Congress sends massive ‘first step’ in pandemic aid to Trump’s desk

U.S. House approves $2,000 stimulus checks backed by Trump. (Image by forcal35 from Pixabay)

WASHINGTON — Congress on Monday night cleared and sent to President Donald Trump the first major COVID-19 relief measure since the spring, a sprawling spending bill that would provide $900 billion in pandemic-related aid but still didn’t go far enough for many Democrats.

House leaders divided the bill into two parts and passed the emergency relief portion on a 359-53 vote. Another portion, which included Pentagon and other spending for the coming year, passed 327-85. The Senate combined the two bills and cleared the package in an overwhelming 92-6 vote shortly before midnight. The White House has signaled Trump will sign the 5,593-page measure.

The bipartisan relief deal that ended months of haggling would extend an array of long-sought assistance, including direct payments to Americans of $600; an additional $300 per week in unemployment benefits; and billions more in loans to struggling small businesses.

It also would send nearly $9 billion to states to aid in vaccine distribution and $22 billion for more coronavirus testing and tracing. The measure contains billions more in child care assistance, help for schools, food aid and money for farmers; transportation funding; rental assistance and an extension of the eviction moratorium; and an end to surprise billing in emergency and scheduled care.

It doesn’t provide additional aid sought by state and local governments struggling with massive budget gaps, nor the liability protections sought for employers who may face COVID 19-related lawsuits if employees become infected with the virus. The measure also doesn’t extend the suspension of student loan interest and payments that will expire at the end of January.

That stimulus bill was sandwiched into a broader piece of legislation totaling $1.4 trillion that pays for federal government operations for the rest of the fiscal year, and was under debate in Congress just hours ahead of another deadline to avoid a government shutdown.

While the fiscal 2021 government operations will be funded through September, congressional Democrats described the emergency pandemic aid as only a small piece of what’s needed to address the ongoing crisis.

Millions of Americans remain on the unemployment rolls and the state-based vaccine distribution efforts have barely begun, while rising case counts have led to a new wave of restrictions on businesses and gatherings across the country.

“I would hope that as we see the need for what we have done in this nearly $900 billion legislation that we’ll vote on today that everyone understands it’s a first step,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said in a floor speech Monday. “It’s a first step, as President-elect Biden has said. It’s a first step, and we will need to do more.”

The relief package is the first major aid legislation to reach Trump since the CARES Act was approved in March, due to months of stalemate over the scope of another aid package. The Democratic-controlled House approved several additional relief measures, but those proposals did not advance in the Republican-controlled Senate.

Senate Republicans have cast blame on Democrats in that chamber for blocking aid proposals, while Democrats argued that those alternative bills did not go far enough.

In a statement, Georgia U.S. Sen. David Perdue pinned the delay on “months of Democrat obstruction.” Georgia’s other senator, Kelly Loeffler, said in a statement Tuesday that the measure “represents a desperately needed compromise from both sides of the aisle – and one that should have been done months ago with bipartisan approval had it not been for the Democrats’ political games.”

Democrats, meanwhile, put the blame squarely on Senate Republicans.

“After eight long months of Mitch McConnell playing ‘keep away’ with federal aid, help is finally on the way to Georgians,” Georgia Congresswoman-elect Carolyn Bourdeaux said in a statement. “Republican obstruction left COVID-19 relief legislation collecting dust in the Senate since July while American families struggled to make ends meet.”

Both Loeffler and Perdue, who are locked in tough election battles, voted for the relief package. With the exception of GOP U.S. Rep. Jody Hice, all of Georgia’s House delegation supported it. U.S. Rep. Barry Loudermilk did not vote.

In touting the new relief bill Monday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell praised the measure’s price tag, saying it requires less than $350 billion in new spending because more than half a trillion dollars in previously approved spending is being repurposed.

“No sprawling left-wing wish list. No unconstrained bailouts for state and local governments, with no connection to COVID needs. Just smart, targeted, bipartisan policies,” McConnell said, adding that the bill will do an “incredible amount of good.”

A deal on the pandemic relief bill appeared in sight late last week, but those talks stretched through the weekend due to disagreement over a provision sought by U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) to ensure that several temporary Federal Reserve lending programs will end this year.

Democrats objected to the provision, arguing that the language he sought was too broad and could overly constrain the Fed’s authority. Negotiators worked over several days to narrow the language sought by Toomey, clarifying which programs would wind down at the end of the year.

The bill’s full text was only released early Monday afternoon, just hours before House lawmakers launched debate on the measure.

Rep. Mark Walker (R-N.C.), who was not on Capitol Hill for the vote due to a potential exposure to COVID-19, bemoaned the quick turnaround, blasting the bill as “flawed in both its content as well as its process.”

Democratic Rep. Joe Neguse of Colorado said he “would certainly prefer for legislators to have 24 hours to consider legislation, particularly of this scope and size.”

“But obviously, there are exigent circumstances at present today in the urgency of this crisis,” Neguse added.

President-elect Joe Biden released a statement Sunday evening in support of the emergency relief bill, saying it “will deliver critical resources to fight COVID-19.”

“But this action in the lame duck session is just the beginning. Our work is far from over,” Biden added.

Georgia Recorder Deputy Editor Jill Nolin contributed to this report. This article is published in partnership with Georgia Recorder.

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