Lodi News-Sentinel

Sides agree to coronaviru­s stimulus package

- By Jennifer Haberkorn

WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin reached a deal Friday on an economic stimulus package to address the coronaviru­s, providing paid sick leave for workers and pumping billions of dollars to states for food programs and unemployme­nt benefits.

Pelosi announced the agreement Friday evening, not long after President Donald Trump trashed it at an afternoon news conference.

“We are proud to have reached an agreement with the administra­tion to resolve outstandin­g challenges, and now will soon pass the Families First Coronaviru­s Response Act,” she wrote in a letter to colleagues late Friday.

A few hours later, President Trump tweeted his own endorsemen­t. “I encourage all Republican­s and Democrats to come together and VOTE YES!,” Trump wrote.

The deal hit a last-minute hitch when some Republican­s reportedly voiced concerns about some elements. But Trump’s support will likely sway many House Republican­s, and more important, the GOP-controlled Senate, which is expected to consider the bill next week. House Democrats were moving toward approving the measure later Friday.

Lawmakers hope the package will quell financial markets. But it is also designed to meet the rapidly changing social needs of the country. With schools closed in many states, children who rely on school lunches will need to be fed with funding from the legislatio­n; with sports arenas and other institutio­ns closing, workers may crowd unemployme­nt lines.

It would also dramatical­ly expand access to free coronaviru­s testing. Insurance companies would be required to cover it without a copay for consumers and a federal national disaster program would reimburse the cost for people without insurance.

“The three most important parts of this bill are testing, testing, testing. This legislatio­n facilitate­s free coronaviru­s testing for everyone who needs a test, including the uninsured,” Pelosi said Friday in an address delivered from the speaker’s balcony hallway. It is a location the speaker reserves for high-profile announceme­nts, complete with hanging American flags, conveying a sense of seriousnes­s.

Pelosi, D-San Francisco, hammered out the deal with Mnuchin, a member of Trump’s Cabinet, in two dozen phone calls over the last two days, according to a Pelosi spokesman. They spoke twice during Trump’s news conference alone.

Negotiatio­ns got tense Friday. Trump’s critical comments at his afternoon news conference nearly scuttled hope for GOP support.

“We just don’t think the Democrats are giving enough,” Trump said in the White House Rose Garden. “We thought we had something, but all the sudden they didn’t agree to certain things they had agreed to.”

But he left the door open slightly, saying “we could have something.” Trump didn’t specify what parts of the bill concerned him.

Democrats warned they would not wait around much longer for a bipartisan agreement.

“If we reach agreement, we’ll vote on it,” House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer, D-Md., told his fellow Democrats. “If not, we will vote today on our bill, which incorporat­es nearly all of what the administra­tion and Republican­s have requested.”

Republican­s in Congress were looking to the White House before deciding whether to support it. GOP lawmakers have often been skittish about voting on legislatio­n before Trump has publicly weighed in.

In 2018, the White House indicated that Trump would support a bill to avert a government shutdown, but Trump reversed his position after the Senate had voted, leading to the longest partial shutdown in American history.

The bill would mark the second coronaviru­s response package approved by Congress and is unlikely to be the last.

“We’ve resolved most of our difference­s, and those we haven’t, we’ll continue the conversati­on because there will obviously be other bills,” Pelosi said late Thursday.

The bill is expected to provide Social Security Administra­tion funding for workers who don’t currently receive sick pay and need to stay home because they have the disease or need to care for someone who does. People would be eligible to receive benefits amounting to two-thirds of their monthly earnings, up to $4,000, for up to three months.

Democrats originally proposed a permanent mandate that employers provide paid leave for all sick workers nationwide, plus the additional temporary measure to address the current need to allow sick workers to stay home. Republican­s said the ideas were too broad, long-lasting and would take too long to implement, advocating for a narrower approach. The permanent program does not appear to be in the final agreement.

A proposal from Trump to cut payroll taxes was not included, as both parties in Congress have panned it.

The deal would mark the second time Pelosi and Mnuchin have successful­ly negotiated a bipartisan agreement.

 ?? LENIN NOLLY/SIPA USA ?? Speaker of the House of Representa­tives Nancy Pelosi delivers remarks during a luncheon for Irish Prime Minister Taoiseach Leo Varadkar on Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington D.C.
LENIN NOLLY/SIPA USA Speaker of the House of Representa­tives Nancy Pelosi delivers remarks during a luncheon for Irish Prime Minister Taoiseach Leo Varadkar on Thursday on Capitol Hill in Washington D.C.

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