Antelope Valley Press

Yellen pushes GOP senators on $1.9 trillion relief package

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Janet Yellen, President-elect Joe Biden’s choice as Treasury secretary, said Tuesday that the incoming administra­tion would focus on winning quick passage of its $1.9 trillion pandemic relief plan, rejecting Republican arguments that the measure is too big given the size of US budget deficits.

“More must be done,” Yellen told the Senate Finance Committee during her confirmati­on hearing. “Without further action, we risk a longer, more painful recession now — and long-term scarring of the economy later.”

Democrats voiced support for the Biden proposal while Republican­s questioned spending nearly $2 trillion more on top of nearly $3 trillion that Congress passed in various packages last year.

Republican­s questioned elements of the Biden proposal such as providing an additional $1,400 stimulus check to individual­s earning less than $75,000. They also objected to the inclusion of such long-term Democratic goals as boosting the minimum wage to $15 per hour.

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., said that the push for a higher minimum wage comes at a time when thousands of small businesses like restaurant­s have gone out of business, and that it would lead to more job losses.

Yellen said, however, that the increase in the minimum wage would help millions of frontline American workers who are risking their lives to keep their communitie­s functionin­g and often working two jobs to put food on the table. “They are struggling to get by and raising the minimum wage would help these workers,” she said.

Despite policy difference­s, Yellen, who would be the first woman to be Treasury secretary after being the first woman to be chair of the Federal Reserve, is expected to win quick Senate confirmati­on.

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