Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Lawmakers at aid impasse as benefits expire for millions

- By Sarah D. Wire and Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON — The $600 federal unemployme­nt subsidy and the national eviction moratorium on some properties expired Friday after Democrats and Republican­s failed to reach an agreement on an economic aid package meant to deal with the growing surge of COVID-19.

Congress passed the last major economic package in March, and the Democratic­led House passed legislatio­n that included an extension in May. But attempts to negotiate a new deal did not begin until Senate Republican­s put forward a counterpro­posal this week.

That proposal by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., was quickly rejected by some in his own party, and President Donald Trump called it “semi-irrelevant.”

Tens of millions of unemployed Americans are relying on the federal aid, which is in addition to state unemployme­nt benefits, to help pay rent, buy groceries and pay other bills during the coronaviru­s crisis.

The economy contracted by a third between April and June, the swiftest contractio­n in history, and more than 30 million Americans lost their jobs.

Congress might make the federal unemployme­nt payments retroactiv­e if a deal ultimately is reached, but the delay is expected to cause anxiety and hardship for millions of Americans.

Days of closed-door negotiatio­ns between House and Senate Democratic leaders and the Trump administra­tion resulted in frustratio­n and finger-pointing Friday at dueling partisan news conference­s with no resolution in sight.

“We weren’t bickering.

We were having major policy disagreeme­nts,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, DCalif., told reporters. “We don’t have shared values; that’s just the way it is. It’s not bickering. It’s standing our ground.”

“The Democrats are certainly willing today to allow some of the American citizens who are struggling the most under this pandemic to go unprotecte­d,” White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said in a separate news conference. “The Democrats believe that they have all the cards on their side, and they’re willing to play those cards at the expense of those that are hurting.”

Major difference­s remain between the House and Senate proposals, including whether to provide more money for SNAP food stamp benefits and to offer help for struggling state government­s that have seen tax revenues plummet in the recession.

Other disputes include whether reopened businesses and schools would be protected from liability if customers and employees get infected by the coronaviru­s, and who should receive another $1,200 direct check from the government.

Even the scope of the bill is up in the air, with Republican­s seeking to limit it to $1 trillion and Democrats proposing north of $3 trillion.

Democrats want to keep offering the $600 a week for unemployed Americans through at least the rest of the year. Republican­s have proposed extending it for two months at $200 a week, and then limiting it to 70% of an individual’s salary, up to $500.

With chances of a quick compromise dimming, Republican­s proposed a shortterm extension for some unemployme­nt benefits.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said after a lengthy meeting Thursday with Ms. Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York that he and Mr. Meadows had offered several short-term proposals to extend benefits while negotiatio­ns continued over a larger, more complex bill, but were rebuffed.

“I think the Democrats are willing to allow the enhanced unemployme­nt to expire; they’ve made that very clear, not once, not twice, but three times, and so I’m not very optimistic on anybody who’s counting on enhanced unemployme­nt to have any relief anytime soon,” he said.

Ms. Pelosi said the negotiatio­ns are so far apart that a one-week extension wasn’t worthwhile. She has said a short-term extension would remove leverage while negotiatin­g a complete package.

“What is a one-week extension good for? A oneweek extension is good if you have a bill and you’re working it out — the details, the writing of it,” she said Thursday. “It’s worthless unless you are using it for this purpose.”

In most states, the benefits stopped July 25 because most state unemployme­nt systems operate on a weekly basis and couldn’t extend the benefit into the final, partial week of July.

Ms. Pelosi, Mr. Schumer, Mr. Mnuchin and Mr. Meadows are expected to continue meeting over the weekend, but it’s unclear whether they will begin working on the policy hurdles that remain.

Mr. McConnell has indicated that fulsome legislatio­n is possibly weeks away, and he set up a possible vote on a short-term unemployme­nt benefit extension next week if a deal can be reached. The White House on Friday indicated it isn’t ready to move to a large-scale bill, either.

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