Hartford Courant

COVID-19 relief bill

McConnell to schedule procedural vote on GOPrelief bill next week.

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON— Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday that he’s scheduling a procedural vote on a GOPCOVID- 19 relief bill next week, saying aid to hard-hit businesses shouldn’t be held up by gridlock involving other aid proposals.

The Kentucky Republican says the first item of Senate business when the chamber returns Monday will be a procedural vote on a scaledback aid bill. Democrats filibuster­ed a GOP-drafted aid bill last month, and recent talks on a larger deal between Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., fell apart this past weekend, probably for good.

“Democrats have spent months blocking policies they do not even oppose. They say anything short of their multitrill­ion-dollar wish list, jammed with non-COVID-related demands, is ‘piecemeal’ and not worth doing,” McConnell said in a statement. “And (Pelosi) has worked hard to ensure that nothing is what American families get.”

McConnell’s move appears unlikely to work. The COVID relief debate appears to have gone back to a phase in which the participan­ts have largely given up and are devoting time and effort to political positionin­g ahead of the election rather than negotiatio­ns and compromise.

President Donald Trump continues to agitate for “stimulus,” saying that Capitol Hill Republican­s should “go big” rather than the limited approach they’ve been advocating.

Opinion polls show that additional coronaviru­s relief is a higher priority for most voters than quickly approving Trump’s nomination of U.S. appellate Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court. While many Republican­s take a skeptical view of the need for more virus relief like special unemployme­nt benefits or direct payments to most taxpayers, some GOP senators in difficult reelection races are eager for more aid.

Under Senate rules, McConnell can call for a revote on the September legislatio­n, which was filibuster­ed by Democrats as insufficie­nt. It also doesn’t satisfy Trump, in part because it did not provide for another round of $1,200 direct payments that would go out under his name.

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