Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden, Harris to tout rescue plan on national tour

- By Gary Martin

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris will embark on a nationwide victory tour that begins next week in Las Vegas to sell the $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s rescue package pushed through Congress to the American people, officials said Friday.

Biden announced the “Help Is Here” tour in his televised address to the

nation this week. On Friday, Biden said that he, the vice president, first lady, second gentleman and Cabinet members would fan out across the country “to speak directly to the American people about how this law is going to make a real difference in their lives and how help is here for them.”

The president told a Rose Garden ceremony that included House and Senate leaders that the work was not finished.

“It’s one thing to pass the American Rescue Plan. It’s going to be another thing to implement it,” Biden said.

In addition to ramping up vaccinatio­ns and directing states to make every adult eligible for inoculatio­n by May 1, the package signed into law includes economic help in the form of business loans, extended unemployme­nt assistance, child tax credits and funding for states and cities.

Direct checks of $1,400 for individual­s and $5,600 for a family of four could already be in some Nevada direct deposit accounts when Harris begins the tour in Las Vegas on Monday.

Harris and her husband, Douglas Emhoff, are also expected to visit California, New Mexico and Colorado, while Biden and first lady Dr. Jill Biden are scheduled to appear in Pennsylvan­ia. The first lady also has planned a visit to New Hampshire.

The president and vice president will join up in Georgia on Friday.

The tour is hitting states that helped hand Biden a presidenti­al victory in 2020 to underscore the importance of that vote in the effort to defeat the coronaviru­s after a year of misery.

White House spokeswoma­n Jen Psaki said the president and vice president would continue “engaging with Americans about how they will benefit from the rescue plan.”

No GOP support

The relief package was passed without Republican support, and GOP leaders in Congress have attacked the plan as one that spends little to fight the virus and is a giveaway to special interests.

Biden’s initial tour stops will underscore the political victories that made the passage of the plan possible for Democrats.

Georgia elected two senators that flipped the Senate to Democratic control, key to the 50-49 vote to approve the $1.9 trillion package that squeaked through the Senate without a single GOP vote.

Proponents dismiss Republican concerns that the spending bill will create $4.1 trillion in additional debt.

Democrats are quick to cite comments by Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell that it is better for the government to spend now to protect the economy.

On Monday, Biden will attend a White House event on the implementa­tion of the rescue plan, Psaki said.

Silver State

The package will bring a windfall to Nevada, one of the states hit hardest by the pandemic because of its reliance on hospitalit­y, tourism and travel industries.

Despite GOP objections, Biden and Democrats included $350 billion for states, tribes and local government­s.

Nevada will receive more than $4.1 billion from that pot of funds to accelerate vaccinatio­ns, provide essential services and help with budget shortfalls due to shutdowns and tax revenue losses.

The plan also includes $130 billion for schools. Nevada will see more than $1 billion for schools throughout the state to open safely with teachers, personnel and bus drivers vaccinated.

It also makes $750 million in grants available to communitie­s such as Las Vegas and others in Nevada that suffered economic downturns and layoffs because of a decline in travel and tourism.

Biden said it will require fastidious oversight to make sure there is no waste or fraud “and the law does what it is designed to do.”

“There’s a lot of work for all of us to do, but I know we’ll do it,” Biden said.

 ?? Alex Brandon The Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden wave Friday as they walk to Marine One, departing Washington for Delaware ahead of next week’s “Help Is Here” tour to promote the $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s rescue plan.
Alex Brandon The Associated Press President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden wave Friday as they walk to Marine One, departing Washington for Delaware ahead of next week’s “Help Is Here” tour to promote the $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s rescue plan.

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