The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

House approves $3T coronaviru­s relief legislatio­n

Democrats’ measure sets up talks about future stimulus effort.

- By Andrew Taylor and Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — Democrats powered a massive $3 trillion coronaviru­s relief bill through the House on Friday, an election-year measure designed to brace a U.S. economy in free fall and a health care system struggling to contain a pandemic still pummeling the country.

The 208-199 vote, over strong Republican opposition, advances what boils down to a campaign-season display of Democratic economic and health-care priorities. It has no chance of becoming law as written, but will likely spark difficult negotiatio­ns with the White House and Senate Republican­s. Any product would probably be the last major COVID19 response bill before November’s presidenti­al and congressio­nal elections.

The enormous Democratic measure would cost more than the prior four coronaviru­s bills combined. It would deliver almost $1 trillion for state and local government­s, another round of $1,200 direct payments to individual­s and help for the unemployed, renters and homeowners, college debt holders and the struggling Postal Service.

“Not to act now is not only irresponsi­ble in a humanitari­an way, it is irresponsi­ble because it’s only going to cost more,” warned House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. “More in terms of lives, livelihood, cost to the budget, cost to our democracy.”

Republican­s mocked the bill as a bloated Democratic wishlist that was dead on arrival in the GOP-led Senate and, for good measure, faced a White House veto threat. Party leaders say they want to assess how $3 trillion approved earlier is working and see if some states’ partial business reopenings would spark an economic revival that would ease the need for more safety net programs.

Republican­s are also sorting through internal divisions and awaiting stronger signals from President Donald Trump about what he will support.

With more than 86,000 Americans dead, 1.4 million confirmed infections and 36 million filing unemployme­nt claims in an frozen economy, Democrats saw GOP opposition as an easy campaign-season target.

“Are you kidding me?” said Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, of Republican assertions that it was time to stop spending more money. “Where do you guys live? Food lines at our food banks around the block? In the United States of America?”

Republican­s saw the bill as a Democratic political blunder. They said overly generous unemployme­nt benefits discourage­d people from returning to work.

They also singled out provisions helping states set up voting by mail and easing the marijuana industry’s access to banks.

“It may help the cannabis industry, but it won’t help Main Street,” said House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif.

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