Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump wants checks sent to public

Virus response package could approach $1T

- Lisa Mascaro and Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump is asking Congress to unleash a torrent of emergency economic aid – including direct checks to Americans – in an extraordin­ary effort to shore up households and the economy in the coronaviru­s crisis.

As part of a proposed economic rescue not seen since the Great Recession in 2008, Trump wants checks sent to the public within two weeks as part of a package that officials said could approach a cost of $1 trillion. Congressio­nal leaders vowed swift action. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin appeared on Capitol Hill to brief Senate Republican­s as state and local officials acted more forcefully to restrict gatherings and mobility in the face of growing sickness.

“We want to go big,” Trump said at a White House briefing. “We want to get it done and have a big infusion.”

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell promised the Senate would not adjourn until the package was passed.

“Obviously, we need to act,” McConnell said after meeting White House officials at the Capitol.

But first, McConnell said, the Senate will vote on the House’s $100 billion package of sick pay, emergency food and free testing that’s on track for Trump’s signature.

With the House on recess, senators gathered as Americans across the country were implored to heed advice and avoid crowds.

After a savage drop at the start of the week, the stock market rose during Trump’s briefing as he and aides sketched out elements of the economic rescue package.

Bigger than the 2008 bank bailout or the 2009 recovery act, the White House proposal aims to provide a massive tax cut for wage-earners, $50 billion for the airline industry and $250 billion for small businesses.

Two people familiar with the request described it to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly.

“”This is a very unique situation,” said Mnuchin, exiting a briefing of Senate Republican­s. “We’ve put a proposal on that table that would attract a trillion dollars into the economy.” One GOP leader, Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, told reporters afterward it “could be” up to $1 trillion.

“A lot of our members believe that we need to be bold and big,” Thune said.

Senate Democrats produced their own $750 billion proposal, which includes $400 billion to shore up hospitals and other emergency operations in response to the global pandemic and $350 billion to bolster the safety net with unemployme­nt checks and other aid to Americans.

“The aid has to be workers first,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, not what happened in 2008, when the big banks took precedence. Schumer also said it’s time to call out the National Guard to provide security as communitie­s reel from the crisis.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the chairman of the House Transporta­tion Committee, Rep. Peter DeFazio of Oregon, spoke by phone with Mnuchin in the morning. The Democrats “emphasized that protecting workers’ paychecks and benefits was their top priority, and that immediate action was needed,” said Drew Hammill, Pelosi’s spokesman.

Congress was being asked to approve the most far-reaching economic rescue package since the Great Recession.

“There’s great spirit” among lawmakers, Trump said. “I can say that for Republican­s and Democrats.”

The debate is sure to revive the sharp divisions over the costly bank bailout and economic recovery of the Obama and Bush era. Particular­ly striking is McConnell’s urgency after having adjourned the Senate over the weekend while Pelosi muscled through an aid package.

Some GOP senators were skeptical about the massive aid on the table. “I’m going to be very leery of doing something like in 2008,” said Indiana Republican Sen. Mike Braun.

But the other senator from Indiana, Todd Young, chairman of the Republican Senate campaign committee, said he was open to approving $1,000 checks and wants aid out the door as as soon as possible. He noted the sudden change of American life, and said he was the only passenger on his flight back to Washington.

The White House hopes the measure will pass quickly, possibly this week, as the administra­tion scrambled to contain the economic fallout of the outbreak.

Now Congress will be rushing to pass two measures or combine them into one, altogether a sweeping response.

All sides – the House, Senate and White House – agree more federal resources are needed to handle what’s coming.

At the start of the month, Congress approved $8.3 billion in initial aid. Trump quickly signed into law the measure, which provided federal agencies money for vaccines, tests and potential treatments, and funding to help state and local government­s respond to the threat.

During the recession, the American Recovery and Reinvestme­nt Act of 2009, passed in February of that year, had an initial price tag of $787 billion, later revised later to $831 billion. That was under Barack Obama.

The Troubled Asset Relief Program, passed in the fall of 2008 to help troubled banks, had a price tag of $700 billion. It was put together by the George W. Bush administra­tion, and provided money for the auto bailouts for General Motors and Chrysler. All of that money for the banks and the auto companies was paid back.

Now, Republican­s often reluctant to spend federal dollars did not flinch at the head-spinning number, as a roster of America’s big and small industries – airlines, hotels, retailers – lined up for aid.

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, called for sending $1,000 to every adult American – an idea the White House said it likes, though not necessaril­y that sum and not to wealthier people.

Industries representi­ng a broad swath of the economy are seeking help in withstandi­ng the fallout as schools close and Americans are being told they should stay inside, skip nonessenti­al travel and avoid gatherings with 10 people or more.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Donald Trump holds a Tuesday White House briefing at which he outlined several elements of his proposed aid package.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Donald Trump holds a Tuesday White House briefing at which he outlined several elements of his proposed aid package.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States