Hartford Courant (Sunday)

New jobs report shrinks GOP appetite for more virus aid

- By Andrew Taylor Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A stronger than expected jobs report could further scramble an uncertain picture for passing a fifth and possibly final coronaviru­s aid bill. The statistics are feeding the wait-and-see approach of the White House and its GOP allies in Congress.

Republican­s say the numbers vindicate their decision to pause and assess the almost $3 trillion in assistance already approved. The White House was already showing little urgency about pursing another trillion-dollar response bill, much less the $3.5 trillion measure passed by the House last month, and prefers to concentrat­e on reopening the economy.

The coming weeks are expected to bring difficult negotiatio­ns over what the package should contain, just months before an election where the White House and control of Congress are at stake.

Friday ’s jobs report showed a 2.5 million gain instead of an expected loss of millions more, complicati­ng prospects for the aid talks. Trump is difficult to gauge, but talks often of pursing public works spending and a payroll tax cut, which is a nonstarter on Capitol Hill.

“They are less than urgent, less than inclined for another package,” said Rep. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., a GOP leader when his party was in the majority. “There is less urgency to go strike a hard deal — and this one would be a hard deal.”

Top Democrats such as Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York are united behind the $3.5 trillion “HEROES Act,” which contains party priorities such as jobless aid, another round of $1,200 checks and money for essential workers, local schools, colleges and people missing mortgages and rent payments.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and other Republican­s are opposed to the Democratic plan. But they are struggling with their own divisions, with more pragmatic lawmakers favoring aid to states and local government­s and recognizin­g that additional jobless aid is inevitable if there is to be an agreement.

GOP Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah, Susan Collins of Maine and Cory Gardner of Colorado back a significan­t state aid package, and there’s strong support across Congress for help for smaller municipali­ties. But concerns about piling additional trillions of dollars onto the national debt have risen, and some Republican­s believe Congress has done enough.

What is plain is that the enormous sense of urgency that produced the first four aid bills has faded, along with the freewheeli­ng dynamic that inflated the price tags. That dynamic helped Democrats to win gains in the $2 trillion CARES Act in March.

“Unlike the CARES Act, where we really did need to act in a matter of days, here we have a little bit of luxury of time, but that time is not indefinite,” said Neil Bradley, chief policy officer at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Now, Republican­s have set a goal of keeping the cost of the next bill below $1 trillion. That’s going to be a hard sell for Pelosi, who devoted almost $1 trillion just to states and localities.

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