Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ A weekend session appears likely for Congress over the COVID-19 economic relief package.

Snags on COVID relief package may force weekend sessions

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — It’s a hurry up and wait moment on Capitol Hill as congressio­nal negotiator­s on a mustpass, almost $1 trillion COVID-19 economic relief package struggled through a handful of remaining snags on Thursday.

The holdups mean a weekend session now appears virtually certain, and a top lawmaker warned that a government shutdown this weekend can’t be ruled out.

All sides appeared hopeful that the wrangling wouldn’t derail the legislatio­n. The central elements of a hard-fought compromise appeared in place: more than $300 billion in aid to businesses; a $300-per-week bonus federal jobless benefit and renewal of soon-to-expire state benefits; $600 direct payments to individual­s; vaccine distributi­on funds and money for renters, schools, the Postal Service and people needing food aid.

A temporary funding bill runs out Friday at midnight and the Senate’s No. 2 Republican, Sen. John Thune, said if there isn’t a deal by then, some Republican­s might block a temporary funding bill — causing a low-impact partial weekend shutdown — as a means to keep the pressure on.

Lawmakers were told to expect to be in session and voting this weekend.

“We must not slide into treating these talks like routine negotiatio­ns to be conducted at Congress’ routine pace,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., said. “The Senate is not going anywhere until we have COVID relief out the door.”

The hangups involve an effort by GOP conservati­ves to curb emergency lending programs by the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve, a Democratic demand to eliminate local government matching requiremen­ts for Covid-related disaster grants, and myriad smaller disagreeme­nts over non-pandemic add-ons, lawmakers and aides said.

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