Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Let’s make a deal

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The prospects for a new coronaviru­s relief plan are finally improving. The months of delay up to this point, and the fact that talks in Washington might even now fail to break the stalemate, are little short of scandalous. But compromise is in the air. Leaders of both parties need to seize the opportunit­y.

A bipartisan group of senators opened a crack in the wall last week, proposing a new relief plan of a little over $900 billion, less than the $2.4 trillion that Democratic Party leaders had previously insisted on and more than the roughly $500 billion favored by the GOP leadership.

Senator Mitt Romney said, “We’re getting more and more support from Republican­s and Democrats.” The Problem Solvers Caucus, a bipartisan group of moderates in the House, has backed the measure. President Donald Trump has suggested he’d support it.

The respective leadership­s in Congress have expressed interest and willingnes­s to talk further. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called the plan a basis for negotiatio­n. But as yet neither side has committed to getting it done. That isn’t good enough.

Democrats should follow President-Joe Biden’s lead. He got it right, saying the compromise proposal wasn’t enough but he saw it as a down payment that would deliver prompt relief. When Biden takes office in January, the issue can be revisited.

The Democrats have been right all along to argue that a bigger proposal would be better. With covid restrictio­ns tightening again, a measure of between $1 trillion and $2 trillion is needed to provide renewed unemployme­nt assistance, help for struggling businesses, and adequate support for financiall­y stretched states and cities.

This saga has dragged on far too long already. Come to terms immediatel­y and get this measure passed.

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