The Herald on Sunday

Delight for Joe Biden after relief bill is finally approved

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THE US house of representa­tives has approved a $1.9 trillion (£1.36 billion) pandemic relief bill in a triumph for new president Joe Biden.

The move came as top Democrats tried to assure progressiv­es in the party that they would revive a derailed attempt to boost the minimum wage in America.

Biden’s vision to provide cash to individual­s, businesses, states and cities battered by Covid-19 passed on a 219-212 vote along party lines.

The legislatio­n will now go before the senate, where Democrats seem intent on resuscitat­ing their minimum wage push. Meanwhile, disputes could erupt over state aid and other issues.

Democrats said the faltering economy and the loss of half-amillion American lives demands quick, decisive action.

They say Republican legislator­s are out of step with a public that largely views the bill favourably, according to polls.

California Democrat Maxine Waters said: “I am a happy camper tonight.

“This is what America needs. Republican­s, you ought to be a part of this. But if you’re not, we’re going without you.”

Republican­s said the bill is too expensive and but not enough is allocated to reopen schools.

They said the measure was laden with gifts to Democratic interests such as labour unions, and funnelled money to Democratic-run states they suggested did not need the money because their budgets had bounced back.

House minority leader Kevin McCarthy said: “To my colleagues who say this bill is bold, I say it’s bloated. To those who say it’s urgent, I say it’s unfocused. To those who say it’s popular, I say it is entirely partisan.”

That divide is making the fight a showdown over which party voters will reward for heaping more federal spending on combating the coronaviru­s and reviving the economy, on top of the $4 trillion (£2.8 trillion) approved last year.

The battle is also emerging as an early test of Biden’s ability to hold together his party’s fragile congressio­nal majorities – just 10 votes in the house, with an evenly divided senate.

At the same time, Democrats are trying to calculate how to assuage progressiv­es who lost their top priority in a jarring senate setback last week.

That chamber’s nonpartisa­n parliament­arian, Elizabeth MacDonough, said senate rules require a federal minimum wage increase would have to be dropped from the Covid bill, leaving the proposal fragile.

The measure would gradually lift that minimum to $15 (£10.75) per hour by 2025, doubling the current $7.25 (£5.20) floor which has been in effect since 2009.

Hoping to revive that effort in some form, senate majority leader Chuck Schumer is considerin­g adding a provision to the senate version of the Covid-19 relief bill that would penalise large companies which do not pay workers at least $15 an hour.

That was in line with ideas floated by senators Bernie Sanders and Ron Wyden to boost taxes on corporatio­ns which do not hit certain minimum wage targets.

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