New York Daily News

TRILLION EXCUSES INSTEAD OF HELP FROM D.C.

Senate split on big rescue plan with 5 GOP pols in quarantine

- BY SHANT SHAHRIGIAN

As the coronaviru­s continued its relentless spread across the nation — infecting nearly 30,000 people and killing more than 370 as of Sunday afternoon — Congress failed to pass a more than $1 trillion deal to rescue the economy and keep the public health disaster from worsening.

The Senate fell far short of the 60 votes needed to pass the bill Sunday evening.

“Right now, they’re not there,” President Trump said ahead of the 47-47 vote, which happened with five Republican senators not participat­ing because they were quarantine­d. “But I think that the Democrats want to get there. And I can tell you for a fact, the Republican­s want to get there. And I don’t think anybody actually has a choice.”

Meanwhile, Trump announced the feds will set up 1,000 hospital beds in New York, with Gov. Cuomo’s office confirming they’ll be in the Javits Center in Manhattan.

“From my point of view, constructi­on can start tomorrow,” Cuomo said just prior to Trump’s announceme­nt. “There is no red tape on the side of New York.”

Congressio­nal leaders had emerged from a closed-door Sunday meeting sharply divided, with Democrats saying the mostly Republican­led effort did too little to help ordinary Americans while failing to restrain businesses standing to benefit from a $500 billion “slush fund.”

“Early this morning, [Senate Majority Leader Mitch] McConnell presented to us a highly partisan bill written exclusivel­y by Republican­s,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) fumed. “The legislatio­n had many, many problems.”

The impasse prompted McConnell (R-Ky.) to push back a key procedural vote and sent House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) back to the drawing board.

Trump, who has been accused of taking a Pollyannai­sh view of the outbreak, tried to put an upbeat spin on the crisis.

“Our goal is to get relief to Americans as quickly as possible so families can get by and small businesses can keep workers on the payroll,” he said at a Sunday evening White House press conference. “You will see our economy skyrocket once this is over.”

While McConnell wanted

a deal ready for the president’s approval by Monday, Pelosi said the Republican­s’ proposal was so flawed she and House Democrats would prepare their own draft financial rescue plan.

“We’ll be introducin­g our own bill, and, hopefully, it will be compatible with what they discuss on the Senate side,” Pelosi said as she left following her meeting with McConnell, Schumer and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), along with Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin.

She cast doubt on McConnell’s goal of a Monday deadline for the deal, saying, “I don’t know about Monday, but we’re still talking. That’s on the Senate side now because that’s their deadline for a vote.”

In taking a stand against the Republican proposal, she invoked the pope.

“Last Thursday, Pope Francis offered the world this prayer: ‘Enlighten those responsibl­e for the common good, so that they might know … how to care for those entrusted to their responsibi­lity,’ ” the House speaker wrote colleagues Sunday. “Democrats Take Responsibi­lity,” she concluded.

Since members of Congress began meeting last week to discuss the financial package, Democrats have been seeking protection­s for workers facing massive layoffs as ordinary American life grinds to a halt.

They’re also seeking billions of dollars in funding for localities and hospitals to fight the virus.

Schumer said the draft package “significan­tly cut back our hospitals, our cities, our states, our medical workers and so many others needed in this crisis.”

Negotiator­s put the price of the stalled rescue package at around $1.4 trillion, with the cost rising to $2 trillion after factoring in measures from the Federal Reserve.

In spite of the latest impasse, Mnuchin insisted the deal “will get done” when speaking on “Fox News Sunday.”

McConnell emphasized that congressio­nal leaders were still talking after the failed Sunday meeting.

The “CARES Act” that the Senate majority leader unveiled Thursday included a $50 billion loan for commercial airlines, $8 billion for air cargo carriers and $150 billion for other businesses, all of which would have to be paid back. Congress would also make $300 billion in loans available to small businesses. Further, the initial proposal included one-time $1,200 payments to individual­s, or $2,400 for couples. Individual­s making up to $75,000 and couples earning up to $150,000 would qualify. The package threw in $500 per child.

City Council Speaker Corey Johnson has called for extra one-time payments of $550 per New Yorker, with $275 per child, though the proposal has yet to gain steam.

Democrats in Congress want their package to include unemployme­nt aid, expanded paid sick leave and health care for workers affected by the economic downturn. They also want safeguards against layoffs and have voiced concern about the lack of constraint­s on the proposed loans.

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 ??  ?? As President Trump vowed GOP and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (inset) would get rescue deal done, plan failed to pass in Senate Sunday.
As President Trump vowed GOP and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (inset) would get rescue deal done, plan failed to pass in Senate Sunday.

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