The Denver Post

Dems to “act big” on $1.9T aid; GOP wants plan split

- By Lisa Mascaro and Josh Boak

WASHINGTON» Democrats in Congress and the White House rejected a Republican pitch to split President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion COVID-19 rescue plan into smaller portions Thursday, with lawmakers appearing primed to muscle the sweeping economic and virus aid forward without GOP help.

Despite Biden’s calls for unity, Democrats said the stubbornly high unemployme­nt numbers and battered U.S. economy leave them unwilling to waste time courting Republican support that might not materializ­e.

They also don’t want to curb the size and scope of a package that they say will provide desperatel­y needed money to distribute the vaccine, reopen schools and send cash to American households and businesses.

Biden has been appealing directly to Republican and Democratic lawmakers while signaling his priority to press ahead.

“We’ve got a lot to do, and the first thing we’ve got to do is get this COVID package passed,” Biden said Thursday in the Oval Office.

The standoff over Biden’s first legislativ­e priority is turning the new rescue plan into a political test — of his new administra­tion, of Democratic control of

Congress and of the role of Republican­s in a post-Trump political landscape.

Success would give Biden a signature accomplish­ment in his first 100 days in office, unleashing $400 billion to expand vaccinatio­ns and to reopen schools, $1,400 direct payments to households, and other priorities, including a gradual increase in the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour. Failure would be a highprofil­e setback.

Democrats in the House and Senate are operating as though they know they are on borrowed time. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi are laying the groundwork to start the goit-alone approach next week.

They are drafting a budget reconcilia­tion bill that would start the process to pass the relief package with a 51-vote Senate majority — rather than the 60-vote threshold typically needed in the Senate to advance legislatio­n. The goal would be passage by March, when jobless benefits, housing assistance and other aid is set to expire.

Schumer said he drew from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s advice to “act big” to weather the COVID-19 economic crisis.

“Everywhere you look, alarm bells are ringing,” Schumer said from the Senate floor. as soon as

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