The Guardian (USA)

Mitch McConnell says 'no realistic path' for $2,000 relief checks bill

- Lauren Gambino

Donald Trump’s demand for $2,000 relief checks to Americans struggling financiall­y with the pandemic was all but dead after Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell said on Wednesday that a proposal from Democrats had “no realistic path to quickly pass the Senate”.

Declaring that he would not be “bullied” by Democrats into quickly approving the measure, McConnell effectivel­y denied a final request for legislativ­e action by the president in the waning days of his administra­tion.

“We just approved almost a trillion dollars in aid a few days ago,” McConnell said, referring to the passage of a massive $900bn stimulus package that included $600 direct payments to most American adults. “It struck a balance between broad support for all kinds of households and a lot more targeted relief for those who need help most.”

Trump, who remained mostly on the sidelines during the negotiatio­ns, nearly derailed the agreement when he demanded Congress more than triple the size of the direct payments from $600 to $2,000. He ultimately relented and signed the bill into law on Sunday. But he has continued to press Congress to act, writing on Twitter that “$600 IS NOT ENOUGH”. He has also called Republican­s “pathetic” for failing to act, and suggested their inaction amounted to a political “death wish”.

“$2000 ASAP!” Trump demanded again on Wednesday before McConnell appeared to extinguish the possibilit­y.

Democrats have eagerly embraced Trump’s call to bolster the payments and on Monday, the House approved a bill that would send $2,000 stimulus checks to Americans. But on Tuesday, McConnell prevented Democrats from bringing the House bill to the floor for considerat­ion, instead offering a vague assurance that Senate would “begin the process” of discussing the $2,000 checks.

He said the measure would be considered alongside with unrelated items that would almost certainly doom the legislatio­n, including an investigat­ion of election security to root out voter fraud, which Trump has baselessly claimed tainted the presidenti­al vote count, and the removal of legal protection­s for social media platforms.

Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer on Wednesday called McConnell’s plan to tie the checks to the election security and social media provisions a “way to kill the bill”.

“There is no other game in town but the House bill,” Schumer said in a floor speech, imploring McConnell to allow a vote on the House bill. “The only way, the only way, to get the American

people the $2,000 checks they need is to pass the House bill and to pass it now.”

When he finished, Schumer again attempted to bring the House bill to the floor for a vote on Wednesday, but McConnell again objected, dismissing it as a Democratic proposal led by the House.

But the effort is not only backed by Democrats. Weeks ago, progressiv­e senator Bernie Sanders joined forces with conservati­ve senator Josh Hawley to demand Congress include direct payments as part of any bipartisan stimulus agreement. After the checks were adopted, they continued to push Congress to dramatical­ly increase the size of the checks.

Trump’s support has further shifted the calculus among Republican­s, who previously demanded that Democrats pare back their coronaviru­s relief proposal to keep costs under $1tn. Loath to defy the president, many Republican senators are now dropping their initial concerns about the cost of the package and embracing his call for bigger payments.

Georgia senators Davide Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, who are running in competitiv­e re-election races next week that will determine control of the Senate, said they support increasing the size of the checks. And 44 Republican­s joined the vast majority of the Democratic caucus to approve the House bill on Monday.

As lawmakers continued to spar over the payments, the treasury department said Americans should begin to receive $600 deposits in their bank accounts as early as Tuesday evening, while paper checks would be mailed out starting Wednesday.

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