Miami Herald

Top Senate official disqualifi­es minimum wage from stimulus plan

- BY EMILY COCHRANE

Democrats suffered a critical defeat in their bid to preserve President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus package Thursday after the Senate’s top rule enforcer said a plan to increase the federal minimum wage could not advance as part of it, effectivel­y knocking out a crucial piece of his plan backed by progressiv­es.

Elizabeth MacDonough, the Senate parliament­arian, told senators and staff that the provision, which would gradually increase the wage to $15 an hour by 2025, violated the strict budgetary rules that limit what can be included in the package, two aides said Thursday. The aides disclosed the ruling on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment on it.

The House is expected to vote on the $1.9 trillion package as early as Friday, with the wage increase included, and it was not clear whether the decision would alter their plans. But it gave

Republican­s grounds to jettison the provision when the Senate considers the stimulus measure shortly after under a fast-track process known as budget reconcilia­tion, which shields it from a filibuster, allowing it to pass without Republican support.

Democrats are working to win enactment of the pandemic aid package before mid-March, when federal unemployme­nt benefits begin to lapse. Doing so through reconcilia­tion ensures speed, but it also comes with stringent rules

that aim to prevent the process from being abused for policy initiative­s that have no direct effect on the federal budget.

Republican­s had argued that the minimum wage increase championed by Biden and top Senate Democrats was such an abuse, in part because it had a “merely incidental” effect on the budget. MacDonough, the arbiter of Senate procedure, agreed, ruling that it was in violation of the so-called Byrd Rule, named for former Sen. Robert Byrd, DW.Va., a master of procedural tactics.

The fate of the provision had long been tenuous in the Senate, particular­ly because two moderate Democrats, Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, have publicly said they do not support such a large increase to the federal minimum

wage.

While the majority typically follows advice from the parliament­arian, Democrats could also try to overrule her guidance, forcing a vote and effectivel­y insisting on including the wage increase in the legislatio­n anyway. Before the ruling, top Democrats had signaled that they would not support taking such an unusual step, and it was not clear whether they could muster a majority for doing so.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI AP ?? President Joe Biden speaks during a virtual meeting of the National Governors Associatio­n on Thursday. Later, the Senate parliament­arian dealt a potentiall­y lethal blow to Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus plan, deciding that the higher minimum wage cannot be part of the latest COVID-19 relief bill that Democrats are trying to speed through Congress.
EVAN VUCCI AP President Joe Biden speaks during a virtual meeting of the National Governors Associatio­n on Thursday. Later, the Senate parliament­arian dealt a potentiall­y lethal blow to Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus plan, deciding that the higher minimum wage cannot be part of the latest COVID-19 relief bill that Democrats are trying to speed through Congress.

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