San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

New jobs report diminishes GOP’s appetite for more coronaviru­s aid

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — A strongerth­an-expected jobs report could further scramble an already uncertain picture for passing a fifth and possibly final coronaviru­s aid bill.

The positive statistics are feeding the wait-and-see approach of the White House and its GOP allies in Congress.

Republican­s say the numbers vindicate their decision to take a pause and assess the almost $3 trillion in assistance they’ve already approved.

The White House already were showing little urgency about pursing another trillion-dollar response bill, much less the $3.5 trillion measure passed by the House last month, and prefers to concentrat­e on reopening the economy.

The coming weeks are expected to bring difficult negotiatio­ns over what the package should contain, just months before an election where the White House and control of Congress are at stake.

For lawmakers, tough decisions loom about how much money to allocate to states, how to extend unemployme­nt benefits for millions of people and whether to create lawsuit protection­s for businesses and schools as they reopen during the pandemic.

Friday’s jobs report showed a 2.5 million gain instead of an expected loss of millions more, complicati­ng prospects for the aid talks.

Trump talks often of pursing public works spending and a payroll tax cut, which is a nonstarter on Capitol Hill.

“They are less than urgent, less than inclined for another package,” said Rep. Patrick McHenry, RN.C., a GOP leader when his party was in the majority. “There is less urgency to go strike a hard deal — and this one would be a hard deal. Doesn’t mean it won’t happen, I just think the urgency is far lessened.”

Democrats looked at the jobs report and saw job losses for 600,000 public employees that are likely to worsen if Washington doesn’t help cash-starved state and local government­s.

Despite the positive jobs news, unemployme­nt nationwide is at 13 percent, so the looming expiration of a supplement­al $600-per-week jobless benefit promises to provide a catalyst for action.

Top Democrats such as Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York are united behind the $3.5 trillion “HEROES Act,” which contains party priorities such as jobless aid, another round of $1,200 checks and money for essential workers, local schools, colleges and people missing mortgages and rent payments.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and other Republican­s are opposed to the Democratic plan.

However, they’re struggling with their own divisions, with more pragmatic lawmakers favoring aid to states and local government­s and recognizin­g that additional jobless aid is inevitable if there is to be an agreement.

GOP Sens. Mitt Romney of Utah, Susan Collins of Maine and Cory Gardner of Colorado back a significan­t state aid package, and there’s strong support across Congress for help for smaller municipali­ties.

Concerns about piling additional trillions of dollars onto the national debt have risen, though, and some Republican­s believe Congress has done enough.

McConnell already has said Republican­s won’t extend the $600 per week supplement­al unemployme­nt benefit, which they say is taking away incentive for people to return to the job market.

A recent Congressio­nal Budget Office report estimated that 5 out of 6 people would earn more by continuing to receive the higher benefits than returning to work and that extending the benefit would harm the economy next year.

What’s plain is that the enormous sense of urgency that produced the first four aid bills has faded — along with the inflated the price tags.

“Unlike the CARES Act, where we really did need to act in a matter of days, here we have a little bit of luxury of time, but that time is not indefinite,” said Neil Bradley, chief policy officer at the U.S Chamber of Commerce.

“We don’t have months,” he added.

 ??  ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is one of those in favor of the $3.5 trillion HEROES Act.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is one of those in favor of the $3.5 trillion HEROES Act.

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