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Pressure building on GOP aid plan

McConnell hopes to unveil virus package amid party divisions

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — Despite deep Republican divisions, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell pushed ahead Wednesday toward a COVID-19 aid package with the White House as Democrats warned the GOP is delaying needed relief to Americans during the crisis.

Key GOP senators revolted over the emerging $1 trillion effort as the price tag could quickly swell. Conservati­ve Republican­s vowed to slow-walk passage of any bill.

But pressure is mounting as the virus outbreak deepens, and a $600 weekly unemployme­nt boost and a federal eviction moratorium come to an end starting Friday.

“We’re hopeful we’ll be able to get there,” McConnell told reporters.

Briefings were underway at the Capitol and the Republican leader hoped to present a working draft soon. But the size and scope of the federal spending, and the jumble of competing priorities from President Donald Trump and GOP senators, left the outcome uncertain as the pandemic death toll climbed past 142,000.

“I just don’t see the need for it,” Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., told reporters Wednesday.

Exasperate­d Democrats, who already approved House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s more sweeping $3 trillion package two months ago, said time is running out for Trump and his GOP allies to act.

“We’re still on the 20-yard line?” Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said, referring to White House comments. “Where have the Republican­s been?”

With millions out of work and a potential wave of evictions ahead, the severity of the prolonged virus outbreak is testing Washington’s ability to respond. Schools are delaying fall openings, states are clamping down with new stay-home orders and the fallout is rippling through an economy teetering with high unemployme­nt and business uncertaint­y.

A new AP-NORC poll shows few Americans want full school sessions without restrictio­ns in the fall.

The White House negotiator­s, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Mark Meadows, the president’s acting chief of staff, arrived late at the Capitol. After a raucous meeting Tuesday, senators did not discuss the package at Wednesday’s lunch. Still, Meadows said other talks had progressed, pushing Republican­s to the 35-yard line.

But Trump and his GOP allies are tangled over his push for a payroll tax cut, which many Republican­s oppose.

They also are straining to come up with a way to limit the extra jobless benefits, which many Republican­s say are paying people too much money.

A stopgap measure may be needed to prevent a benefits shutoff.

As the Republican­s battle over their priorities, Democrats warn they are wasting time.

“We are just days away from a housing crisis that could be prevented,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said.

McConnell’s blueprint is expected to include a new round of direct payments to earners below a certain income level, similar to the $1,200 checks sent in the spring. It also will likely have some version of Trump’s demand for a payroll tax holiday for workers.

Republican­s said they want to replace the $600 weekly federal jobless benefit with a lower amount.

Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, said it would likely be swapped for one more closely pegged to state benefits rates. That means workers in states with larger benefits would get a more generous add-on.

“We cannot allow there to be a cliff in unemployme­nt insurance given we’re still at about 11% unemployme­nt,” Portman said.

Republican­s want to include at least $105 billion for education, with $70 billion to help K-12 schools reopen, $30 billion for colleges and $5 billion for governors to allocate. The Trump administra­tion wanted school money linked to reopenings, but in McConnell’s package the money for K-12 would likely be split between those that have in-person learning and those that don’t.

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said there will be another boost for small business lending in the Payroll Protection Program. “It’s going to be big,” he said.

The centerpiec­e of the GOP package will be McConnell’s five-year liability shield to protect businesses, schools and others from COVID-related lawsuits. It’s also likely to include tax breaks to help shops and workplaces retool safely for the reopenings.

Mnuchin and Meadows made it clear during a private meeting Tuesday with Pelosi and Schumer that the White House was resisting Democratic proposals for new spending on virus testing, housing aid or money for cash-strapped states, according to a person granted anonymity to discuss the talks.

Republican­s said some $150 billion allotted previously to state government­s is sufficient to avert sweeping layoffs, and they said more housing protection­s are not needed.

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, who opposes direct checks in favor of more targeted aid, lamented the White House’s handling of the crisis.

“I don’t think it’s been a great example for the world to see,” he said. “We’re still struggling.”

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DREW ANGERER/GETTY
 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY ?? Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., address eviction protection­s in the next coronaviru­s bill Wednesday at the Capitol.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., address eviction protection­s in the next coronaviru­s bill Wednesday at the Capitol.

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