Porterville Recorder

Trump, GOP soften stance on $600 benefit

- By ANDREW TAYLOR and LISA MASCARO

WASHINGTON — The White House and its GOP allies appear to be retreating from their opposition to a $600 per week supplement­al unemployme­nt benefit that has propped up both the economy and family budgets but is expiring Friday.

President Donald Trump is plainly eager to extend the benefit, undercutti­ng his GOP allies on Capitol Hill who have spent considerab­le effort on devising an alternativ­e to it that could unite Republican­s.

The unemployme­nt insurance is a principal element as talks continue on a COVID-19 relief bill, which is expected to grow considerab­ly from a $1 trillion-plus GOP draft released this week. Top Democrats announced a meeting with administra­tion representa­tives for this morning after latenight talks at the Capitol failed to produce a breakthrou­gh Thursday.

The two sides took their case to the media Friday morning, with White House chief of staff Mark Meadows speaking to reporters on short notice at the exact moment House Speaker Nancy Pelosi appeared at her weekly news conference.

Meadows accused Democrats of refusing to negotiate, saying Trump has instructed him to be “aggressive and forward-leaning” in trying to extend the supplement­al jobless benefit.

“Democrats have made zero offers over the last three days,” said Meadows, an inexperien­ced negotiator and former tea party lawmaker. He said Democrats are “willing to play politics” and are acting like they “hold all the cards.”

The White House on Thursday offered a one-week extension of the $600 weekly unemployme­nt benefit, top Democrats said, but Pelosi rejected it, saying it needs to be addressed as part of a far more sweeping bill that would deliver aid to state and local government­s, help for the poor and funding for schools and colleges to address the pandemic. Without action, the unemployme­nt benefit runs out Friday — and both the House and Senate have exited Washington.

“Clearly they did not understand the gravity of the situation,” Pelosi said. She said a short-term extension only makes sense if the two sides are close to a deal.

“Why don’t we just get the job done,” she said.

An aide familiar with the talks said Pelosi rejected an administra­tion offer of a fourmonth extension of the benefit at $400 per week, combined with additional provisions for particular­ly hardhit businesses and a shield against lawsuits for businesses, schools and other entities that reopen as the pandemic continues to rage.

Pelosi, brimming with confidence, offered a tutorial on negotiatin­g on Friday.

“There are two things to remember. One is the person you’re negotiatin­g with has to want something” for the American people, Pelosi said. “And they have to know you will walk” if you don’t get a good enough agreement.

Republican­s in the Senate had been fighting to trim back the $600 jobless benefit in the next coronaviru­s package, but their resolve weakened as the expiration of the popular benefit drew near — and as Trump undercut their position by signaling he wants to keep the full $600 benefit for now.

“We want a temporary extension of enhanced unemployme­nt benefits,” Trump said at the White House on Thursday. “This will provide a critical bridge for Americans who lost their jobs to the pandemic through no fault of their own.”

There continues to be agreement among Washington’s top power players that Congress must pass further relief in the coming days and weeks.

“Do we want to continue to come to an agreement? Absolutely,” said top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer. “But it’s got to meet the gravity of the problem.”

Trump is eager for another round of COVID relief, and it’s also a priority for GOP allies like Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, as well as Pelosi and Schumer. Democrats hold a strong negotiatin­g hand — exploiting GOP divisions over whether more aid is even needed — and they are expected to deliver a necessary trove of votes.

Both sides say the talks have not produced much progress but they could be nearing a critical phase over the weekend and into next week. The pending COVID rescue bill, the fifth since the pandemic has struck, is likely the last one before the November election.

Republican­s controllin­g the Senate have kept the relief measure on “pause” in a strategy aimed at reducing its price tag. But as the pandemic has worsened in past weeks — and as fractures inside the GOP have eroded the party’s negotiatin­g position — Republican­s have displayed some greater flexibilit­y.

“The Democrats are playing for Nov. 3, and we’re playing for the good of the people. It is a disgrace that they are not negotiatin­g,” Trump said Friday. “I think it’s a bad political game. I think it hurts them.”

Also at issue in the negotiatio­ns is an almost $1 trillion Democratic demand for funding for state and local government­s, a second $1,200 direct payment to most American adults, more than $100 billion to help schools reopen, and a liability shield measure that is essential to Mcconnell.

Meadows played a role in killing an increase in food aid during talks on a $2 trillion relief bill in March, but Democrats are pressing hard for a boost to food stamp benefits. Republican­s added $20 billion for agribusine­sses but nothing for greater food stamp benefits.

“Traditiona­lly we’ve had a partnershi­p between farms and families and they’ve consistent­ly broken that,” said Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, the top Democrat on the Senate Agricultur­e Committee.

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 ?? AP PHOTO BY ALEX BRANDON ?? President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as he walks to Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, Friday, July 31, in Washington. Trump is en route to Florida.
AP PHOTO BY ALEX BRANDON President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as he walks to Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, Friday, July 31, in Washington. Trump is en route to Florida.

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