The Sentinel-Record

Mnuchin, Schumer rev up talks as small business aid runs dry

- ANDREW TAYLOR

WASHINGTON — With a key coronaviru­s rescue fund nearly exhausted, negotiatio­ns are accelerati­ng in Washington over President Donald Trump’s $250 billion emergency request to help smaller employers across the country keep workers on their payroll.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin spoke Wednesday morning about legislatio­n to shore up a paycheck subsidy program that has nearly reached its $349 billion lending limit. House and Senate aides were set to meet with Treasury officials later in the day.

Reaching a deal won’t be easy. The Capitol is largely shuttered, requiring consensus from all sides for any legislatio­n to pass, and top GOP leaders are vowing to stick closely to Trump’s request despite Democratic demands. Long-standing feuds and rivalries hang over the talks, including a toxic relationsh­ip between House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Trump.

But the unpreceden­ted legislativ­e environmen­t gives Democrats considerab­le influence, even if their funding requests for hospitals and state and local government­s may have to be scaled back significan­tly or dropped, at least for now. Democrats blocked a fast-track bid to pass the funding last week, and Republican­s in turn stymied their efforts for additional funding for other priorities in a brief debate that was mostly a messaging exercise.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., had no comment, according to spokesman David Popp. The Senate is away from Washington through May 4, though it convenes twice each week for pro forma sessions that could be used to pass more coronaviru­s aid — though only if no senator objects.

With leaders unable to readily summon lawmakers to Washington, the usual power dynamics are scrambled, especially in the House. There, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., for example, can stymie legislatio­n more easily than if members are present, and Pelosi, D-Calif., cannot rule the House with her typical tight grip.

“Tell Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi to STOP blocking critical funding for small businesses. The Paycheck Protection Program is about to run out of money — millions of jobs are hanging in the balance. Congress MUST ACT!” McCarthy wrote Tuesday on Twitter.

At issue is a $350 billion paycheck protection program that’s a centerpiec­e of last month’s $2.2 trillion rescue bill. The program gives grants to businesses with fewer than 500 workers so that they can maintain payroll and pay rent while shutting down their businesses during social distancing edicts.

The program is quickly running dry after being open for only a matter of days, though it’s unclear how much money has actually been distribute­d to businesses. Mnuchin says an additional $250 billion is needed immediatel­y.

But Democrats want money for hospitals burdened under COVID-19 caseloads and additional funding for states and local government­s straining as the economy slides into recession.

Democrats also want to make sure the paycheck protection program is opened up more to businesses that don’t have establishe­d relationsh­ips with banks that have been accepting applicatio­ns for rescue funding.

“We cannot allow the billions, hundreds of billions of dollars being spent to fight the horror of the coronaviru­s and the impact on our economy to further hard

en the disparity of the lack of access to credit for so many in the small business community,” Pelosi said Wednesday afternoon on CNN. She also reiterated demands for “desperate state and local government­s” and hospitals.

Pelosi is pressing to add money to be distribute­d by community developmen­t financial institutio­ns, which are small, nontraditi­onal lenders that focus on making loans in underdevel­oped and underserve­d neighborho­ods, typically communitie­s with larger minority population­s.

The outlook for the legislatio­n is unclear at best, and negotiator­s may not be able to meet a potential deadline of Thursday afternoon’s pro forma session.

Eventually, the need for consensus seems likely to result in a relatively limited package.

“I don’t see big new issues being put in the mix here,” said Steve Elmendorf, a veteran Democratic lobbyist.

“It’s a matter of adding money to things they’ve already done so long as the amounts aren’t out of whack with reality,” said Hazen Marshall, a former GOP leadership aide who lobbies Congress. “They can probably thread this needle if they can just keep it to money.”

Where the negotiatio­n heads isn’t clear, but Republican­s are increasing­ly agitating to help rural hospitals, while Democrats are also keen to boost aid to cash-strapped states and local government­s whose revenues have cratered. Aiding the states may be a stretch for now, however, as the issue can easily provoke fights between large, high-tax states like California and New York and smaller states more typically run by Republican­s.

Senate Democrats are already eyeing the next coronaviru­s bill, proposing that it include $30 billion for a comprehens­ive federal plan to ramp up testing and its supply chain for diagnostic materials, as well as the ability to trace the spread of COVID-19.

Greater access to testing is a key element to have in place in order to reopen the economy, as Trump is itching to do. The proposal envisions emergency money to quickly scale up testing and develop a pipeline to ensure an adequate supply of material.

“We need testing to be fast, free, and everywhere,” said Schumer, D-N.Y.

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