President Donald Trump and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Wednesday suggested passing a short-term extension on unemployment benefits and moratorium on evictions, amid mounting pressure for Washington to do something before millions lose aid.
In remarks outside of the White House, Trump and Mnuchin acknowledged that the administration and Democrats remain far apart on any kind of deal, with the Senate GOP still divided over its own $1 trillion-plus opening bid. But Trump emphasized that halting evictions — and keeping people in their homes amid a global pandemic — should be a priority.
“We ought to work on the evictions so that people don't get evicted,” Trump said. “You work on the payments for the people, and the rest of it we're so far apart we don't care. We really don't care.”
The president’s support for a short-term deal — which has appeared less of a priority for Senate Republicans so far — comes as the extra $600-per-week boost in unemployment benefits for tens of millions of Americans expires Friday. That benefit, which Congress passed in March as part of the CARES Act, also included a moratorium on evictions, which expired this past weekend.
Democrats have long pushed to halt evictions as the pandemic rages on, and to keep the additional $600 in benefits through at least the end of the year. But Republicans, who released their own proposal Monday, argue that the extra unemployment aid disincentivizes work. Instead, the Senate GOP is pushing to reduce that extra $600 to a temporary, flat payment of $200 for 60 days to allow state systems to then offer a 70 percent wage replacement.
Democrats and Republicans are in such conflict on the next coronavirus aid package that both Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows have suggested a so-called “skinny” deal, which would tackle narrower issues one a time. But Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has already rejected a “piecemeal” approach.
Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) plan to meet again with Mnuchin and Meadows on Wednesday afternoon, the third straight day of face-to-face meetings. But so far, there’s little sign of progress on an agreement to deliver much-need relief to millions of out-of-work Americans.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Wednesday blamed Pelosi on the Senate floor for refusing to negotiate on the unemployment aid, suggesting the House “will not let a package go forward unless we continue paying people more not to work.”
“When it’s time to actually make a law, Democrats would rather keep political issues alive than find a bipartisan way to resolve them,” the Kentucky Republican said.
Schumer shot back at McConnell, saying “the fact that Leader McConnell would even consider the idea that a political party might deny support for the American people in order to help win an election says more about the Republican leader than anybody else.”
One of the biggest issues in the negotiations is the price tag. Democrats are pushing for the $3 trillion Heroes Act which passed the House in May. Senate Republicans skittish about rising deficits, meanwhile, want to keep the package at close to $1 trillion.
McConnell is also making clear that any bill that passes the Senate will need to include liability protection for companies worried about being sued over coronavirus infections, something Democrats are resisting.
House Democrats have ripped the Senate GOP’s proposal, which they say is not a serious enough effort to even begin negotiations across the two parties.
“When we have a reasonable bill put forth by Senate Republicans for us to discuss, let’s have a discussion about our differences,” House Democratic Caucus Chairman Hakeem Jeffries said Wednesday, declining to comment on GOP demands like liability changes.
“Half the Senate Republicans don’t even seem to support the Senate Republican coronavirus bill,” Jeffries said. “It’s an inhumane, cruel, cold-hearted response.”
Max Cohen contributed to this report.
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