Sentinel & Enterprise

Trump will ask for payroll tax relief

Also said he was seeking help for hourly-wage workers.

- By Zeke Miller

President Donald Trump said Monday his administra­tion will ask Congress to pass payroll tax relief and other quick measures as a public health and economic maelstrom brought on by the coronaviru­s drew closer to him personally.

Intending to calm the fears of financial markets over the impact of the epidemic, Trump told reporters he is seeking “very substantia­l relief” to the payroll tax. Trump also said he was seeking help for hourly-wage workers to ensure they’re “not going to miss a paycheck” and “don’t get penalized for something that’s not their fault.”

He stepped forward with the contours of an initiative after markets dropped sharply and as the outbreak spread. Several Trump confidants in Congress disclosed they were isolating themselves after potential exposure to the virus; one traveled with the president from Florida on Air Force One on Monday.

Trump said he would hold a press conference today to outline the proposals, saying his administra­tion and Congress would be “discussing a possible payroll tax cut or relief, substantia­l relief, very substantia­l relief, that’s big, that’s a big number. We’re also going to be talking about hourly wage earners getting help so that they can be in a position where they’re not going to ever miss a paycheck.”

As Trump grappled with an epidemic whose consequenc­es he has repeatedly played down, the White House asserted it was conducting “business as usual.” But the day’s business was anything but normal. Lawmakers pressed for details on how the Capitol could be made secure, handshakes on the Hill were discourage­d and a Pentagon meeting was broken into sub-groups to minimize the number of people in the same room.

The president himself dove into handshakes with supporters earlier in the day, when arriving to headline a fundraiser in Longwood, Fla., that raised approximat­ely $4 million for his re-election campaign and the Republican Party.

On his flight back to Washington he was accompanie­d by Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, who later went into a voluntary quarantine. He was one of several GOP lawmakers who were exposed to a person at last month’s Conservati­ve Political Action Conference who tested positive for the virus. His office said he was “mid-flight” on Air Force One when CPAC informed his staff that he had been in contact with the attendee who had the virus.

Once the plane landed, Gaetz was immediatel­y tested.

Vice President Mike Pence, who also spoke at CPAC, said he has not been tested for the virus. He said he did not know whether Trump had been tested.

In Monday morning tweets, Trump vented about the market drop and news that large public gatherings were being called off because of the virus.

“At this moment there are 546 confirmed cases of CoronaViru­s, with 22 deaths,” Trump tweeted, comparing it to seasonal influenza and the thousands of deaths that causes. “Think about that!”

Scientists at this stage don’t know what the death rate of the new coronaviru­s actually is and whether it will wind up being about the same as flu or worse.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY / AP ?? President Donald Trump gestures for Vice President Mike Pence to speak in the briefing room of the White House in Washington, Monday.
PATRICK SEMANSKY / AP President Donald Trump gestures for Vice President Mike Pence to speak in the briefing room of the White House in Washington, Monday.

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