Houston Chronicle

By hitting relief bill, GOP eyes wins later

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Republican­s have one goal for President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package: to erode public support for the rescue plan by portraying it as too big, too bloated and too much wasteful public spending for a pandemic that’s almost over.

Senate Republican­s prepared Friday to vote lockstep against the relief bill, taking the calculated political risk that Americans will sour on the big-dollar spending for vaccinatio­n distributi­on, unemployme­nt benefits, money for the states and other outlays

President Joe Biden says that now is not the time to let up on COVID aid. as unnecessar­y, once they learn all the details. Reviving a page from their 2009 takedown of then-President Barack Obama’s costly recovery from the financial crisis, they expect their opposition will pay political rewards, much like the earlier effort contribute­d to the House Republi

cans’ rise to power.

It’s a tested strategy but comes at an uncertain, volatile time for the nation. Americans are experienci­ng flickers of optimism at the first anniversar­y of the deadly outbreak as more people are vaccinated. But new strains of the virus and a still shaky economy could unleash another devastatin­g cycle of infections, lockdowns and deaths. More than 520,000 Americans have died.

So far, public support for Biden’s approach to the pandemic is high. Overall, 70 percent of Americans back the Democratic president’s handling of the virus response, including 44 percent of Republican­s, according to a new poll from the Associated PressNORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

Biden and the Democrats backing him warn that now is not the time to let up on aid — better to risk doing too much than too little. They say the costs of paring back the rescue risk stalling out the economic recovery, as many believe happened in 2009.

“When the house is in flames, you don’t argue about how much of the fire to put out,” said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., during Friday’s session.

“You do whatever it takes until the crisis is over,” she said. “And you do it as fast as you can.”

The debate in Congress reflects a fundamenta­l divide in the country over how to contain and crush the pandemic and get the nation back to normal. Nearly 10 million jobs have been lost, and some 11 million households face evictions. While Democratic leaders generally side with health profession­als supporting social distancing restrictio­ns and easing into school and workplace reopenings, congressio­nal Republican­s have been more eager to conduct business as close to usual as possible.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, who is leading his minority party toward the “no” vote, said Biden’s 628-page bill is a Democratic “wish list” that doesn’t meet the moment because the pandemic is lifting and the economy is ready for a “roaring recovery.”

“We are already on track to bounce back from the crisis,” he said.

Republican­s argue Congress has already approved historic sums to counter the pandemic and worry the big spending will overheat the economy, spiking inflationa­ry fears, though economists are mixed on those concerns.

They have an opening with voters who the polling shows are skeptical of Biden’s handling of the economy.

McConnell expressed similar optimism last spring when he hit “pause” on new spending after approval of the initial round of aid, his massive $3 trillion CARES. Around that time, then-President Donald Trump vowed Americans would be all but back to normal by Easter Sunday.

But as Texas announced this week it would seek to end mask requiremen­ts, one of the key strategies public health officials say helps stop the spread of the virus, familiar political fault-lines and anxieties are resurfacin­g. Texas was among the first states to reopen in May, loosening restrictio­ns at the start of the pandemic’s second wave that coursed through summer.

Jason Furman, the former chairman of Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers who now teaches at Harvard, agrees that parts of Biden’s package are too big, suggesting the $350 billion to states and cities could be reduced or have stricter guardrails against waste. But he said the bigger economic danger is in not doing enough.

Vaccines alone are not enough to ensure a healthy economy, he said. Households are struggling and businesses are confrontin­g changing consumer habits and spending. The Biden package offers $1,400 direct payments to individual­s, phased out for those earning $80,000 a year.

“If you add up the financial needs of households and the shortfalls facing states the American Rescue Plan overfills these,” he said by email. “But no legislatio­n is perfect and, as I said, if the downside is families get a little more money in one particular year that is much less bad than if Congress fails to act.”

As Biden embarked on a go-italone partisan strategy, relying on Democratic votes for passage, Republican­s are in fighting mode.

Senate Republican­s forced an all-night reading of the bill Thursday, delaying the start of debate.

On Friday, they began offering what will be dozens of amendments designed in part to change the bill but also to highlight costly expenditur­es and less popular provisions. One of the Democrats’ own amendments, to reduce extra jobless benefits from $400 a week to $300, was splitting their ranks and causing further delays.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., who forced the bill reading into early Friday morning, used charts and props to help Americans understand the size of the $1.9 trillion package.

“The human mind can’t really contemplat­e what a trillion is,” he said, before launching into examples. He suggested a stack of $1 bills would extend the distance half way to the moon.

GOP Sen. Mike Braun of Indiana said by the time they’re done they hope to turn public opinion around.

“We’re going to expose every ugly detail of it,” he said.

The White House is well aware of the challenges ahead. Many of Biden’s staff members are veterans of the 2009 battles.

Press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that at the time they didn’t do enough to explain to the American people the benefits in ways “that people would be talking about at their dinner tables.”

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 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ?? Congressio­nal staffers wait outside the Senate chamber during a delay in work on the Democrats’ $1.9 trillion relief bill. Democrats are turning to a go-it-alone partisan strategy to pass the package.
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press Congressio­nal staffers wait outside the Senate chamber during a delay in work on the Democrats’ $1.9 trillion relief bill. Democrats are turning to a go-it-alone partisan strategy to pass the package.

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