The Day

Pelosi, Mnuchin agree to avoid October government shutdown

- By ERIK WASSON, LAURA LITVAN and BILLY HOUSE

Washington — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin have agreed to work to avoid a government shutdown right before the election, and not let the stalemate over virus-relief legislatio­n hold up a vital stopgap spending bill.

Their informal agreement was made in a Tuesday phone call, according to people familiar with the discussion. While clearing the way for the government to keep running at the Oct. 1 start of the fiscal year, it doesn’t resolve the standoff over a new stimulus or whether some relief measures might be included.

Republican­s and Democrats in Congress, seeking to avert a politicall­y damaging government shutdown just before the Nov. 3 election, had been planning a bill to extend funding at least until mid-November. There was a risk, however, that either side would try to leverage the need to pass such a stopgap to achieve their goals for an economic stimulus.

The agreement was reported earlier Thursday by The Associated Press.

“House Democrats are for a clean continuing resolution,” said Drew Hammill, Pelosi’s spokesman, referring to the temporary funding measure.

Congressio­nal Democrats and the Trump administra­tion have been at an impasse over stimulus since talks broke off on Aug. 7. The sides are about $1 trillion apart, with Democrats pushing for $915 billion in aid to states and localities and insisting on $600-per-week federal supplement­al unemployme­nt benefits.

During the Tuesday call, Mnuchin and Pelosi weren’t able to bridge that gap — even after the Treasury chief had signaled fiscal aid was urgent for parts of the U.S. economy. Pelosi later pointed out that Democrats had already pared their earlier $3.4 trillion demand down to $2.2 trillion.

The continuing impasse has led to pessimism this week from Republican­s.

“I don’t know if there will be another package in the next few weeks or not,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said at an event at a hospital in his home state of Kentucky on Wednesday. He said any embrace of bipartisan­ship in the Capitol has “descended” as the fall elections near.

Senate Republican­s are discussing holding a vote next week on a roughly $500 billion package, if they can get most of their lawmakers on board with it.

McConnell’s Democratic counterpar­t, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, in a letter to colleagues Thursday said Republican­s weren’t taking the economy’s needs seriously in moving toward such a vote.

“Republican­s may call their proposal ‘skinny,’ but it would be more appropriat­e to call it ‘emaciated.’ Their proposal appears to be completely inadequate and, by every measure, fails to meet the needs of the American people,” Schumer said.

He referenced continuing high unemployme­nt, something seen in data released

Thursday. The number of initial claims for unemployme­nt insurance in state programs held above 800,000 in the latest week — unadjusted for seasonal variations — almost quadruple the pre-coronaviru­s trend. Today’s August employment report is forecast to show a second straight slowdown in job gains.

As for the Pelosi-Mnuchin accord, it could help to limit any financial-market turmoil spurred by worries over a shutdown twinned with the absence of stimulus. A runup in equities to record highs in recent weeks has reduced pressure that might otherwise have been brought to bear on politician­s for a deal on virus relief. Though a 3.5% tumble Thursday shows the narrative could shift in time.

Back in late 2018, a deadlock between Trump and Congress over border wall funding led to the longest shutdown in history, lasting 35 days.

“We do believe we’ll be able to get funding to avoid a shutdown,” White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said Thursday.

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