The Denver Post

McConnell scheduling revote on GOP plan

- By Andrew Taylor

» Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday that he’s scheduling a procedural vote on a GOP COVID- 19 relief bill next week, pushing aid to hard- hit businesses in a smaller- bore approach to virus relief that Democrats say they won’t go for.

The Kentucky Republican says the first item of Senate business when the chamber returns next Monday will be a procedural vote on a scaled- back aid bill. Democrats filibuster­ed a GOPdrafted aid bill last month and recent talks on a larger deal between Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D- Calif., fell apart this past weekend, probably for good.

“Democrats have spent months blocking policies they do not even oppose. They say anything short of their multi- trillion- dollar wish list, jammed with nonCOVID- related demands, is ‘ piecemeal’ and not worth doing,” McConnell said in a statement. “And she has worked hard to ensure that nothing is what American families get.”

McConnell’s move appears unlikely to work. The COVID relief debate appears to have gone back to a phase in which the participan­ts have largely given up and are devoting time and effort to political positionin­g ahead of the election rather than negotiatio­ns and compromise.

President Donald Trump continues to agitate for “stimulus,” saying that Capitol Hill Republican­s should “go big” rather than the limited approach they’ve been advocating.

Opinion polls show that additional coronaviru­s relief is a higher priority for most voters than quickly approving Trump’s nomination of Appeals Court Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court. While many Republican­s take a skeptical view of the need for more virus relief such as special unemployme­nt benefits or direct payments to most taxpayers, some GOP senators in difficult reelection races are eager for more aid.

Under Senate rules, McConnell can call for a revote on the September legislatio­n, which was filibuster­ed by Democrats as insufficie­nt. It also doesn’t satisfy Trump, in part because it did not provide for another round of $ 1,200 direct payments that would go out under his name.

McConnell could also modify the earlier GOP bill.

Pelosi issued a statement again criticizin­g Trump for caring chiefly about the direct payments.

“A fly on the wall or wherever else it might land in the Oval Office tells me that the president only wants his name on a check to go out before Election Day and for the market to go up,” Pelosi said in a letter to her colleagues.

She defended her hardline position on a Tuesday conference call with fellow Democrats, claiming Democrats have more leverage than ever. But the risk of emerging empty- handed until next year appears very real. Talks on the latest potential round of COVID relief began in July, collapsed in August, and were revived last month. Last week alone saw Trump cause the talks to collapse Tuesday, only to revive them heading into the weekend. They then cratered again Saturday after Trump’s latest $ 1.8 trillion proposal took heavy fire from both Democrats and Trump’s GOP allies.

Republican­s are back to offering smaller, targeted aid that would permit endangered party members to again go on record in favor of aid, even if it’s a nonstarter with Democrats and opposed by Trump.

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