WASHINGTON (AP) — Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Saturday that Republicans were set to roll out the next COVID-19 aid
package Monday and assured there was backing from the White House after
he and President Donald Trump’s top aide met to salvage the $1 trillion
proposal that had floundered just days before.
Mnuchin
told reporters at the Capitol that extending an expiring unemployment
benefit — but reducing it substantially — was a top priority for Trump.
The secretary called the $600 weekly aid
“ridiculous” and a disincentive for people to go back to work. He also
promised a fresh round of $1,200 stimulus checks would be coming in
August.
“We’re
prepared to move quickly,” Mnuchin said after he and Mark Meadows, the
president’s acting chief of staff, spent several hours with GOP staff at
the Capitol. He said the president would “absolutely” support the
emerging Republican package.
Mnuchin’s
optimistic assessment came before Democrats weighed in publicly on the
updated proposal, which remained only a starting point in negotiations
with House and Senate leaders in the other party. He said he recently
called House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck
Schumer ahead of shuttle negotiations next week on the broader deal.
The
White House and Senate Republicans were racing to regroup after plans
to introduce a $1 trillion virus rescue bill collapsed Thursday amid GOP
infighting over its size, scope and details. It was expected to bring
$105 billion to help schools reopen, new money for virus testing and
benefits for businesses, including a fresh round of loans, tax breaks
and a sweeping liability shield from COVID-related lawsuits.
As
Republicans struggled, the White House team downplayed the differences
with the GOP senators as overblown and said Trump was focused on
providing relief.
“The
president has been very clear. He wants to make sure that the American
people have what they need during this unprecedented time,” Meadows
said, “to make sure not only the money is there but the programs.”
The
expiration of the $600 weekly jobless benefits boost had been
propelling the Republicans to act. Democrats already approved their sweeping $3 trillion plan
from Pelosi two months ago. But with millions of Americans about to be
suddenly cut off from the aid starting Saturday, they were bracing to
prevent social and economic fallout.
The White House floated plans to cut the additional aid back to $100 a week,
while Senate Republicans preferred $200, with general agreement about
phasing out the flat boost in favor of one that ensures no more than 70%
of an employee’s previous pay.
Mnuchin
also said the $1,200 direct payments would be based on the same formula
from the earlier aid bill. Individuals making $75,000 or less, for
example, received the full amount and those making more than $75,000
received less than $1,200 depending on their income. Individuals earning
above $100,000 did not qualify for the payment.
“We’ll get the majority of them out in August and those will help people,” Mnuchin said.
The
administration officials said the overall package remained at $1
trillion, apparently on par with Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell’s original draft.
Democrats had warned time was running out, saying Republicans were in disarray.
The
jobless benefit officially expires July 31, but due to the way states
process unemployment payments, the cutoff was effectively Saturday.
Other aid, including a federal eviction moratorium on millions of rental
units, also expires at month’s end.
The
GOP plan was not expected to come to a vote but serve as a
counter-offer to Democrats. That strategy enabled McConnell, who did not
have full support from his GOP majority, to avoid having to endure a
failed outcome. But it also gave Democrats some leverage in insisting on
their priorities as part of any final deal.
The path ahead remained uncertain, but both sides were scrambling to reach a deal.
McConnell,
who spent time over the weekend in his home state of the Kentucky, said
Friday he hoped a package could be agreed on “in the next few weeks.”
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