Marin Independent Journal

Fight over Fed powers stalls $900B aid plan

- By Andrew Taylor and Christophe­r Rugaber

A battle over emergency Federal Reserve powers is frustratin­g efforts on an economic relief package.

An arcane battle over emergency Federal Reserve powers foiled efforts on Saturday to lock down an agreement on an almost $1 trillion COVID-19 economic relief package. Saturday’s deadlock was just the latest stumble in a partisan, months- long fight over pandemic relief and the lack of progress is backing lawmakers once again up against a government shutdown deadline Sunday night.

Lawmakers on both sides said a provision by Sen. Pat Toomey, R- Pa., that would curb emergency Federal Reserve powers was the sticking point. Republican­s are insisting on the Toomey plan, while Democrats are adamantly against it. A compromise was proving elusive, but communicat­ions channels are open, as key lawmakers convened in scrums on the Senate floor and as Toomey and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., met to exchange ideas.

“I think that we should be able to get a deal done,” Toomey said afterward.

“I think they agreed to go back and write down what they were saying, so everybody can read it and exchange paper,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas.

The latest pratfall likely upends hopes for a House vote Sunday and quick Senate action on an agreement that’s virtually ready save for Toomey’s provision.

“That has to be resolved. And then everything will fall into place,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, DCalif. “It’s a very significan­t difference.”

A new deadline of midnight Sunday for a government shutdown served as a backstop for the tortuous negotiatio­ns, which were being conducted in secret largely among the top four leaders in Congress.

“We need to conclude our talks, draft legislatio­n, and land this plane,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Toomey defended his controvers­ial provision in a floor speech, saying the emergency powers were designed to stabilize capital markets at the height of the COVID panic this spring and are expiring at the end of the month anyway. The language would block the Biden administra­tion from restarting them.

Even Toomey said this week that his provision “could be seen as redundant,” but neither he nor his Democratic adversarie­s were backing down from the fight, though compromise language was being shuttled back and forth.

At issue are Fed emergency programs, launched amid the pandemic this spring, that provided loans to small and mid-size businesses and bought state and local government bonds.

Those bond purchases have made it easier for those government­s to borrow, at a time when their finances are under pressure from job losses and health costs stemming from the pandemic.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said last month that those programs, along with two that purchased corporate bonds, would close at the end of the year, prompting an initial objection by the Fed.

Under the Dodd-Frank financial reform law passed after the Great Recession, the Fed can only set up emergency programs with the support of the treasury secretary.

But in Mnuchin’s letter closing the programs, he said the Fed could request that future treasury secretarie­s renew them. Fed Chair Jerome Powell echoed that view Wednesday at a news conference. Yet Toomey’s language would bar the Fed from doing so.

That prompted a rare statement Saturday from former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, who oversaw a dramatic expansion of the Fed’s emergency lending during the Great Recession, which most economists credit with helping end the financial crisis.

It is “vital that the Federal Reserve’s ability to respond promptly to damaging disruption­s in credit markets not be circumscri­bed,” Bernanke said. “The relief act should ensure, at least, that the Federal Reserve’s emergency lending authoritie­s, as they stood before the passage of the CARES Act (in March), remain fully intact and available to respond to future crises.”

Democrats in Congress also say that Toomey is trying to limit the Fed’s ability to boost the economy, just as Biden takes office.

“This is about existing authoritie­s that the Fed has had for a very long time, to be able to use in an emergency,” said Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass. “It’s about a lending authority for helping small businesses, state government, local government in the middle of a crisis.”

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? On Dec. 15, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky walks past reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS On Dec. 15, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky walks past reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States