Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Dems, GOP far apart on virus aid as Trump wants deal

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WASHINGTON — A day of shuttle diplomacy on Capitol Hill over a COVID-19 aid package produced few results Tuesday, with stark difference­s between the $3 trillion proposal from Democrats and $1 trillion counteroff­er from Republican­s.

As top White House negotiator­s returned for a second day of talks, the leverage is apparent. They are meeting again in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office. Republican­s are so deeply divided over the prospect of big government spending that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is left with a severely weakened hand.

President Donald Trump said the Republican effort is “semi-irrelevant” as talks launch with Democrats.

“We want to do what’s best for the people,” Mr. Trump said.

Striking any agreement with Congress by Friday’s deadline for expiring aid will be daunting. But the outcome will be a defining one for the president and the parties heading into the November election as an uneasy nation is watching and waiting for Washington to bring some end to the health crisis and devastatin­g economic fallout.

“We cannot afford to fail,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said.

Key to the debate is the $600 weekly unemployme­nt benefit bump that is expiring for millions of jobless Americans. Republican­s want to slash it to $200 a week as an incentive to push people back to work. Democrats have shown flickers of willingnes­s to curb the federal aid but held firm in first-round talks.

With the virus death toll climbing and 4.2 million infections nationwide, both parties are eager for relief.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows spent hours going back and forth between the leaders’ offices at the Capitol.

Mr. McConnell set the tone by insisting that he would accept no package without a liability shield against COVID-19 lawsuits, his top priority.

But he’s coming to the negotiatin­g table with half the GOP senators expected to oppose any virus relief deal, and the Democrats swiftly rebuffed his demand, telling the White House negotiator­s to ask if he was serious.

Ms. Pelosi called it “liability on steroids” — a sweeping ban on injury lawsuits — and she said Mr. McConnell ”sounded like a person who had no interest in having an agreement.”

Several senators vigorously questioned Mr. Mnuchin, Mr. Meadows and Mr. McConnell and warned against caving to liberal demands, said two Republican­s who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the closed-door meeting.

By day’s end, Mr. Meadows acknowledg­ed that talks are not “getting closer.” The White House officials plan to return Wednesday.

The two bills are widely seen as starting points in talks.

Republican­s seek $16 billion for virus testing. Democrats want $75 billion.

For school reopenings, Democrats want four times the $105 billion that Republican­s propose.

Democrats want to extend a federal eviction moratorium on millions of rental units that is expiring Friday, but Republican­s are silent on evictions.

While Mr. McConnell insisted on the liability shield, Democrats want tougher federal workplace safety oversight.

One major sticking point will be over funding for states and cities. Democrats proposed nearly $1 trillion to avert municipal layoffs, but Republican­s prefer providing them with flexibilit­y in previously approved aid.

An area of common ground is agreement on a new round of $1,200 direct payments to Americans earning $75,000 or less.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, RS.C., said Mr. McConnell would be lucky to get half the Republican­s on board.

“We’re in a war, OK, with the virus,” Mr. Graham said at the Capitol. “If you don’t think we need money for hospitals and doctors, you’re not looking at the same movie I’m looking at.”

As bipartisan talks unfold, the White House has suggested a narrower relief package may be all that’s possible. Democrats have dismissed that as too meager. And Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said, “I haven’t heard any support for that.”

The $600 weekly jobless benefits boost officially expires Friday, but because of the way states process unemployme­nt payments, the cutoff has effectivel­y begun.

Economists widely see signs of trouble in the economy as the virus crisis continues.

 ?? Patrick Semansky/Associated Press ?? The flag-draped casket of Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., lies in state Tuesday on the East Front Steps of the Capitol in Washington.
Patrick Semansky/Associated Press The flag-draped casket of Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., lies in state Tuesday on the East Front Steps of the Capitol in Washington.

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