San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Officials say administra­tion trying to block funds for tests, tracing.

Administra­tion pushes back on testing, tracing

- BY ERICA WERNER & JEFF STEIN Werner and Stein writes for The Washington Post.

The Trump administra­tion is trying to block billions of dollars for states to conduct testing and contact tracing in the upcoming coronaviru­s relief bill, people involved in the talks said Saturday.

The administra­tion is also trying to block billions of dollars that GOP senators want to allocate for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and billions more for the Pentagon and State Department to address the pandemic at home and abroad, the people said.

The administra­tion’s posture has angered some GOP senators, the officials said, and some lawmakers are trying to push back and ensure that the money stays in the bill. The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to reveal confidenti­al deliberati­ons, cautioned that the talks were fluid and the numbers were in flux.

The negotiatio­ns center around a bill Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., is preparing to unveil this coming week as part of negotiatio­ns with Democrats on what will likely be the last major coronaviru­s relief bill before the November election.

Negotiatio­ns are expected to kick off with increased urgency because of the rapid growth of cases — and steady uptick in deaths — in the United States. The number of cases began falling in April but accelerate­d sharply after Memorial Day, shattering records in the past two weeks.

In late May, there were fewer than 20,000 new cases of coronaviru­s reported each day. On Friday, there were more than 76,000 new cases reported.

The two political parties are far apart on a number of contentiou­s issues, such as unemployme­nt insurance, but the conflict between Trump administra­tion officials and Senate Republican­s on money for testing and other priorities is creating a major complicati­on even before bipartisan negotiatio­ns get under way. Some lawmakers are trying to reach a deal quickly, as enhanced unemployme­nt benefits for millions of Americans are set to expire in less than two weeks.

One person involved in the talks said Senate Republican­s were seeking to allocate $25 billion for states to conduct testing and contact tracing, but that certain administra­tion officials want to zero out the testing and tracing money entirely. Some White House officials believe they have already approved billions of dollars in assistance for testing and that some of that money remains unspent.

Roughly 3.7 million Americans have tested positive for coronaviru­s in the United States.

President Donald Trump and other White House officials have been pushing for states to own more of the responsibi­lity for testing and have objected to creating national standards, at times seeking to minimize the federal government’s role.

The last major coronaviru­s spending bill Congress approved, in April, included $25 billion to increase testing and also required the Health and Human Services Department to release a strategic testing plan. The agency did so in May, but the plan mainly reasserted the administra­tion’s insistence that states — not the federal government — should take the lead on testing.

Several Senate Republican­s including Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-LA., are exploring pushing a testing and tracing provision in the next stimulus package but are expected to meet resistance from the White House.

“Cases and deaths are now both rising again, including in many red states,” said Sam Hammond, a policy expert at the right-leaning think tank the Niskanen Center, which has been working with Senate Republican­s on testing legislatio­n. “Senate Republican­s have asked for funding to help states purchase test kits in bulk. As it currently stands, the main bottleneck to a big ramp-up in testing is less technical than the White House’s own intransige­nce.”

Trump has repeatedly questioned the value of conducting widespread coronaviru­s testing, arguing that if there were fewer tests conducted, the number of infections would be lower. Coronaviru­s infections and deaths are on the rise in many states.

The administra­tion is also seeking to zero out $10 billion in new funding for the CDC in the upcoming bill, while slashing spending for the Pentagon and State Department related to foreign aid, the person said. Trump has been skeptical of State Department spending and foreign aid generally, but it was unclear why the Trump administra­tion would seek to block money for the Pentagon for a variety of Covid-related expenses such as reimbursin­g contractor­s for providing paid leave to employees.

A White House spokesman declined to comment.

Congress has already approved roughly $3 trillion in new spending and tax cuts as part of its response to the coronaviru­s pandemic. Some White House officials had hoped to keep the next bill at less than $1 trillion, but they also want to include numerous elements that could prove costly. For example, Trump has demanded a payroll tax cut as part of the legislatio­n. And he also wants to include another round of stimulus checks, though lawmakers are split on how to design new payments. Some people are still awaiting their payment from the initial stimulus package.

White House officials have been sharply critical of the CDC’S performanc­e during the pandemic, complainin­g that its initial testing efforts were faulty and that it didn’t know more about the virus earlier this year.

At the same time they push cuts in testing and CDC funds, administra­tion officials are trying to use the spending package to fund priorities that appear not directly related to the coronaviru­s — including a new FBI building, which has been a longtime priority for Trump, according to people involved.

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