Hartford Courant

GOP suggests ‘targeted’ virus aid

Dems insist $500B Senate measure not enough in pandemic

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Tuesday that the Senate would vote on a trimmed-down Republican coronaviru­s relief package, though it has a slim chance of passage in the face of Democrats’ insistence for more sweeping aid.

The Kentucky Republican released the approximat­ely $500 billion measure as senators returned to Washington for an abbreviate­d preelectio­n session, as hopes are dimming for another coronaviru­s relief bill — or much else.

Republican­s struggling to retain their Senate majority this fall have been divided, with some GOP-senators in close races anxious to respond further to the pandemic, even as conservati­ves are tiring of all the spending and passing legislatio­n in concert with liberal House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

McConnell called the package “a targeted proposal that focuses on several of the most urgent aspects of this crisis, the issues where bipartisan­ship should be especially possible.” They included school aid, new money for vaccines and testing, and a second round of the popular Paycheck Protection Program for smaller businesses.

Democrats are demanding a far larger bill, including hundreds of billions of dollars for state and local government­s, more generous jobless benefits, and help for renters and homeowners, along with other provisions in the House Democrats’ $3.5 billion relief bill that passed in May.

Republican senators such as Susan Collins of Maine are eager to show constituen­ts they are continuing to work to ease the pandemic’s disastrous impact on jobs, businesses and health. But many Senate Republican­s are resisting more spending and the scaled-back bill is roughly half the size of a measure McConnell

unveiled earlier this summer.

McConnell’s move Tuesday would clear the way for a Thursday test vote in which Democrats are sure to block the legislatio­n.

Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said the bill “doesn’t come close to addressing the problems and is headed nowhere.”

McConnell’s bill would provide $105 billion to help schools reopen, enact a shield against lawsuits for businesses and others that are powering ahead to reopen, create a scaled-back $300-per-week supplement­al jobless benefit, and write off $10 billion in earlier debt at the U.S. Postal Service.

There’s also $31 billion for a coronaviru­s vaccine, $16 billion for virus testing and$15 billion to help child care providers reopen. There is additional­ly $20 billion for farmers.

The package will also include a school choice initiative sought by Texas GOPSen. Ted Cruz and others that would provide a tax break, for two years, for people who donate to nonprofit organizati­ons offering private school scholarshi­ps.

It would also provide for a $258 billion second round of paycheck protection subsidies.

But it won’t contain another round of $1,200 direct payments going out under President Donald Trump’s name. Pelosi continues to demand a package totaling $2.2 trillion, and while Trump’s negotiator­s have signaled a willingnes­s to inch further in her direction, a significan­t gap remains.

Talks between top Democrats and the Trump administra­tion broke offlast month and remain off track, with the bipartisan unity that drove almost $3 trillion in COVID-19 rescue legislatio­n into law this spring replaced by toxic partisansh­ip anda return to Washington dysfunctio­n.

Expectatio­ns in July and August that a fifth bipartisan pandemic response

bill would eventually be birthed despite increased obstacles has been replaced by genuine pessimism. Recent COVID-related conversati­ons among key players have led to nothing.

Democrats seem secure in their political position, with President DonaldTrum­p and several Senate GOP incumbents lagging in the polls. Trump is seeking to sideline the pandemic as a campaign issue, and Republican­s aren’t interested in a deal on Democratic terms — even as needs like school aid enjoy widespread support.

Poisonous relationsh­ips among key leaders like Pelosi and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows give little reason for confidence about overcoming obstacles on the cost, scope and details of a potential relief bill. Pelosi recently referred to Meadows as “whatever his name is,” while the Meadows-run White House during a press briefing ran a video loop of Pelosi’s controvers­ial visit to a San Francisco hair salon.

The relationsh­ip between Pelosi and her preferred negotiatin­g partner, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, is civil but isn’t generating much in the way of results, other than a promise to avoid a government shutdown at the end of the month by keeping a government-wide temporary spending bill free of controvers­y. That measure is likely to keep the government running into December. It’s likely to contain a bunch of lower-profile steps, such as an extension of the federal flood insurance program and a temporary reauthoriz­ation of spending from the highway trust fund.

But if talks continue to falter, there’s little to keep lawmakers in Washington long, particular­ly with the election fast approachin­g.

The Senate returned Tuesday to resume its diet of judicial and administra­tion nomination­s.

The House doesn’t come back until Sept. 14.

 ?? SCOTTAPPLE­WHITE ?? In this Aug. 3, 2020, file photo dark clouds and heavy rain sweep over the U.S. Capitol in Washington. At least a government shutdown is off the table. But as lawmakers straggle back to Washington for an abbreviate­d pre-election session, hopes are fading for a pandemic relief bill, or much else. AP Photo/J.
SCOTTAPPLE­WHITE In this Aug. 3, 2020, file photo dark clouds and heavy rain sweep over the U.S. Capitol in Washington. At least a government shutdown is off the table. But as lawmakers straggle back to Washington for an abbreviate­d pre-election session, hopes are fading for a pandemic relief bill, or much else. AP Photo/J.

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