Call & Times

Senate revamps unemployme­nt benefits, rejects minimum wage increase

- By ERICA WERNER, JEFF STEIN and TONY ROMM

WASHINGTON — Democrats maneuvered franticall­y Friday to push President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus bill over the finish line in the Senate, agreeing to a last-minute change sought by moderates to keep federal unemployme­nt benefits at their current $300-per-week level instead of raising them to $400-perweek.

At the same time, the Senate was poised to defeat an attempt by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., to restore a $15 minimum wage to the bill, with Republican­s voting unanimousl­y against the provision and more than a half-dozen Democrats joining them.

The fast-moving developmen­ts came as the Senate launched into rancorous partisan debate on the overall relief measure, with Majority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., vowing to stay in session until they pass the massive legislatio­n as Republican­s threatened a cascade of amendments aimed at slowing if not stopping the bill.

“We need to get this done. It would be so much better if we could in a bipartisan way, but we need to get it done,” Schumer said. “We’re not going to make the same mistake we made after the last economic downturn, when Congress did too little to help the nation rebound . . . we’re not going to be timid in the face of big challenges.”

Following Schumer on the Senate floor, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., lambasted Democrats for using a partisan procedure to rush through the giant legislatio­n after Biden campaigned on promises to unify the nation – but conceded there was little Republican­s could do to stop it.

“In this supposed new era of healing leadership we’re about to watch one party ram through a partisan package on the thinnest of margins,” McConnell said. “Go figure.”

Senate Democratic leaders were still tinkering with the legislatio­n Friday morning to lock down support from wavering moderate Democrats. One final change involved $300 weekly federal unemployme­nt payments that Biden proposed to increase to $400-per-week and extend through August. An amendment to be offered by Sen. Thomas Carper, D-Del., would keep the unemployme­nt benefits at $300-per-week but

extend them through September, and also provide tax forgivenes­s for the benefits as a way to avert a surprise yearend tax shock facing millions of American families.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki praised the new compromise on unemployme­nt insurance.

“The president believes it is critical to extend expanded unemployme­nt benefits through the end of September to help Americans who are struggling,” Psaki wrote on Twitter. “The compromise amendment achieves that while helping to address the surprise tax bills that many are facing by eliminatin­g the first $10,200 of UI benefits from taxation for 2020. Combined, this amendment would provide more relief to the unemployed than the current legislatio­n.”

Multiple moderate Senate Democrats, including Sen. Joe Manchin III, W.Va. – a key swing vote – had expressed unease about increasing the weekly unemployme­nt benefits, with Manchin expressing concerns it could keep people from rejoining the workforce at a moment when the economy is struggling to recover.

Friday’s debate kicked off after Sen. Ron Johnson, R.Wis., forced Senate clerks to read the entire 628-bill aloud, a process that took almost 11 hours and concluded around 2:05 a.m. That came after the Senate voted 51 to 50 on party lines Thursday afternoon to open debate, with Vice President Kamala Harris breaking the tie. The partisan vote to start debate was a likely sign of the final outcome, although Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said she was still examining the bill after Democrats made some last-minute changes that could help her state and others.

Even without any GOP support in the 50-50 Senate, Democrats appeared likely to hold together to pass Biden’s first major legislativ­e initiative after making concession­s to moderate Democrats. It will be one of the largest bills ever enacted in congressio­nal history, and its passage would stand as an early success for the new president, who has insisted it is necessary to stabilize the economic recovery and ensure the nation gets vaccinated.

In addition to extending emergency federal unemployme­nt benefits, the package would devote $400 billion to a new round of $1,400 stimulus payments; $130 billion for schools; and $350 billion for states, cities, tribal government­s and U.S. territorie­s; among other large measures, including significan­t public health funding for vaccine distributi­on and coronaviru­s testing.

The amendment debate promised to be hectic as well as consequent­ial for significan­t portions of the relief bill. Senators will have the opportunit­y to offer unlimited amendments through a series of roll-call votes - a procedure known as a “vote-a-rama” – that would allow any group of 51 senators to change the structure of the bill.

Senate Republican­s and some Democrats have prepared extensive lists of amendments to try to shape the bill as it speeds toward passage. Democrats have been united on the need to pass the legislatio­n ahead of a March 14 deadline when unemployme­nt benefits will expire for millions of Americans unless Congress acts first. After the bill passes the Senate it must go back to the House for final passage, which is expected early next week.

The first vote Friday came on Sanders’ effort to overcome a ruling by the Senate parliament­arian, who found last month that the minimum wage hike was not permissibl­e within the rules of budget reconcilia­tion, the procedure Democrats are using to pass the relief bill with a simple majority rather than the 60 votes normally required.

Sanders insisted in floor debate that the current $7.25 federal minimum wage, which hasn’t been raised in years, was insufficie­nt to provide a living wage to American workers. But Republican­s disagreed, and even some fellow Democrats declined to support him on a procedural vote aimed at restoring the $15 minimum wage to the bill.

Other controvers­ies loom in the amendment process.

“Republican­s have many ideas to improve the bill, many ideas, and we’re about to vote on all kinds of amendments in the hope that some of these ideas make it into the final product,” McConnell said.

Even before the late change on unemployme­nt benefits, Biden and Democratic leaders already had agreed to some other changes aimed at addressing concerns raised by moderate Democrats, including narrowing eligibilit­y for stimulus payments and earmarking some of the state and local funding for capital projects.

Congress passed a series of bills last year totaling some $4 trillion to fight the pandemic, including $900 billion in December, and Republican­s said that was more than enough.

The debate came as the U.S. economy saw encouragin­g news on Friday in a jobs report showing 379,000 jobs had been added in February. Still, unemployme­nt rate remained dramatical­ly elevated above pre-covid levels with more than 9 million Americans remaining jobless.

 ?? Washington Post photo by Salwan Georges ?? Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer appears at a news conference on Capitol Hill last month.
Washington Post photo by Salwan Georges Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer appears at a news conference on Capitol Hill last month.

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