The Bakersfield Californian

Congress OKs $900B package, sending to Trump

- BY ANDREW TAYLOR

WASHINGTON — Congress passed a $900 billion pandemic relief package Monday night that would finally deliver long-sought cash to businesses and individual­s and resources to vaccinate a nation confrontin­g a frightenin­g surge in COVID-19 cases and deaths.

Lawmakers tacked on a $1.4 trillion catchall spending bill and thousands of pages of other end-of-session business in a massive bundle of bipartisan legislatio­n as Capitol Hill prepared to close the books on the year. The bill goes to President Donald Trump for his signature, which is expected in the coming days.

The relief package, unveiled Monday afternoon, sped through the House and Senate in a matter of hours. The Senate cleared the massive package by a 91-7 vote after the House approved the COVID-19 package by another lopsided vote, 359-53. The tallies were a bipartisan coda to months of partisansh­ip and politickin­g as lawmakers wrangled over the relief question, a logjam that broke after President-elect Joe Biden urged his party to accept a compromise with top Republican­s that is smaller than many Democrats would have liked.

The bill combines coronaviru­s-fighting funds with financial relief for individual­s and businesses. It would establish a temporary $300 per week supplement­al jobless benefit and a $600 direct stimulus payment to most Americans, along with a new round of subsidies for hardhit businesses, restaurant­s, and theaters and money for schools, health care providers and renters facing eviction.

The 5,593-page legislatio­n — by far the longest bill ever — came together Sunday after months of bat

tling, posturing and postelecti­on negotiatin­g that reined in a number of Democratic demands as the end of the congressio­nal session approached. Biden was eager for a deal to deliver long-awaited help to suffering people and a boost to the economy, even though it was less than half the size that Democrats wanted in the fall.

“This deal is not everything I want — not by a long shot,” said Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern, D-Mass., a longstandi­ng voice in the party’s oldschool liberal wing. “The choice before us is simple. It’s about whether we help families or not. It’s about whether we help small businesses and restaurant­s or not. It’s about whether we boost (food stamp) benefits and strengthen anti-hunger programs or not. And whether we help those dealing with a job loss or not. To me, this is not a tough call.”

The Senate, meanwhile, was also on track to pass a one-week stopgap spending bill to avert a partial government shutdown at midnight and give Trump time to sign the sweeping legislatio­n.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, a key negotiator, said on CNBC Monday morning that the direct payments would begin arriving in bank accounts next week.

Democrats promised more aid to come once Biden takes office, but Republican­s were signaling a wait-and-see approach.

The measure would fund the government through September, wrapping a year’s worth of action on annual spending bills into a single package that never saw Senate committee or floor debate.

The legislatio­n followed a tortured path. Democrats played hardball up until Election Day, amid accusation­s that they wanted to deny Trump a victory that might help him prevail. Democrats denied that, but their demands indeed became more realistic after Trump’s loss and as Biden made it clear that half a loaf was better than none.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., took a victory lap after blocking far more ambitious legislatio­n from reaching the Senate floor.

“The president-elect suggesting that we needed to do something now was helpful in moving both Pelosi and Schumer into a better place,” McConnell told the AP.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN / AP ?? Dusk falls over the Capitol Monday in Washington.
JACQUELYN MARTIN / AP Dusk falls over the Capitol Monday in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States