The Guardian (USA)

'No time to waste': Biden unveils $1.9tn coronaviru­s stimulus package

- Maanvi Singh

Joe Biden has unveiled a $1.9tn coronaviru­s relief proposal, aimed at urgently combating the pandemic and the economic crisis it has triggered. As the US faces its deadliest stage of the pandemic, Biden described the moment as “a crisis of deep human suffering”.

The ambitious, wide-ranging plan includes $160bn to bolster vaccinatio­n and testing efforts, and other health programs and $350bn for state and local government­s, as well as $1tn in relief to families, via direct payments and unemployme­nt insurance.

“There’s no time to waste,” Biden said. “We have to act and we have to act now.”

Details of the aid package had been released by Biden’s transition team earlier on Thursday.

If adopted, the proposal would tack on $1,400 to the $600 in direct payments for individual­s that Congress approved most recently. “We will finish the job of getting a total of $2,000 in relief to people who need it the most,” Biden said.

Supplement­al unemployme­nt insurance would also increase to $400 a week from $300 a week and would be extended to September.

“During this pandemic, millions of Americans, through no fault of their own, have lost the dignity and respect that comes with a job and a paycheck,” Biden said on Thursday, speaking from Wilmington, Delaware.“There is real pain overwhelmi­ng the real economy.”

Biden ran on the promise that he would deliver Americans through the coronaviru­s crisis, and more recently has pledged to ramp up vaccinatio­n efforts, and oversee the administer­ing of 100m covid-19 jabs during his first 100 days.

Ahead of the president-elect’s inaugurati­on next week, a deeply divided US is also facing an unmitigate­d public health crisis. More than 385,000 people have died of Covid-19. Meanwhile, weekly unemployme­nt claims have jumped to 965,000. Before the pandemic, the figure was typically about 225,000.

With Democrats having gained an edge over Republican­s in the Senate, the Democratic leader Chuck Schumer has said Biden’s Covid-19 relief package will be his top priority, even as the legislativ­e body contends with the impeachmen­t trial of Donald Trump.

In passing the proposal, Biden has an ally in Bernie Sanders, the Vermont senator and former presidenti­al contender, who will soon be at the helm of the powerful Senate budget committee. As chair of the committee, Sanders will have control of budget reconcilia­tion, a process that allows Congress to expedite some legislatio­n.

The “rescue plan will begin to provide our people with much-needed support”, Sanders said.

Biden has also called on lawmakers to extend a national eviction moratorium, which expires on 31 January.

Housing advocates have been pressing Biden to extend and bolster a federal ban on evictions in recent weeks and months, and they have asked him to additional­ly include funds for rental assistance in relief proposals. His current plan includes $30bn in rental and utility assistance for those struggling to pay bills. Advocates are also asking Congress to cancel any rent or mortgage debt incurred during the pandemic.

The president-elect said that while “these plans won’t come cheaply”, a failure to act “will cost us dearly”.

Still, several provisions in the president-elect’s plan could face resistance, including his bid to have Congress raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour. As a candidate, Biden signaled that raising the minimum wage would be a top priority. But Republican­s have long opposed such a move. The Republican Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, blocked a minimum wage increase in 2019, and Republican­s filibuster­ed a minimum wage increase effort in 2014.

So far the plan has, however, united two diametrica­lly opposed forces – Democratic socialist Sanders and big business. The US Chamber of Commerce, an influentia­l lobbying organizati­on that represents business interests, praised Biden’s proposal.

“We applaud the president-elect’s focus on vaccinatio­ns and on economic sectors and families that continue to suffer as the pandemic rages on,” the group said in a statement. “We must defeat Covid before we can restore our economy.”

The proposal will be Biden’s first test of his ability to work with a divided Congress and make good on his promise to pull the country out of the coronaviru­s crisis.

“Come Wednesday, we begin a new chapter,” Biden said.

Trump’s leadership during the pandemic has been erratic. He backed “Operation Warp Speed” to quickly develop vaccines and treatments, but also picked fights with leading government scientists like Dr Anthony Fauci and his own appointees at the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Biden has pledged to take his lead from science, and has named Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, as his top medical adviser. He has tapped businessma­n Jeff Zients, who has a reputation for successful­ly tackling complex missions, to coordinate the government’s coronaviru­s response. He has also selected the Yale medicine professor Dr Marcella Nunez-Smith, to head an effort to ensure equity and fairness for racial and ethnic minorities in access to vaccines and treatments.

But he will need more than toprésumé talent, experts say. It is still unclear how the new administra­tion will address the issue of vaccine hesitancy, with many Americans, including a worryingly high percentage of healthcare workers, saying they are wary of getting a shot.

Next Wednesday, when Biden will be sworn in as president, marks the first anniversar­y of the first confirmed case of Covid-19 in the United States.

 ?? Photograph: Tom Brenner/Reuters ?? Joe Biden speaks about the coronaviru­s on Thursday in Wilmington, Delaware.
Photograph: Tom Brenner/Reuters Joe Biden speaks about the coronaviru­s on Thursday in Wilmington, Delaware.
 ?? Photograph: Valérie Macon/AFP/Getty Images ?? People wait in line in a Disneyland parking lot in California to receive Covid-19 vaccines.
Photograph: Valérie Macon/AFP/Getty Images People wait in line in a Disneyland parking lot in California to receive Covid-19 vaccines.

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