The Sentinel-Record

CONGRESS: Progress slow on virus relief bill as negotiatio­ns continue

- ANDREW TAYLOR

WASHINGTON — Negotiator­s on a huge coronaviru­s relief bill reported slight progress after talks resumed Monday afternoon in the Capitol, with issues like food for the poor and aid to schools struggling to reopen safely assuming a higher profile in the talks.

Multiple obstacles remain, including an impasse so far on extending a $600-per-week pandemic jobless benefit, funding for the Postal Service, and aid to renters facing eviction. Democratic negotiator­s spoke of progress at almost the very moment that top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell was slamming them for taking a hard line in the talks.

All sides predict a long slog ahead. Several more days of talks are expected, if not more, as lawmakers seek to deliver what will likely be the final legislativ­e response to the pandemic before the November election.

“We are really getting an understand­ing of each side’s position. And we’re making some progress on certain issues moving closer together,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. “There are a lot of issues that are still outstandin­g. But I think there is a desire to get something done as soon as we can.”

After the meeting, Pelosi told her Democratic colleagues on a call that she’s hopeful a deal could be reached this week, but doesn’t know if it’s possible, according to a Democratic aide who was granted anonymity to describe the private discussion.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, a lead negotiator for President Donald Trump, said afterward that “we continue to make a little bit of progress” and that the administra­tion is not insistent on a small-bore approach centered on extending the supplement­al unemployme­nt benefit and leaving other items for later. A GOP move to advance a slimmed-down relief package has been a recent point of conflict, with Democrats insisting there must be a comprehens­ive deal.

“We’re open to a bigger package if we can reach an agreement,” Mnuchin said.

On the Senate floor, McConnell, R-Ky., re-upped his complaint that Democrats are taking too tough a line. McConnell is not a direct participan­t in the talks but is likely to be an important force in closing out any potential agreement.

“The Speaker of the House and the Democratic Leader are continuing to say ‘our way or the highway’ with a massive wish list for left-wing lobbyists that was slapped together a few weeks ago called a coronaviru­s bill,” McConnell said.

Speaking to reporters after the twohour session, Democratic negotiator­s pressed the case for additional food aid, funding for the Postal Service, and the $600-per-week jobless benefit that lapsed last week. The benefit has helped prop up the economy and family budgets as the coronaviru­s has wrought havoc.

The White House is seeking opportunit­ies to boost Trump, like providing another round of $1,200 stimulus payments and extending the supplement­al jobless benefit and partial eviction ban. Pelosi appears intent on an agreement as well, but she’s made it clear she needs big money for state and local government­s, unemployme­nt benefits and food aid.

“It was productive, we’re moving down the track. We still have our difference­s, we are trying to have a clearer understand­ing of what the needs are, and the needs are that millions of children in our country are food insecure,” Pelosi said. “Millions of people in our country are concerned about being evicted. Tens of millions of people are on unemployme­nt insurance.”

Most members of the Democratic-controlled House have left Washington and won’t return until there is an agreement to vote on, but the GOP-held Senate is trapped in the capital. Several senators said Monday evening that they expect the process to drag into next week, when they are scheduled to leave for the August recess.

“I can’t see how we can go home and tell people we’ve failed, so I think

that’s going to be a lot of pressure on everybody to come up with something,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas. “It really is a matter of will. It’s not a matter of substance at this point. This is just a painful period between people finally deciding OK, we want a deal, and then what that deal will ultimately look like.”

Areas of agreement already include the $1,200 direct payment and changes to the Paycheck Protection Program to permit especially hard-hit businesses to obtain another loan under generous forgivenes­s terms.

But the terms and structure of the unemployme­nt benefit have remained a sticking point, along with the money for state and local government­s. Democrats want almost $1 trillion for localities grappling with pandemic-related revenue losses.

Speaking to reporters Monday evening, Trump made clear the two sides were still far apart on that issue.

“They want to bail out cities and states that have been in trouble for years of bad management,” Trump said. “In all cases Democrat-run cities, and we don’t think that’s fair.”

On unemployme­nt, Pelosi said she’d consider reducing the $600 benefit for people in states with lower unemployme­nt rates. Republican­s want to cut the benefit to encourage beneficiar­ies to return to work and say it is bad policy since it pays many jobless people more money than they made at their previous jobs.

Another sticking point is that Republican­s want to give more school aid to systems that are restarting with in-school learning, even as Dr. Deborah Birx, Trump’s top coronaviru­s adviser, cautioned that schools in areas with spikes in cases should delay reopening.

Pelosi said Monday’s talks featured extensive discussion on reopening schools. Schumer said the discussion got into the details on the dollar figures involving school aid and food aid.

The House passed a $3.5 trillion measure in May, but Republican­s controllin­g the Senate have demanded a slower approach, saying it was necessary to take a “pause” before passing additional legislatio­n.

Since they announced that strategy, however, coronaviru­s caseloads have spiked and the economy has absorbed an enormous blow.

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 ?? The Associated Press ?? SPEAKER: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., left, speaks as she stands next to Senate Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of N.Y., right, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday. Schumer and Pelosi met earlier with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows as they continue to negotiate a coronaviru­s relief package.
The Associated Press SPEAKER: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., left, speaks as she stands next to Senate Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of N.Y., right, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday. Schumer and Pelosi met earlier with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows as they continue to negotiate a coronaviru­s relief package.

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