The Reporter (Vacaville)

New White House offer adds $600 checks to COVID relief

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON >> The Trump administra­tion dove back into Capitol Hill’s confusing COVID-19 negotiatio­ns on Tuesday, offering a $916 billion package to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi that would send a $600 direct payment to most Americans.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin made the offer to Pelosi late Tuesday afternoon, he said in a statement. He offered few details, though House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy said it proposes the $600 direct payment for individual­s and $1,200 for couples, which is half the payment delivered by the March pandemic relief bill.

Mnuchin reached out to Pelosi after a call with top congressio­nal GOP leaders, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who remains at odds with Democratic leaders over COVID-19 relief.

McConnell had earlier proposed shelving a top Democratic priority — aid to state and local government­s — in exchange for dropping his own pet provision, a shield against lawsuits for COVID- related negligence. Democrats angrily rejected the idea, saying McConnell was underminin­g the efforts of a bipartisan group of Senate negotiator­s and reneging on earlier statements that state and local aid would likely have to be an element of a CO

VID-19 relief agreement given Democratic control of the House.

Top Republican­s dislike the direct payments, saying they are costly and send too much aid to people who do not need it. Democrats generally embrace the idea.

“Right now we’re targeting struggling families, failing businesses, health care workers and we don’t have a stimulus check to every single person, regardless of need,” said Sen. Susan Collins, RMaine, who is a leader of a bipartisan group pressing for a $908 billion pact.

T he $916 billion Mnuchin offer, the separate ongoing talks among key rank-and-file senators, and the shifting demands by the White House all add up to muddled, confusing prospects for a long- delayed COVID-19 aid package. The pressure to deliver is intense — all sides say failure isn’t an option.

The group of moderates, led by Democrat Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Collins are seeking to rally lawmakers in both parties behind the $908 billion framework. It is more generous than a GOP plan that’s been filibuster­ed twice already but far smaller than a wish list assembled by House Democrats.

McConnell said Congress will not adjourn without prov iding the long- overdue COVID-19 relief. He had previously said he would not put any pandemic relief bill on the

floor that does not include the liability shield, which is being sought by businesses, universiti­es, nonprofits, and others that are reopening during the pandemic.

“Leav ing here without a COVID relief package cannot happen,” McConnell said. “Why don’t we set aside the two obviously most contentiou­s issues. We know we’re going to be confronted with another request after the first of the year. We’ll live to fight those another day.”

Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer immediatel­y rejected the entreaty, saying the state and local relief is sought by many Republican­s, too, including some conservati­ves like Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Mitt Romney of Utah. Pelosi blasted McConnell’s offer as an attempt to undercut the bipartisan group whose framework she supports as a foundation for the negotiatio­ns.

Pelosi init ia l ly de - manded more than $900 billion for state and local government­s this spring, but the fiscal situation in the states hasn’t been as bad as feared and Democratic leaders could be willing to accept a $160 billion proposal by the moderate group.

Already, Capitol Hill leaders are moving a government shutdown deadline to the end of next week, but progress is slow and key decisions are yet to be made. The House has scheduled a vote on a one-week temporary government funding bill for Wednesday. Without the measure, the government would shut down this weekend.

Separately, Pelosi and Senate Appropriat­ions Commit tee Chairman Richard Shelby, R-Ala., spoke by phone on Monday to try to kick start talks on a separate $1.4 trillion government-wide spending bill. That measure is held up over issues like protection­s for the sage grouse, the Census and accounting maneuvers being employed by lawmakers to squeeze $12 billion more into the legislatio­n.

McConnell initially proposed a sweeping fiveyear liability shield, retroactiv­e to December 2019, to protect companies and organizati­ons from COVID-19- related lawsuits. Democrats, along with their allies in labor and civil rights groups, roundly dismissed that approach as a danger to workers. And there hasn’t been a wave of lawsuits.

Top Republican­s dislike the direct payments, saying they are costly and send too much aid to people who do not need it. Democrats generally embrace the idea.

 ?? GREG NASH — POOL ?? Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin answers questions during a House Financial Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Dashington on Dec. 2.
GREG NASH — POOL Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin answers questions during a House Financial Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Dashington on Dec. 2.

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