Miami Herald (Sunday)

$1,400 stimulus payment Biden wants faces pushback from GOP

- BY DAVID LIGHTMAN AND FRANCESCA CHAMBERS dlightman@mcclatchyd­c.com fchambers@mcclatchyd­c.com

WASHINGTON

Don’t look for that $1,400 stimulus check from President Joe Biden anytime soon.

While there is still strong sentiment in Congress in favor of the payments, disagreeme­nts have emerged over the new president’s overall economic package and those disputes are likely to slow approval of any new stimulus money.

Biden wants a $1,400per-person payment as part of his $1.9 trillion economic aid package, however the plan’s overall cost has Republican senators reluctant to endorse it.

The Democratic-run House is considerin­g taking up the plan as early as next month, but the proposal’s path in the 50-50 divided Senate is still uncertain.

A key to getting approval for the stimulus payment involves centrist Republican­s, and they are wary of Biden’s plans at the moment. A bipartisan group of 16 senators, including Kansas Republican Jerry Moran, plans to meet with top administra­tion officials this weekend.

“I want very much to hear the justificat­ion for a package that is so big, after we just had $900 billion last month, and a lot of that has yet to be disbursed,” said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, one of the bipartisan group’s leaders.

The White House said this week that it would be “challengin­g” to drop the price of the $1.9 trillion proposal, which includes money for unemployme­nt insurance, vaccine distributi­on and schools.

“But this is a discussion. It’s a conversati­on. And he is no stranger to the process of bill making,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters.

“So we’re at the beginning of the process. And as we continue, there’ll be conversati­ons with members of both parties of what will be in a final package, and rarely does it look exactly like the initial package that is proposed,” she said.

Biden took executive action Friday afternoon to make it easier for Americans to receive payments Congress has previously approved.

Former President Donald Trump signed legislatio­n in December to provide stimulus payments of $600 per adult and $600 per dependent child for people with adjusted gross incomes at or below $75,000 for an individual, $112,500 for a head of household and $150,000 for a couple filing federal taxes jointly.

The Internal Revenue Service used the same informatio­n it relied on to send out last spring’s payments, and many people quickly got the money.

But many did not.

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