Aid bill for Postal Service runs into snag
White House dubs it not serious legislation
WASHINGTON — Help for the U.S. Postal Service landed in stalemate Sunday, as the White House dismissed an emergency funding bill aimed at shoring up the agency before the November election as “going nowhere” and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi urged senators to act quickly.
“The public is demanding action on this now,” Pelosi said. “I can’t see how the Senate can avoid it unless they do so to their peril.”
White House chief of staff Mark
Meadows rejected the legislation the House passed late Saturday to provide $25 billion and block operational changes by Postmaster General Louis Dejoy. Meadows called it a “political statement,” stressing that President Donald Trump would consider additional money only as part of a broader coronavirus relief package.
“That bill was not a serious bill,” Meadows said. “And my conversations with a lot of the Democrats on Capitol Hill yesterday is if you want to be serious about it, this president is willing to put forth money and reforms.”
Meadows said he planned to speak with Pelosi later Sunday. The legislation heads to the Senate, where Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., has been eyeing a $10 billion postal rescue as part of the next COVID-19 relief package.
“Hopefully what will happen is the Republican senators will take this bill when it comes across, they’ll amend it and actually address many of the things that are hurting America right now in terms of this pandemic response and be able to get it to the president’s desk,” Meadows said.
“What they want to do is not the right path,” Pelosi said Sunday.
“All the president wants is this one thing: He wants his name on the letter to go out with a check in it, and he doesn’t care about the rest of it.”
With heated debate over mail delays, the House approved the legislation in a rare Saturday session. More than two dozen House Republicans broke with the president in backing the bill, which passed 257-150.