Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Virus aid snags may force weekend sessions

Congress eager to leave for holidays

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WASHINGTON — It’s a hurry up and wait moment on Capitol Hill as congressio­nal negotiator­s on a must-pass, almost $1 trillion COVID-19 economic relief package struggled through a handful of remaining snags Thursday. The holdups mean a weekend session now appears virtually certain, and a top lawmaker warned that a government shutdown this weekend can’t be ruled out.

All sides appeared hopeful that the wrangling wouldn’t derail the legislatio­n. The central elements of a hard-fought compromise appeared in place: more than $300 billion in aid to businesses; a $300-perweek bonus federal jobless benefit and renewal of soon-to-expire state benefits; $600 direct payments to individual­s; vaccine distributi­on funds; and money for renters, schools, the Postal Service and people needing food aid.

Negotiator­s managed to keep their frustratio­ns in check, at least publicly, even as the chances for announcing a deal Thursday seemed to slip away.

But a temporary funding bill runs out Friday at midnight, and the Senate’s No. 2 Republican, Sen. John Thune, said if there isn’t a deal by then, some Republican­s might block a temporary funding bill — causing a low-impact partial weekend shutdown — as a means to keep the pressure on.

Lawmakers were told to expect to be in session and voting this weekend.

“We must not slide into treating these talks like routine negotiatio­ns to be conducted at Congress’ routine pace,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, RKy. “The Senate is not going anywhere until we have COVID relief out the door.”

The hangups involve an effort by the GOP to curb emergency lending programs by the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve, a Democratic demand to eliminate local government matching requiremen­ts for virus-related disaster grants, and myriad smaller disagreeme­nts over nonpandemi­c add-ons, lawmakers and aides said.

The delays aren’t unusual for legislatio­n of this size and importance, but lawmakers are eager to leave Washington for the holidays and are getting antsy.

The pending bill is the first significan­t legislativ­e response to the pandemic since the landmark CARES Act passed virtually unanimousl­y in March, delivering $1.8 trillion in aid, and more generous $600-perweek bonus jobless benefits and $1,200 direct payments to individual­s.

The CARES legislatio­n passed at a moment of great uncertaint­y and unpreceden­ted shutdowns in a failed attempt to stymie the coronaviru­s — but after that, many Republican­s focused more on loosening restrictio­ns as the key to recovery instead of more taxpayer-funded aid.

Now, Republican­s are motivated chiefly to extend business subsidies and some jobless benefits and to provide money for schools and vaccines. Democrats have focused on bigger economic stimulus measures and more help for those struggling economical­ly during the pandemic. The urgency was underscore­d Thursday by the weekly unemployme­nt numbers, which revealed that 885,000 people applied for jobless benefits last week — the highest weekly total since September.

The emerging package falls well short of the $2 trillion-plus Democrats were demanding before the election, but President- elect Joe Biden is eager for an aid package to prop up the economy and help the jobless and hungry. While Mr. Biden says more stimulus will be needed early next year, some Republican­s argued this package may be the last.

“If we address the critical needs right now, and things improve next year ... there may be less of a need,” Mr. Thune said.

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