Marysville Appeal-Democrat

House backs Trump on $2,000 checks

- Bloomberg News (TNS)

WASHINGTON — The House on Monday passed a bill replacing the $600 stimulus checks in the newly enacted virus relief bill with $2,000 payments, as Democrats and moderate Republican­s voted in favor of a proposal backed by President Donald Trump.

The bill cleared the chamber on a 275 to 134 vote, reaching the two-thirds majority needed for the expedited procedure used Monday.

It now heads to the Senate, where it will create a political dilemma for Republican­s. Many of them previously opposed stimulus payments larger than the $600 in the existing law, in part over concerns about the price tag. Bumping the payments to $2,000 would cost roughly $464 billion. But Trump’s stamp of approval still has sway with GOP voters.

In addition to increasing the payment amounts and the income cutoff to receive a check, the

House measure would expand the eligibilit­y of household members who can get the money, allowing adult dependents, as well as child dependents, to receive the payments. Currently, just children of adults under the income caps qualify for the payments.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell hasn’t said whether the Senate would take up the House bill, attempt to vote on a different measure that would also increase direct payments or simply ignore the issue. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer is urging Republican­s to bring up a clean bill, like the House measure, to increase the payments to $2,000. Schumer is expected to seek unanimous consent to pass the House bill on Tuesday and to be blocked in that effort.

A vote against the increased payments would put Senate Republican­s at odds with the leader of their party and on record against a politicall­y popular idea, in a week that Republican­s are trying to remain unified ahead of two crucial runoff elections in Georgia that will determine control of the Senate.

“I worry that this whopping $463 billion won’t do what’s needed, stimulate the economy or help workers get back to work,” Rep. Kevin Brady, a Texas Republican said before the House vote. “It’s hard to stimulate the economy that is locked down by local politician­s.”

The nonpartisa­n Committee for a Responsibl­e Budget estimates that the bigger payments would raise disposable income in the first quarter to as much as 25% above pre-pandemic levels. The legislatio­n would produce an additional 1.5% in GDP output, but not all of the growth will occur in 2021, according to Marc Goldwein, an economist who coauthored the CRFB projection­s.

Trump last week called $600 stimulus checks a “disgrace” and asked Congress to increase them to $2,000 while cutting foreign aid and other unspecifie­d “pork” from legislatio­n that combines virus relief with funding for government operations. After days of complaints, Trump capitulate­d on Sunday night and signed the more than $2.3 trillion bill.

In a statement that accompanie­d his signing of the broader legislatio­n, Trump said the Senate had agreed to begin the process of voting on the $2,000 checks along with a measure to reform unrelated liability protection­s for technology companies and an investigat­ion into alleged voter fraud. Mcconnell hasn’t made any public statements about such an agreement.

It is not yet clear if this means

Senate leaders will package these provisions together. If they do, such a bill will likely draw enough opposition from both parties to fail on the floor.

On Sunday, Pennsylvan­ia Sen.

Pat Toomey, a Republican, said he would vote against $2,000 checks. During months of COVID-19 relief negotiatio­ns, Republican­s fought against any direct payments and insisted that $600 was the maximum they could support in this round of economic aid.

The U.S. Treasury Department could start issuing $600 direct payments beginning this week, a person familiar with the matter said. Most of the checks will likely actually go out next week.

An official said any further payments authorized by Congress after the fact will be added to what has already been paid.

 ?? Dreamstime/tns ?? The U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, D.C.
Dreamstime/tns The U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, D.C.

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