■ A weekend session appears likely for Congress over the COVID-19 economic relief package.
Snags on COVID relief package may force weekend sessions
WASHINGTON — It’s a hurry up and wait moment on Capitol Hill as congressional negotiators on a mustpass, almost $1 trillion COVID-19 economic relief package struggled through a handful of remaining snags on Thursday.
The holdups mean a weekend session now appears virtually certain, and a top lawmaker warned that a government shutdown this weekend can’t be ruled out.
All sides appeared hopeful that the wrangling wouldn’t derail the legislation. The central elements of a hard-fought compromise appeared in place: more than $300 billion in aid to businesses; a $300-per-week bonus federal jobless benefit and renewal of soon-to-expire state benefits; $600 direct payments to individuals; vaccine distribution funds and money for renters, schools, the Postal Service and people needing food aid.
A temporary funding bill runs out Friday at midnight and the Senate’s No. 2 Republican, Sen. John Thune, said if there isn’t a deal by then, some Republicans might block a temporary funding bill — causing a low-impact partial weekend shutdown — as a means to keep the pressure on.
Lawmakers were told to expect to be in session and voting this weekend.
“We must not slide into treating these talks like routine negotiations to be conducted at Congress’ routine pace,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., said. “The Senate is not going anywhere until we have COVID relief out the door.”
The hangups involve an effort by GOP conservatives to curb emergency lending programs by the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve, a Democratic demand to eliminate local government matching requirements for Covid-related disaster grants, and myriad smaller disagreements over non-pandemic add-ons, lawmakers and aides said.