U.S. stimulus talks remain on life support after the House passed a Democrat-only $2.2 trillion package that did nothing to bridge the gap with Republicans.
The 214-207 vote, which garnered no GOP support, followed the most concerted talks between the top negotiators since early August. House Speaker
How the talks might be affected by President
Pelosi and Mnuchin held multiple phone calls Thursday after meeting in person at the Capitol on Wednesday, amid rising pressure from a wave of job-cut announcements by large companies. “We are going back and forth with our paper,” Pelosi said Thursday, underscoring the importance of the language used in any deal.
Eighteen Democrats, most from swing districts, voted against the bill, arguing that passage would hinder efforts to find a bipartisan solution.
The talks have so far failed to resolve what’s been a difference of hundreds of billions of dollars between the two sides. Sharp disagreements also remain on components of coronavirus relief, with the Trump administration rejecting the scale of aid Democrats want for state and local authorities, and Pelosi demanding the end of tax breaks she says are devoted to the wealthy.
Pelosi said the House’s vote on its own bill would help present in a more public way what Democrats are unified in “pushing for” in the negotiations. Republicans in the Senate, where they have a majority, attempted to pass their own package last month -- a $650 billion plan, nicknamed the “skinny” package, that was blocked by Democrats.
Clock Ticking
With the presidential and congressional elections 32 days away and Congress expected to go on recess beforehand for the final leg of the campaign, time is running short. Private economists have already cut their growth forecasts for the fourth quarter after the failure to find a compromise on another fiscal package.
Economic data are already showing the fading impact of the $2 trillion stimulus enacted in March. Americans’ incomes fell in August by the most in three months after the government’s supplemental unemployment benefits expired, a
Although Trump and his aides have continued to express confidence in the recovery, major companies have announced job cuts in recent days.
“People say we should have a skinny package -- no, we don’t have a skinny problem. We have a massive problem,” Pelosi said on the House floor Thursday.
Reduced Package
Democrats reduced their stimulus demands from a $3.4 trillion bill the House passed in May. But the legislation approved Thursday is still more than Republicans have said they could accept. Also, Senate Majority Leader
House Republicans cast the bill as pure political messaging, more of a left-wing, campaign-year wish list that showed how far apart the two sides are than genuine legislating.
Top Appropriations Committee Republican
Mnuchin said Trump instructed his negotiators “to come up significantly” from the initial GOP proposal of a $1 trillion pandemic relief plan.
Republican Counter
They offered Pelosi a maximum of $1.6 trillion, some of which was covered by unused small business relief funds, according to people familiar with the proposal.
Pelosi underscored before the House vote that she’d still work on negotiations for a bill that both the House and Senate could pass, and Trump can sign into law. “I’m hopeful that they can produce something. I never say this is the last chance.”
“We could come right back and prepare to do another bill,” assured Rules Committee Chairman
Some House Democrats had for weeks been pressuring their leaders to allow such a vote, in lieu of a bipartisan deal, as they hit the final stretch of their re-election campaigns.
Gauging Intentions
“I can’t tell how much of this is genuine effort to pass a bill and how much is position-taking prior to the election,” said Josh Huder, a senior fellow at Georgetown University’s governmental affairs institute.
Some political analysts suggest Pelosi and House Democrats have less to lose politically from a stalemate on stimulus than the White House and Republicans.
Majority Leader
Job losses, shutdowns of businesses, and other potentially catastrophic economic events do not fall neatly into districts exclusively held by either Democrats or Republicans.
Polling by the Financial Times-Peterson Foundation in mid-September found 89% of those asked said another relief package was needed. As for a failure to get a deal, Democrats and Republicans were seen as equally responsible, both nationally and within so-called “battleground states.”
(Updates with Mnuchin testing negative for virus, in third paragraph.)
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Christopher Anstey, John Harney
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