued that his proposal merely codified

what Congress intended in March when it enacted the original $2.2 billion pandemic stimulus law, which earmarked funding to support the Fed’s emergency lending programs. But the scope of the language proposed by Toomey went beyond that, prompting alarm from Democrats, who said they were enlisting prominent figures to weigh in against it.

Ben Bernanke, who led the Fed through the 2008 financial crisis, issued a statement warning that it was “vital that the Federal Reserve’s ability to respond promptly to damaging disruption­s in credit markets not be circumscri­bed.”

Referring to the March stimulus law, Bernanke added, “The relief act should ensure, at least, that the Federal Reserve’s emergency lending authoritie­s, as they stood before the passage of the CARES Act, remain fully intact and available to respond to future crises.”

Schumer said that Jerome Powell, the current Fed chair, whom he called “hardly a flaming liberal,” was “strongly opposed” to Toomey’s proposal. The Fed declined to a comment on whether Powell, a Republican who first was nominated as a central bank governor by President Barack Obama, had discussed the issue with Schumer in recent days.

On the private call with House Democrats on Saturday, Pelosi denounced the proposal, telling lawmakers that “for them to write in there that this cannot happen ever again is just beyond the pale,” according to a person on the call, who disclosed the comments on the condition of anonymity.

“It’s a way for them to say to Joe Biden: ‘ We are tying your hands. No matter what comes down the pike, you can’t do this,’ ” Pelosi told Democrats.

Toomey defended the provision, arguing that Democrats had pushed for very generous terms on the municipal program in particular, with an eye on helping state and local government­s gain access to cheap financing. Republican­s long have objected to providing a direct stream of aid to state and local government­s, and Democrats are seeking to provide relief through other avenues.

“Some of my colleagues want to morph these facilities into a use that was never intended for them,” Toomey said. “Fiscal and social policy is the rightful realm of the people who are accountabl­e to the American people, and that’s us — that’s Congress.”

Toomey denied that he was seeking to hamstring the Biden administra­tion, and pointed out that he had for months sought to ensure that the Fed’s pandemic programs sunset. But the language he has proposed to attach to the stimulus plan has been more expansive than that.

Republican senators rallied around Toomey on Saturday. Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the majority leader, privately told them during an afternoon call with Steven Mnuchin, the Treasury secretary, that they should stand firmly behind Toomey.

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., made a point to correct reporters and declare “it is not the Toomey language — it is the Senate Republican language, because we are wholly unified behind it.”

But there were indication­s that Toomey might be willing to compromise. Though his initial proposal targeted all five Fed programs backed by the March stimulus law, an aide familiar with the discussion­s confirmed that the so-called Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility — which helps to keep the market that bundles consumer and business-facing loans chugging — had been dropped from it.

The program was also used in the 2008 crisis to unstick markets, and it has fans on Wall Street.

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Democrats negotiatin­g a stimulus package were outraged by an effort led by Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., to include language that would prevent the Federal Reserve from restarting emergency loan programs.
ANNA MONEYMAKER — THE NEW YORK TIMES Democrats negotiatin­g a stimulus package were outraged by an effort led by Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., to include language that would prevent the Federal Reserve from restarting emergency loan programs.

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