Times Standard (Eureka)

New pressure on lawmakers as virus aid for firms hits limit

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON » Lawmakers struggled Thursday to break a stalemate over President Donald Trump’s $250 billion emergency request for a small-business program, stoking uncertaint­y about when additional support will be available in a key rescue program now exhausted of funds.

A Senate session quickly adjourned without any progress, though staff aides to House and Senate Democrats and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin convened another conference call, on legislatio­n to shore up the Paycheck Protection Program and demands by Democrats for potential additions. The Small Business Administra­tion announced Thursday it has reached its $349 billion lending limit and is no longer accepting applicatio­ns, and Trump immediatel­y weighed in on Twitter to bash Democrats.

“Democrats are blocking additional funding for the popular Paycheck Protection Program. They are killing American small businesses. Stop playing politics Dems! Support Refilling PPP NOW — it is out of funds!” Trump wrote.

GOP aides said that Mnuchin is prepared to accept additional funding sought by Democrats for hospitals, but that additional aid to state and local government­s couldn’t get approval in the current round. The aides spoke on condition of anonymity to characteri­ze internal party deliberati­ons.

Thursday’s Senate session featured a short speech by a frustrated majority leader, Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., but no effort to pass Trump’s $250 billion request — or to shame Democrats, were they to block it as they did last week. Instead, McConnell said that he had cleared the $250 billion package on the GOP side but that Democrats would have stopped it.

“Democrats would not let us reopen the program,” McConnell said. “This really should be above politics.”

The Capitol is largely shuttered, requiring consensus from all sides for any legislatio­n to pass, and top GOP leaders are vowing to stick closely to Trump’s request despite Democrats’ additional demands.

The Senate is away from Washington through May 4, but it convenes twice each week for pro forma sessions that could be used to pass more coronaviru­s aid — though only if no senator objects. The next Senate pro forma is Monday afternoon; no action is expected at a brief Friday House session.

McConnell, asked by a reporter whether he could support any agreement reached by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Mnuchin, was noncommitt­al.

“Well, look, we’d take a look at it. My members want to plus up the small-business program. We think the need is obvious,” he told reporters. “And all the money for the other programs is not yet out the door. It doesn’t mean we won’t be dealing with them later, but we have an emergency, we ought to deal with it.”

GOP leaders McConnell and Kevin McCarthy are back in Washington to monitor developmen­ts. McCarthy,

the House minority leader, is closer to Trump, but both seem to fear Mnuchin might be willing to contemplat­e concession­s that rank-andfile Republican­s would find objectiona­ble.

At issue is a $349 billion Paycheck Protection Program that is a centerpiec­e of last month’s massive rescue bill. The Congressio­nal Budget Office issued an estimate for the legislatio­n, passed virtually unanimousl­y last month, pegging its deficit cost at $1.8 trillion. That’s less than the $2.2 trillion informal White House estimate, and the difference is because the CBO believes

an almost half-trillion-dollar loan guarantee program designed to stabilize large companies and state and local government­s won’t have deficit costs because the money would be paid back.

The program gives grants to businesses with fewer than 500 workers so that they can maintain payroll and pay rent while shutting down their businesses during social distancing edicts.

The program has been swamped by businesses applying for loans and has reached its appropriat­ions limit. Mnuchin says $250 billion more is needed immediatel­y. But Democrats want money for hospitals burdened under COVID-19 caseloads and additional funding for states and local government­s straining as the economy slides into recession.

They also want to make sure the Paycheck Protection Program is opened up more to businesses that don’t have establishe­d relationsh­ips with banks that have been accepting applicatio­ns for rescue funding.

Pelosi is pressing to add money to be distribute­d by community developmen­t financial institutio­ns, which are small, nontraditi­onal lenders that focus on making loans in underdevel­oped and underserve­d neighborho­ods, typically communitie­s with larger minority population­s.

“We want to make sure that, as it gets more money, many more people get access to the credit,” Pelosi said.

Eventually, the need for consensus seems likely to result in a relatively limited package.

Republican­s are agitating to help rural hospitals, while Democrats are also keen to boost aid to cash-strapped states and local government­s whose revenues have cratered. Aiding the states may be a stretch for now, however, as the issue can easily provoke fights between large, high-tax states like California and New York and smaller states more typically run by Republican­s.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin speaks about the coronaviru­s in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington on Monday.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin speaks about the coronaviru­s in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington on Monday.
 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., center, speaks with reporters outside the Senate chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, April 9. Senate Democrats on Thursday stalled President Donald Trump’s request for $250billion to supplement a “paycheck protection” program for businesses crippled by the coronaviru­s outbreak, demanding protection­s for minorityow­ned businesses and money for health care providers and state and local government­s.
PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., center, speaks with reporters outside the Senate chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, April 9. Senate Democrats on Thursday stalled President Donald Trump’s request for $250billion to supplement a “paycheck protection” program for businesses crippled by the coronaviru­s outbreak, demanding protection­s for minorityow­ned businesses and money for health care providers and state and local government­s.

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