Greenwich Time

GOP rallies solidly against Democrats’ virus relief package

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WASHINGTON — Republican­s rallied solidly Wednesday against Democrats’ proposed $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill as lawmakers awaited a decision by the Senate’s parliament­arian that could bolster or potentiall­y kill a pivotal provision hiking the federal minimum wage.

Despite their paper-thin congressio­nal majorities, Democratic leaders were poised to push the sweeping package through the House on Friday. They were hoping the Senate, where changes seem likely, would follow quickly enough to have legislatio­n on President Joe Biden’s desk by mid-March.

By late Wednesday, not one Republican in either chamber had publicly said he or she would back the legislatio­n. GOP leaders were honing attacks on the package as a job killer that does too little to reopen schools or businesses shuttered for the pandemic and that was not only wasteful but also even unscrupulo­us.

“I haven’t seen a Republican yet that’s found something in there that they agree with,“said House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. “I think all Republican­s believe in three simple things: They want a bill that puts us back to work, back to school and back to health. This bill is too costly, too corrupt and too liberal.”

The hardening opposition suggested that Biden’s first major legislativ­e initiative could encounter unanimous GOP opposition. That was a counterpoi­nt to the new president’s refrain during his campaign about bringing the country together and a replay of the Republican wall that new President Barack Obama encountere­d in 2009 and most of his administra­tion.

Democrats showed no signs of backing down, citing the assistance the measure would spread to people, businesses and state and local government­s.

“If congressio­nal Republican­s want to oppose all that, my response is: Good luck,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said on the Senate floor.

By Wednesday evening, the most suspense was over a decision anticipate­d from Elizabeth MacDonough, the Senate’s nonpartisa­n arbiter of its rules, that promised enormous political and legislativ­e consequenc­es.

The relief bill includes a provision that over five years would hike the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour. The parliament­arian is involved because Democrats are pushing the overall $1.9 trillion measure through Congress under special rules that will let them avoid a Senate filibuster by Republican­s.

Those same rules prohibit provisions with only an “incidental” impact on the federal budget because they are chiefly driven by other policy purposes. The parliament­arian decides if a provision passes that test.

With Republican­s strongly against a minimum wage increase, the only way for it to survive is by including it in a filibuster-proof bill like the COVID-19 relief measure. To end a filibuster, Democrats would need 60 votes, an impossibil­ity for them in the evenly divided 50-50 Senate.

If the parliament­arian decides the minimum wage provision can remain in the bill, it would be a major boost for its proponents. But there would be no guarantee the measure would survive because some moderates oppose it or want it dialed back. That suggests grueling bargaining on its final form would lie ahead.

A decision by the parliament­arian that the minimum wage hike must fall from the bill could be fatal, but not necessaril­y. Democrats could employ a rarely used procedural move to muscle the minimum wage provision into the bill with just 51 votes anyway, but it was unclear if they could muster enough support to do that.

The minimum wage has stood at $7.25 since 2009. Winning the increase is a top priority for progressiv­es at a time when Democrats control Congress and the White House.

The overall bill would provide millions of Americans with $1,400 direct payments to help them weather the pandemic that’s stalled much of the economy for a year and killed half a million people. It contains billions of dollars for vaccines and COVID-19 testing, schools, state and local government­s and emergency jobless benefits while providing tax cuts or payments for many families with children.

Stamford-based High Ridge Brands has sold the White Rain line of shampoo and conditione­rs to Michigan-based Internatio­nal Wholesale, with deal terms not disclosed. Internatio­nal Wholesale sells an array of household products under license agreements for Brillo, Hostess, Hershey and Peeps. White Rain was created by Gillette in 1952, with High Ridge acquiring the brand in 2012 from Sun Products which is owned today by Henkel. Westport-based Tengram Capital acquired High Ridge last year from the Greenwich private equity firm Brynwood Partners.

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