Houston Chronicle

Congressio­nal Republican­s balk at Biden’s $1.9T relief plan

- By Jeff Stein and Erica Werner

WASHINGTON — A growing number of congressio­nal Republican­s are expressing opposition to President-elect Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion economic relief proposal, complicati­ng the incoming administra­tion’s push to quickly inject additional aid into the ailing U.S. economy.

Congressio­nal Republican lawmakers and aides on Friday predicted widespread GOP opposition to the plan Biden unveiled the day before, particular­ly over its provisions to raise the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour and provide $350 billion in state and local aid. Senior Republican­s such as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., had not yet commented on the measure by Friday afternoon.

Democrats will have a narrow Senate majority and could attempt to pass a relief package without any Republican votes. But doing so would require a parliament­ary Senate procedure that could take time and require Biden to jettison key parts of his proposal, such as the increase in the minimum wage. Approving a relief package solely with Democratic votes would also fly against Biden’s repeated campaign pledges to unify lawmakers and cut bipartisan deals across party lines.

Biden officials this week made early overtures to the centrist congressio­nal Republican­s in the bipartisan group that broke the logjam over stimulus spending in December, according to three people granted anonymity to share details of private conversati­ons. That group included Sens. Mitt Romney, R-Utah; Bill Cassidy, R-La.; and Susan Collins, RMaine, among others. Major concession­s to this group could spur a backlash from liberal senators, however.

Multiple congressio­nal Republican­s

from Sen. Patrick Toomey, R-Pa., to Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, the top Republican on the House Ways and Means Committee, publicly panned Biden’s proposal Friday as a nonstarter, although the typically GOP-friendly U.S. Chamber of Commerce issued a positive statement about the plan. Biden would need at least 10 Republican senators to pass the measure through “regular order,” the typical path for approving legislatio­n in the Senate.

Biden’s current proposal appeared very unlikely to command that much support in a GOP caucus already uncomforta­ble with the more than $4 trillion already spent by the U.S. in response to the pandemic, said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the American Action Forum, a right-leaning policy group, citing conversati­ons with numerous congressio­nal Republican offices.

Democrats are likely to accuse Republican­s of hypocrisy if they resist higher spending in response to the pandemic. The national debt increased by almost $7.8 trillion during President Donald Trump’s tenure, rising to levels unseen since World War II, partly because of the GOP’s $1.5 trillion unpaid-for tax cut bill.

“We have to get serious about how we’re spending taxpayer dollars,” Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., said in a statement. “We cannot simply throw massive spending at this with no accountabi­lity to the current and future American taxpayer.”

With the pandemic surging and the economy shedding jobs, Democrats have signaled that they are prepared to pass legislatio­n without Republican votes. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., the incoming chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, has said he wants to move aggressive­ly to pass a bill via the budget process known as “reconcilia­tion,” which requires only a majority vote in the Senate. Some budget experts say that an increase in the minimum wage would be rejected by Senate parliament­arians if attempted through reconcilia­tion.

Moving legislatio­n without Republican votes would present its own challenges given divisions among Democrats and the party’s narrow majorities in both chambers. The Senate will be divided 50-50 between Republican­s and Democrats in the new Congress, with Democrats in the majority only because Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will be in the position to cast tie-breaking votes once Biden is inaugurate­d Jan. 20.

That means any individual Democratic senator could hold up the legislatio­n with any number of demands.

The proposal includes multiple provisions to speed vaccine production, increase testing, help schools reopen and send direct relief to individual­s, communitie­s and businesses.

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