Virus relief bill still a work in progress as time wanes
McConnell promises GOP proposal will be ready on Monday
WASHINGTON — Negotiations over the next COVID-19 rescue bill were in flux Friday after the White House floated cutting an unemployment benefits boost to as little as $100 and President Donald Trump turned to a new priority, adding money to build a new FBI headquarters.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell sent senators home, promising a Republican proposal would be ready Monday. Outraged Democrats warned that time is wasting on GOP infighting as the virus worsens, jobless aid expires and the death toll rises.
“We call upon Leader McConnell to get serious,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York in a statement.
During a head-spinning week of start-and-stop progress, McConnell abruptly halted the rollout of Republicans’ $1 trillion plan, which was supposed to provide a counteroffer to Democrats’ $3 trillion bill in an opening bid for negotiations. Plans shifted after Trump was forced to abandon his push for a payroll tax break, which his party opposed, and the White House turned to the new priorities.
As Republicans struggled, the nation’s infections topped 4 million, the number of deaths rose this week by several thousands, to more than 145,000, and the $600 unemployment benefit boost for millions of out-of-work Americans was put on track to expire.
As McConnell shuttered the Senate, he promised to return with “a strong, targeted piece of legislation aimed directly at the challenges we face right now.”
The GOP leader, who is up for reelection in November alongside Trump, dashed home to Kentucky for an event with the nation’s drug czar, Jim Carroll, in a part of Appalachia confronting opioid addiction. Kentucky has faced skyrocketing overdose deaths.
One sticking point for Republicans trying to resolve their differences with the White House is how to cut the $600 weekly jobless benefit boost that is expiring.
Republicans largely believe the add-on, which had been approved in an earlier aid bill, is too robust and becoming a disincentive for returning to work. In some situations, the boost gives the unemployed more money than if they were working.
Under McConnell’s plan, senators proposed cutting it to $200 and then transitioning over the next few months to a new system more closely linked to a state’s own payment levels.
An administration official granted anonymity to discuss the private talks said the White House viewed the Senate GOP’s proposal as too “cumbersome” and the $200 boost as too high.
A number of solutions were being discussed, the official said Thursday, including dropping the addon payment to $100.
Democrats warned time is running out. The benefit officially expires Friday, but due to the way states process unemployment payments, the cutoff was effectively Aug. 1.
Rep. Richard Neal, DN.J., chairman of the House Ways & Means Committee, said the nation is on “the eve of an economic catastrophe.”
“People need the sustenance of day-to-day life,” Neal said at the Capitol. He said the extra aid not only helps cash-strapped families, but is key to fueling the economy as Americans go without paychecks.
The unemployment debate is only one of many issues dividing Republicans as they enter negotiations with Democrats over how best to respond to the prolonged coronavirus crisis and devastating economic fallout.
McConnell’s emerging CARES Act II, named after the earlier effort, was expected to include a fresh round of direct $1,200 cash payments to Americans — a repeat of the money sent in spring — along with $105 billion to help reopen schools, $25 billion for virus testing and McConnell’s top priority of a liability shield to protect businesses, hospitals and others against COVID-19 lawsuits.
Trump was pushing the payroll tax break, but Senate Republicans didn’t want to include it because they say it does little to help out-of-work Americans. It would also pull revenue away from the tax that funds Social Security and Medicare.
The president relented, but the White House also inserted new priorities — rethinking the jobless benefit and Trump’s preference for a new building to replace the FBI’s aging J. Edgar Hoover Building in downtown Washington, across the street from the newer Trump hotel.
“This is disarray,” Pelosi said Friday at the Capitol.
The next steps are uncertain after days of closeddoor GOP negotiations at the Capitol with top White House officials, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff.