Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Progress reported in aid talks

But no deal at hand yet, sides admit

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Erica Werner and Rachael Bade of The Washington Post; and by Andrew Taylor of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Negotiatio­ns between top White House officials and congressio­nal Democrats on coronaviru­s relief legislatio­n showed signs of progress on Saturday, although negotiator­s had not yet struck a deal.

The action takes place after days of stalemate that caused 30 million Americans to lose emergency federal unemployme­nt benefits when they expired Friday with no agreement on an extension.

At stake beyond the $600-per-week jobless benefit is a fresh $1,200 direct payment to most Americans, and hundreds of billions of dollars in other aid to states, businesses and the poor, among other elements.

Emerging from a threehour meeting with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff,

Aid

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said they had had the most productive discussion to date.

“This was the longest meeting we’ve had and it was more productive than the other meetings,” said Schumer. “We’re not close yet, but it was a productive discussion — now each side knows where they’re at.”

“It was the best discussion we’ve had so far, and I’d call it progress but a ways to go,” he added.

He said aides would be meeting todayto go over details, and the principals would meet again Monday.

Mnuchin and Meadows agreed as they addressed reporters at the Capitol a short time later.

“It’s time to make a deal,” Meadows said. “And if we’re going to be able to succeed in this, it’s taking what started as probably the first day of a good foundation, productive discussion­s and building upon those until we reach an agreement, hopefully in the next couple of days.”

It was a change of tone from Friday, when Meadows and Pelosi exchanged public criticism about who was to blame for the expiration of the federal unemployme­nt benefits at a time of enhanced economic uncertaint­y.

White House officials have been trying to get Democrats to agree to a short-term fix that would extend the unemployme­nt benefits and address a handful of other items such as continuing a moratorium on evictions that also recently expired.

Pelosi mentioned food aid and funding for voting by mail after the negotiatin­g session was over. She and Schumer appeared more upbeat than they have after earlier meetings.

“We have to get rid of this virus so that we can open our economy, safely open our schools, and to do so in a way that does not give a cut in benefits to American workers,” Pelosi said.

Mnuchin said restoring the $600 supplement­al jobless benefit is critically important to President Donald Trump.

“We’re still a long ways apart and I don’t want to suggest that a deal is imminent because it is not,” Meadows said afterward. “There are still substantia­l difference­s, but we did make good progress.”

Whatever unemployme­nt aid negotiator­s agree on will be made retroactiv­e — but antiquated state systems are likely to take weeks to restore the benefits.

$3 TRILLION BILL

Democrats, whose starting point is a $3 trillion bill the House passed in May, have been holding out for a more comprehens­ive response.

Mnuchin said Saturday that even as the two sides were finding areas of agreement on policy, there was still disagreeme­nt on the best way to move forward legislativ­ely.

“They’ve made clear that there’s a desire on their part to do an entire package; we’ve made clear that we are willing to deal with the short-term issues, pass something quickly, and come back to the larger issues,” Mnuchin said. “So we’re at an impasse on that.”

Neverthele­ss the positive comments after the meeting suggested that the two sides might finally be heading toward a deal, after fourstraig­ht days of meetings.

Congress has not acted since spring even as the coronaviru­s has been spiking, and the economic recovery has stalled. More than 154,000 Americans have died as of Saturday, according to a running tally by Johns Hopkins University. More than 4.6 million Americans are known to have been infected with the virus.

“Millions are on the verge of eviction. People need resources in order to meet the needs of their families,” Pelosi said. “This is not a usual discussion, because the urgency is so great.”

Mnuchin said the two sides agreed on the need to extend unemployme­nt insurance and the eviction moratorium and provide money for schools and small businesses. Vast difference­s remain, though, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s demand for a liability shield for businesses, health care providers and others, and Democrats’ demand for $1 trillion in additional aid to cities and states.

“This is a very different kind of negotiatio­n, because of what is at stake. Millions of children are food insecure, millions of families are at risk of eviction, and for the 19thstraig­ht week, over 1 million Americans applied for unemployme­nt insurance,” Pelosi said.

STICKING POINT

McConnell was home in Kentucky on Saturday and did not participat­e in the negotiatio­ns, which he’s largely

left to administra­tion officials. But Meadows and Mnuchin said they were keeping him and Trump closely apprised of developmen­ts.

Senate Republican leaders waited until last Monday to release a $1 trillion bill that was their response to the Democrats’ plan, but it immediatel­y encountere­d resistance from within the Senate GOP conference. The White House quickly abandoned it and began pushing for some kind of short-term fix for the unemployme­nt benefits.

The Republican­s have floated a few plans for extending the enhanced unemployme­nt benefits, which come on top of whatever states already offer. Republican­s say the $600 weekly payment is so generous it provides a disincenti­ve for people to return to work, though Democrats disagree. One approach that’s attracted GOP support would reduce the benefit to $200 weekly, or a formula that would replace around two-thirds of a worker’s wages before the job loss.

Democrats insist any such approach is insufficie­nt for the need in the country and the fragile state of the economy, which could suffer overall from the evaporatio­n of the benefits that have helped newly unemployed workers pay rent and buy groceries.

The stimulus package will be the fifth legislativ­e response to the pandemic and could well be the last one before the November election. The only other must-pass legislatio­n on the agenda is a stopgap spending measure that should advance in September.

Since May, Republican­s controllin­g the Senate had kept the relief negotiatio­ns on “pause” in a strategy aimed at reducing its price tag. But as the pandemic surged back over the summer, Republican­s displayed greater flexibilit­y.

“We’re still a long ways apart and I don’t want to suggest that a deal is imminent because it is not. There are still substantia­l difference­s, but we did make good progress.”

— Mark Meadows, White House chief of staff

 ?? (AP/Manuel Balce Ceneta) ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi walks to her office Saturday on Capitol Hill to resume talks with White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.
(AP/Manuel Balce Ceneta) House Speaker Nancy Pelosi walks to her office Saturday on Capitol Hill to resume talks with White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.
 ??  ?? Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (left) and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows arrive Saturday at the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. “It’s time to make a deal,” Meadows said after the meeting.
(AP/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin (left) and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows arrive Saturday at the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. “It’s time to make a deal,” Meadows said after the meeting. (AP/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

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