WASHINGTON, DC – SEPTEMBER 23: House Minority Whip Steve Scalise (R-LA). (Photo by Stefani Reynolds-Pool/Getty Images)
OAN Newsroom
UPDATED 7:35 PM PT – Friday, February 19, 2021
Top House Republicans called on members to vote no on Joe Biden’s coronavirus relief package.
On Friday, House GOP Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) vowed to meet with
Republicans in the lower chamber to discuss how to combat the nearly $2
trillion package.
Scalise said the “Pelosi Payoff to Progressives Act” aims to jam a
liberal agenda through Congress. Republicans in both chambers of
Congress fear the bill will keep schools closed, pay Americans to not
work as well as bailout floundering blue states.
House GOP Leadership recommending a NO vote on Biden COVID relief package, which comes to floor next week.
Scalise team mockingly calling the legislation the "Pelosi’s Payoff to Progressives Act" pic.twitter.com/PtT2RtJAuY
— Scott Wong (@scottwongDC) February 19, 2021
“What this new pot of hundreds of billions of dollars is actually
doing is going to help states that prior to the pandemic, like New York
and Illinois, had fundamental fiscal problems,” Sen. Steve Daines
(R-Mont.) said. “And I don’t believe Montanans should be footing the
bill to help states get out of long-term financial problems.”
The push against the bill came in response to the House Budget Committee’s announcement that members were gearing up to vote.
The package includes extending $400 unemployment benefits to
out-of-work Americans and jacking up the federal minimum wage to $15 per
hour. Additionally, Democrats hope to push another round of stimulus
checks at up to $1,400 per check.
“Do you agree with my assessment that a majority of those checks end
up going to people who never had any lost income?” questioned Sen. Pat
Toomey (R-Pa.). “And secondly, is your view that it is not constructive
to the economy for the government to be just arbitrarily sending money
to people who never had any lost income?”
In the meantime, the House Budget Committee is expected to vote on
the bill Monday and bring it to the full House later in the week.
Democrats in the Senate are hoping to vote on the bill shortly after and
to get it to the White House by March 14.
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