Houston Chronicle

Pelosi anticipate­s economic relief agreement

- By Erica Werner and Jeff Stein

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Friday she anticipate­s striking a bipartisan economic relief deal with the Trump administra­tion, suggesting that President Donald Trump’s coronaviru­s diagnosis could speed up an agreement. She called on airlines to hold off on imminent furloughs pending a deal.

“This kind of changes the dynamic because here they see the reality of what we have been saying all along — this is a vicious virus,” Pelosi, D-Calif., said on MSNBC.

“I’m optimistic. I’m always optimistic,” she said. “We always have to find a path — that is our responsibi­lity to do so — and I believe that we will.”

Democrats had sought a $2.2 trillion package, while the White House’s most recent offer was closer to $1.6 trillion. Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin spoke Friday afternoon for 65 minutes and plan to continue their discussion­s, according to Drew Hammill, a spokesman for the House speaker.

The pace of talks — and the possibilit­y of a deal — have picked upmarkedly in recent days. White House chief of staff Mark Meadows told reporters Friday that Trump had inquired about the status of negotiatio­ns Friday morning, shortly after the president announced his positive coronaviru­s test.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., sounded a positive note at a news conference in Kentucky. “I’m trying to figure out here whether I should predict another bill quickly or not, but the talks have speeded up in the last couple days,” said McConnell, who is not directly involved in the negotiatio­ns but is regularly briefed by Mnuchin. “I think we’re closer to getting an outcome.”

The U.S. economy plunged sharply into a recession earlier this year when the coronaviru­s pandemic led many companies and employers to lay off workers and temporaril­y close. The economy recovered a bit during the summer, but it has shown signs of lagging in recent weeks, particular­ly as several large companies have announced new plans for layoffs. That emerging head wind has helped revive talks between the White House and Democrats, but numerous significan­t issues remain unresolved.

Pelosi outlined some of them in a letter Friday afternoon to House Democrats that pointed to unemployme­nt insurance, money for cities and states, and tax credits for children and families as among the areas where she had yet to reach agreement with Mnuchin.

“We are expecting a response from the White House on these areas and others with more detail,” Pelosi wrote. “In the meantime, we continue to work on the text to move quickly to facilitate an agreement.”

In a sign that a deal could be emerging, Mnuchin told at least one Republican senator in a phone call on Thursday night that the agreement with Pelosi would include a substantia­l amount of money for state and local government­s, a provision numerous conservati­ve Republican senators have strongly resisted, according to one person who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share details of the private conversati­on. The call was interprete­d as designed to prepare conservati­ves for the White House to give more on state

and local aid than they had previously expected.

A Treasury Department spokeswoma­n confirmed that Mnuchin held phone calls with GOP senators but would not comment on their substance.

Mnuchin and Pelosi have mostly conducted their negotiatio­ns over the phone, but they met at length in person on Wednesday. After Trump reported his positive coronaviru­s diagnosis early Friday, Mnuchin reported testing negative, and phoned Pelosi to inform her of that result, Pelosi said.

The speaker said that she had been tested Friday morning “out of an abundance of caution” and her office later announced that the results were negative.

After bipartisan talks broke down in early August, prospects for any new stimulus deal before the election looked grim, despite continued high unemployme­nt and the virus’ persistent spread. But with moderates in both parties increasing­ly anxious over

Congress’ inaction, negotiatio­ns between Pelosi and Mnuchin resumed this week and appeared to be getting serious, even as House Democrats approved their own $2.2 trillion bill late Thursday without GOP support.

TheHouse is supposed to recess Friday through the election, but lawmakers could be called back to vote on a deal if there is one.

Several items have been agreed to, including a new round of $1,200 checks to individual­s. Pelosi said they were nearing agreement on $75 billion for coronaviru­s testing and tracing, with Democrats pushing for language ensuring a comprehens­ive testing strategy.

Other key items remained outstandin­g, including state and local aid, unemployme­nt insurance and a child tax credit. Pelosi’s comments Friday suggested talks were getting into details as she described pushing for $144 billion for a portion of the legislatio­n dealing with a hodgepodge of spending items including

agricultur­e and transit support. She said the administra­tion was trying to cut that figure down to $100 billion.

White House officials also called for striking a deal. Trump administra­tion officials have been pushing much more aggressive­ly for a stimulus package in recent days, amid Trump’s weak approval numbers and signs of weakness in the U.S. economy.

Mnuchin said Friday that parts of the economy “need more help,” citing in particular restaurant­s and other hard-hit industries. Several members of the Independen­t Restaurant Coalition, a trade group formed this year to lobby for an industry devastated by the coronaviru­s outbreak, said Friday that if Congress doesn’t enact a substantia­l relief package, it could lead to the closure of 85 percent of small, independen­tly owned restaurant­s nationwide.

On Fox Business, White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow sounded optimistic about the odds of a stimulus package and suggested itwas essential to approve additional support for small businesses and the unemployed.

“Would you rather have zero or would you rather have everything youwant?” Kudlow said. “There has to be compromise in life.”

Two people who have spoken with senior administra­tion officials in recent weeks, commenting on the condition of anonymity to share details of private conversati­ons, said the White House is pushing harder for a deal in part because Trump trails in the polls.

“People in the administra­tion got spooked Trump hasn’t risen more in the polls and that’s given an impetus to a negotiated deal,” one of them said.

In the early days of the pandemic in the spring, Congress rushed to pass four bipartisan bills totaling an unpreceden­ted $3 trillion in spending. Many of the programs approved at that time have run their course, but with the election approachin­g partisan tensions have increased and Congress has not acted since.

Some conservati­ves, including a sizable minority of Senate Republican­s, argue that Congress has already spent enough money and that no more action is needed in light of the ballooning budget deficit.

On Friday morning, leaders from the conservati­ve groups Americans for Prosperity, R Street, the Libre Initiative, and Heritage Action joined a conference call urging lawmakers to reject any agreement.

“We are very concerned about any possible deal at this point,” said Tim Phillips, president of Americans for Prosperity.“We are urging Congress: ‘Do not do another spending deal.’ ”

 ?? Steven Senne / Associated Press ?? The U.S. economy plunged sharply into a recession earlier this year when the pandemic led many companies to lay off workers and temporaril­y close.
Steven Senne / Associated Press The U.S. economy plunged sharply into a recession earlier this year when the pandemic led many companies to lay off workers and temporaril­y close.

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