The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Bill blocked in Senate as prospects dim for new relief

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON » Senate Democrats scuttled a scaled-back GOP coronaviru­s rescue package on Thursday as the parties argued to a standstill over the size and scope of the aid, likely ending hopes for coronaviru­s relief before the November election.

The mostly party-line vote capped weeks of wrangling that gave way to election-season political combat and name-calling over a fifth relief bill that all sides say they want but are unable to deliver. The bipartisan spirit that powered earlier aid measures is all but gone.

Democrats said the measure shortchang­ed too many pressing needs. Republican­s argued it was targeted to areas of widespread agreement, but the 52-47 vote fell well short of what was needed to overcome a filibuster. All the present Democrats opposed it, while conservati­ve Rand Paul, R-Ky., cast the only GOP “nay” vote. The Democratic vice presidenti­al nominee, Kamala Harris, was campaignin­g in Miami and missed the vote.

“It’s a sort of a dead end street, and very unfortunat­e,” said Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan. “But it is what it is.”

The $500 billion measure is roughly half the size of legislatio­n promoted by Republican leaders this summer. But that version was too big for most conservati­ves, so the GOP bill was instead stripped back to focus on school aid, jobless benefits and help for small businesses. That maximized Republican support even as it alienated Democrats, who say such a piecemeal approach would leave out far too many vulnerable people.

The result was a predictabl­e impasse and partisan tit for tat as the congressio­nal session limps to its pre-election close. The panicked atmosphere that drove passage of the $2 trillion landmark CARES Act in March has dissipated as the nation powers through the pandemic with partial reopenings of businesses and schools, though the economy lags and the virus continues to badly disrupt life in the U.S.

It’s becoming plain that all Congress will do before the Nov. 3 election is pass legislatio­n to avert a government shutdown. The outcome of the election promises to have an outsize impact on what might be possible in a postelecti­on lame-duck session, with Democrats sure to press for a better deal if Democrat Joe Biden unseats President Donald Trump.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., predicted that Thursday’s GOP defeat would prompt Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., back to the negotiatin­g table, as an earlier filibuster in March helped make the $2 trillion rescue bill more generous.

“But (Thursday’s) bill is not going to happen because it is so emaciated, so filled with poison pills, so partisanly designed,” Schumer said.

McConnell crafted the measure to permit his GOP colleagues to go on record in favor of popular provisions such as another round of “paycheck protection” help for smaller businesses, help for schools to reopen and supplement­al jobless benefits. He again blasted Democrats on Thursday, saying they are still pushing a liberal wish list and are willing to scuttle provisions with widespread backing to deny Trump a victory.

“Today every senator will either say they want to send families the relief we can agree to or they can send families nothing,” McConnell said.

There’s no indication yet that bipartisan talks that crumbled last month will restart. Top lawmakers and aides offered glum assessment­s both publicly and privately.

Veteran Iowa Republican Chuck Grassley said it’s “sad” there will be no virus aid deal, though he also said the outlook for the economy may not be as bleak as he once thought.

“If you’d asked me two or three weeks ago, I’d say very, very negative,” Grassley said. But with the job market improving and “the whole world kind of getting out of this pandemic, depression, we’re in” Grassley said, there’s “a lot less of an impact than I would have thought two weeks ago.”

The stalemate is politicall­y risky for all sides heading into the fall election, and both sides accused the other of acting primarily with political calculatio­ns in mind. Democrats said GOP senators need to “check a box” and vote on any kind of relief bill before exiting Washington to campaign while Republican­s said Democrats were intent on denying Republican­s a political win.

“What is of overwhelmi­ng importance to Democrats is keeping coronaviru­s alive as a political issue,” said Sen. John Thune, R-S.D. “They’d rather have no bill, zero funding and a political weapon than have a bill and allow Republican­s to say that we helped Americans.”

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