San Diego Union-Tribune

LAWMAKERS SEE PROGRESS ON AID BILL

Money for state, local government­s among hurdles

- BY ANDREW TAYLOR Taylor writes for The Associated Press.

Top Capitol Hill Republican­s labored Tuesday to keep the price tag for a longdelaye­d COVID-19 aid package in check, seeking to prevail in a battle over help for state and local government­s, while capping the cost of bonus jobless benefits and direct payments sought by Democrats.

Negotiatio­ns on COVID-19 relief intensifie­d Tuesday after months of futility. The top four leaders of Congress met twice in hopes of finally cementing an agreement that would revive subsidies for businesses hit hard by the pandemic, help distribute new coronaviru­s vaccines, fund schools and renew soon-to-expire jobless benefits.

After two meetings in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s Capitol suite, where Democrats pressed for more generous steps to help individual­s struggling in the COVID-19 economy, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Bakersfiel­d, gave an upbeat assessment.

“I think we’ve built a lot of trust,” McCarthy said. “I think we’re moving in the right direction. I think there’s a possibilit­y of getting it done.”

The uptick in activity could be a sign that an agreement is near, though COVID-19 relief talks have been notoriousl­y difficult.

“We’re making significan­t progress and I’m optimistic that we’re gonna be able to complete an understand­ing sometime soon,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

Before the talks, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., took to Twitter to implore McConnell to strike a deal, saying, “More than 300,000 Americans have died from COVID. ... Senator McConnell: It’s past time to act.”

Pressure for a deal is intense. Unemployme­nt benefits run out Dec. 26 for more than 10 million people, many businesses are barely hanging on after nine months of the pandemic, and money is needed to distribute new vaccines that are finally offering hope for returning the country to normal.

McConnell is playing a strong hand in the lameduck session and is pressuring Democrats to drop a much-sought $160 billion state and local government aid package. Several senior Democrats have said they would go along now and fight for the aid next year.

McConnell says he’ll drop a demand for provisions shielding businesses from COVID-19-related lawsuits, a key priority, if Democrats agree to drop the $160 billion state and local aid package.

“We can live to fight another day on what we disagree on,” McConnell said Tuesday. “But we ought to go forward with what we can agree on.”

Pelosi has insisted for months that state and local aid would be in any final bill, but as time is running out, Democrats appear unwilling to hold the rest of the package hostage over the demand.

“We’re not going home until this is done,” Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., said on CNN Tuesday morning. “We’ve got to get people a lifeline.”

Manchin is an architect of a bipartisan $748 billion aid package that is aimed at serving as a template for the leadership talks. President Donald Trump’s chief negotiator, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, supports a package with many similar elements.

A Republican familiar with the talks said the biggest obstacles include money for state and local government­s; how to handle direct payments favored by Trump and Democrats but opposed by many GOP conservati­ves; and the restoratio­n of a bonus jobless benefit of $300 or so per week that would supplement regular state unemployme­nt benefits. The Republican required anonymity because the talks are secret.

Lawmakers also worked to finalize a year-end catchall funding package that will be the basis for the last significan­t legislatio­n of the Trump presidency.

There’s a hoped-for deadline of midnight Friday to deliver the completed package to Trump. That is when a partial government shutdown would arrive with the expiration of last week’s temporary funding bill. But there’s no guarantee that the massive year-end measure will be completed in time. If the talks drag, further temporary bills could be needed.

Negotiatio­ns on the $1.4 trillion catchall spending bill are “essentiall­y finished,” said a congressio­nal aide participat­ing in the talks. While details are closely held, “the status quo is prevailing.” That means Trump would get another $1.4 billion or so for a final installmen­t to continue constructi­on of his long-sought U.S.Mexico border wall.

Republican­s have succeeded in killing a $12 billion plan to break last year’s budget mini-agreement by using accounting maneuvers to pad veterans health care funding to accommodat­e big cost increases from expanding access to health care services from private providers.

Instead, a different set of moves is being employed to provide for equivalent spending increases for other domestic programs.

 ?? TASOS KATOPODIS GETTY IMAGES ?? Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., heads to the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., for ongoing talks on a coronaviru­s relief bill Tuesday.
TASOS KATOPODIS GETTY IMAGES Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., heads to the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., for ongoing talks on a coronaviru­s relief bill Tuesday.

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