Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill is expected to be passed today
The House is poised to approve a sweeping $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill on Wednesday and send it to President Joe Biden to sign, a major early legislative victory for the new president and the Democrats who control Congress.
Despite united GOP opposition and a narrow Democratic majority, House Democratic leaders expressed confidence on Tuesday that they will have votes to spare. House Democratic Caucus Chairman Hakeem Jeffries of New York said he was “110% confident” of success.
Democrats touted the breadth of the legislation, which they’ve begun to frame not just as a bill to attack the coronavirus pandemic and economic downturn, but as a generational anti-poverty measure.
“This legislation represents the boldest action taken on behalf of the American people since the Great Depression,” House Democratic Caucus Vice Chairman Pete Aguilar of California said Tuesday.
“This is seismic legislation,” said Ways and Means Chairman Richard
Neal, D-Mass.
Republicans are using much the same argument against the bill, saying it’s largely unconnected to the pandemic crisis.
“We know for sure that it includes provisions that are not targeted, they’re not temporary, they’re not related to COVID and it didn’t have to be this way,” said House Republican Conference Chair Liz Cheney of Wyoming. “We could have had a bill that was a fraction of the cost of this one; it could have gotten bipartisan approval and support.”
Final House passage of the legislation would come after the Senate approved the bill on Saturday afternoon following an all-night session.
Leaders of the Congressional Progressive Caucus praised the bill, which Democratic leaders are calling a historic antipoverty measure, in part, because of a boosted child tax credit that will provide a monthly benefit for many needy families. House Democrats are talking about trying to make that benefit permanent.
The legislation will also send $350 billion to cities and states, $130 billion to schools to help them reopen, and devote billions more to a national vaccination program, expanded coronavirus testing, food stamps, rental assistance and more.