WASHINGTON (AP) — Suggesting a narrower pandemic
relief package may be all that’s possible, the White House still pushed
ahead with Monday’s planned rollout of the Senate Republicans’ $1
trillion effort as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi assailed the GOP
“disarray” as time-wasting during the crisis.
The
administration’s chief negotiators — White House chief of staff Mark
Meadows and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin — spent the weekend on
Capitol Hill to put what Meadows described as “final touches” on the
relief bill Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is expected to bring
forward Monday afternoon.
“We’re done,” Mnuchin said as he and Meadows left Capitol Hill on Sunday after meeting with GOP staff.
But
looming deadlines may force them to consider other options. By Friday,
millions of out-of-work Americans will lose an $600 federal unemployment
benefit that is expiring and federal eviction protections for many
renters are also coming to an end. President Donald Trump’s standing is
at one of the lowest points of his term, according to a new AP-NORC poll.
“They’re in disarray and that delay is causing suffering for America’s families,” Pelosi said.
Pelosi
panned the Trump administration’s desire to trim the $600 weekly
unemployment boost to about 70% of pre-pandemic wages. She also said she
opposes tackling a relief package in piecemeal fashion.
With
the virus death toll climbing and 4.2 million infections nationwide,
the administration officials converged on the Capitol to revive the
Republican package that unraveled last week. Republican senators and the
White House are at odds over various items, including how to cutback
the jobless benefit without fully doing away with it.
Meadows
said as the White House was “looking for clarity” on a “handful” of
remaining issues with Republicans, but they had yet to talk to
McConnell. “We have an agreement in principle,” he said.
Both
Mnuchin and Meadows said earlier Sunday that narrower legislation might
need to be passed first to ensure that enhanced unemployment benefits
don’t run out for millions of Americans. They cited unemployment
benefits, money to help schools reopen, tax credits to keep people from
losing their jobs, and lawsuit protections for schools and businesses as
priorities.
“We can move very quickly with the Democrats on these issues,” Mnuchin said.
But negotiations with Democrats have yet to begin with billions at stake and deadlines near.
Separately,
White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said a federal eviction
moratorium on millions of rental units, due to expire at the end of the
month, will be extended. “We will lengthen it,” he said, without
specifying for how long.
On
the jobless benefits, Republicans have argued that federal jobless
benefits should be trimmed because the combination of state and federal
unemployment assistance left many people better off financially than
they were before the pandemic and therefore disinclined to return to
their jobs.
Many
Democrats contend that a lot of people don’t feel safe going back to
work when the coronavirus is surging again around the country.
Meadows,
a former congressman who was the head of the conservative House Freedom
Caucus, said he is working with Mnuchin and Labor Secretary Eugene
Scalia to address complaints that outdated state computer systems will
make it difficult for the jobless to get their benefits in a timely
fashion if the formula is changed.
“It’s our goal to make sure that it’s not antiquated computers that keep people from getting their benefits,” Meadows said.
Pelosi criticized the hold-up on the GOP side. House Democrats passed a $3 trillion relief package a couple of months ago, with the aim of jump-starting negotiations.
The
White House and Senate Republicans were racing to regroup after plans
to introduce a $1 trillion virus rescue bill collapsed Thursday during
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-19-related lawsuits.
The
expiration of the $600 weekly jobless benefits boost had been
propelling the Republicans to act, 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 GOP agreement
about phasing out the flat boost in favor of one that ensures no more
than 70% of an employee’s previous pay.
Apart
from jobless benefits, Mnuchin said Saturday that new $1,200 direct
payments would be based on the same formula from the earlier aid bill.
Then, people making $75,000 or less received the full amount and those
making more than $75,000 received less, depending on their income.
People earning above $100,000 did not qualify for the payment.
The
jobless benefit officially expires July 31, but due to the way states
process unemployment payments, the cutoff was effectively Saturday.
___
Meadows
spoke on ABC’s “This Week,” Mnuchin was on “Fox News Sunday,” Pelosi
appeared on CBS’ “Face the Nation” and Kudlow was interviewed on CNN’s
“State of the Union.”
___
Superville reported from Bridgewater, New Jersey. Associated Press writer Hope Yen in Washington contributed to this report.
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