Yuma Sun

Pelosi: Americans ‘worth it’ on $3T virus aid

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WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday defended the stunning $3 trillion price tag on Democrats’ pandemic relief package as what is needed to confront the “villainous virus” and economic collapse.

“The American people are worth it,” Pelosi told The Associated Press.

In an interview with the AP, Pelosi acknowledg­ed that the proposal is a starting point in negotiatio­ns with President Donald Trump and Republican­s, who have flatly rejected the coronaviru­s relief bill headed for a House vote Friday.

“DOA,” Trump said during an event at the White House. “Dead on arrival.”

As wary Americans wait on Washington, the stakes are enormous for all sides. The virus outbreak threatens the health and economic security of Americans, posing a generation­al test of political leadership on par with the Great Depression. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned Wednesday that without interventi­on, the U.S. risks a prolonged recession.

House lawmakers are set to return to Washington for Friday’s vote, but prospects are dim in the Senate, where leaders say they won’t consider another relief package until June.

Trump has insisted any future coronaviru­s aid “must prioritize Americans’ health and the nation’s economic prosperity,” said White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany in a tweet. She called the Democrats’ proposal “unserious.”

The bill provides nearly $1 trillion to states and cities to avert layoffs of police, firefighte­rs and other essential workers as tax revenues tank during the shutdown. It boosts another round of $1,200 direct cash payments to Americans, extends unemployme­nt benefits and launches a rent and mortgage relief fund. It provides $75 billion for more virus testing.

As the pandemic rages, Pelosi had just one message for Trump: “Tell the truth.”

“This is the biggest disaster that our country has ever faced,” Pelosi said.

“The president calls it a war — we’re all warriors, that people are dying in the war. No, these are family, and people are dying in the family,” she said.

“We have to address in a big way,” she said. “The American people are worth it.”

The speaker and the president don’t talk much anymore. But Pelosi remains in contact with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who led negotiatio­ns on past virus aid packages, and expects to begin talks with him on the next bill from Congress.

With Congress still partly shuttered, lawmakers face life-and-death decisions ahead. They are weighing whether it is safe for communitie­s to reopen during the pandemic, perhaps with new restrictio­ns on businesses and gatherings, or whether it is better to stay hunkered down until the U.S. can ramp up testing and prevent a second wave of COVID-19 cases, with deaths now beyond 83,000.

The president says the country can’t stay closed indefinite­ly. But Pelosi warned that schools, businesses and large gatherings, including the Democrats’ presidenti­al nominating convention, will not be business as usual.

“You just can’t say because people want to go to work, we should just take every risk,” she said. “In order to turn the economy around, we have to get rid of the pandemic.”

The virus outbreak is rewriting the rules of the fall elections, and Pelosi acknowledg­ed that voter turnout will be key as Democrats push alternativ­es to in-person ballots.

As the party’s presumptiv­e presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden shelters at home, campaignin­g via video from his basement, Pelosi said he’s doing “just fine” in the new normal of an election year.

“It’s not as if he’s missing a big crowd someplace,” she said.

“We’re in a whole new world, and I think he’s doing just fine,” she said.

She expects Democrats will retain control of the House and flip the Senate — “which I very much think we can do.”

Pelosi is often seen as the de facto leader of the Democratic Party, the highestran­king elected official, setting the agenda and message. But now she says of Biden: “He is the leader of the Democratic Party.”

As Republican­s on Capitol Hill join the Trump administra­tion to investigat­e China’s role in the virus outbreak, she calls it a “diversion” from the more immediate problems of stemming the health crisis and salvaging the U.S. economy.

“Yes, we want to know the source of this pandemic, but let’s focus on why we are not testing, how we can help people,” she said.

Pelosi, 80, shows up for work most days, masked in a scarf at the U.S. Capitol, and said she is reminded that “life is fragile.”

She repeatedly washes her hands and covers herself to protect others, she said.

“Let’s take it one giant step at a time as we go forward because what we’ve been doing before has been helpful but not enough,” she said, noting that some House Democrats wanted an even bigger bill.

She said that she has been “dismayed, frankly,” by the way Trump is encouragin­g people to avoid the stayhome guidelines but that she “can’t dwell” on the president’s leadership.

“I mean, injecting Lysol, ‘magically go away,’ ‘hoax,’” she said, repeating some of Trump’s comments on the coronaviru­s.

“I believe in miracles. I believe in prayer. But again, we have to pray — and work — for the solutions to it all,” she said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? HOUSE SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI Wednesday. of Calif., speaks during an interview with The Associated Press on Capitol Hill in Washington on
ASSOCIATED PRESS HOUSE SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI Wednesday. of Calif., speaks during an interview with The Associated Press on Capitol Hill in Washington on

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