CONGRESS
Pelosi eyes combining Covid aid with mammoth
spending deal
She said Mitch McConnell also agrees on pairing the
two together.
By CAITLIN
EMMA and HEATHER CAYGLE
12/04/2020
01:19 PM EST
Updated:
12/04/2020 04:12 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/04/nancy-pelosi-covid-aid-spending-deal-442870
House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Friday she wants to attach a coronavirus relief bill
to a $1.4 trillion omnibus spending package that would avert a government
shutdown later this month, raising the prospects of long-stalled stimulus
relief finally being signed into law.
The
California Democrat said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell agreed with her
about combining the annual spending measures with coronavirus relief during
their conversation Thursday, the first time in weeks the two leaders have discussed
moving a relief bill.
“That would
be a hope, because that is the vehicle leaving the station,” Pelosi said of
attaching pandemic aid to a must-pass fiscal 2021 funding package during her
weekly press conference. “We would want a big, strong vote.”
Pelosi said
the $908 billion proposal released this week by a centrist group of Senate and
House members helped restart the stimulus talks, which fell apart just before
the election after months of dragging on with little real movement.
“There is
momentum — there is momentum with the action that the senators and House
members in a bipartisan way have taken,” Pelosi said Friday, in the latest sign
that negotiators are closing in on a deal. “The tone of our conversations is
one that is indicative of the decision to get the job done.”
President-elect
Joe Biden on Friday said he’s “encouraged" by the $908 billion proposal,
framing it as the type of bipartisan work that he hopes to foster as president.
He cautioned that “any package passed in the lame duck session is not going to
be enough overall.”
But hurdles
remain. Government funding runs out in just one week, and there are still a
sizable number of issues impeding an agreement on a massive spending package
that would increase agency budgets for the rest of the fiscal year.
The sheer
number of outstanding items at such a late stage makes it increasingly likely
that congressional negotiators will require a brief stopgap spending bill to
complete their work before leaving for the holidays. Such a decision could be
made early next week if lawmakers fail to make significant progress over the
weekend.
Pelosi
demurred when asked about the possibility of a short-term stopgap to buy more
time for talks, and dismissed the need for a longer term continuing resolution
that would extend current government funding into early next year.
“We will
take the time that we need,” Pelosi said, while acknowledging that a number of
issues remain, including some outside of appropriators’ jurisdiction.
“Don’t
worry about a date,” she added.
While
appropriators in both chambers remain optimistic that they’ll finish their work
before the holidays, Republicans and Democrats are still swapping offers and
arguing over details, kicking some of the most difficult items up to
congressional leaders.
For
example, a House Democratic aide close to the talks said Republicans want to
scrub any mentions of Covid-19 from the omnibus package entirely. Earlier this
year, House Democrats added coronavirus relief to their slate of fiscal 2021
appropriations bills, while Senate Republicans have insisted that pandemic aid
remain totally separate from annual appropriations measures.
Republicans
are also objecting to funding for research on reducing racial and ethnic
inequalities in the justice system, in addition to language that would require
the Capitol Police to report on policies and procedures on eliminating
unconscious bias and racial profiling during training, the Democratic aide
said.
Republicans,
meanwhile, are accusing Democrats of holding up omnibus talks by insisting on
the removal of two Interior-Environment policy riders that have been included
in annual spending bills for years. The provisions involve protections for the
greater sage-grouse, in addition to a provision related to the carbon
neutrality of forest biomass.
“Dredging
these up right now is beyond counterproductive,” a GOP aide familiar with the
talks said Thursday night.
Funding for
President Donald Trump’s border wall also remains a perennial sticking point —
Senate Republicans have proposed $2 billion for fiscal 2021, which began on
Oct. 1. House Democrats have proposed no extra cash.
Lawmakers
have also disagreed on detention beds for detained migrants in recent days,
although Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) — the top Senate Democrat who oversees
funding for the Department of Homeland Security — said Thursday that issue may
get solved without the help of leadership.
Also in
question is whether the White House will ultimately support a package that
classifies billions of dollars in veterans’ health care spending as “emergency”
spending outside of strict budget limits. Both House Appropriations Chair Nita
Lowey and Senate Appropriations Chair Richard Shelby are moving forward with
their negotiations assuming that’s the case, since the White House has
previously signed off on such an arrangement.
Pelosi on
Friday also said that whatever coronavirus relief they include in the
government funding bill will not be the last time Congress addresses the
ongoing pandemic, which continues to devastate the U.S., killing more than
275,000 Americans and causing a sharp downturn in the economy. The U.S. saw the
deadliest day ever on Thursday, with Covid-19 fatalities exceeding 2,700.
“President-elect
Biden has said that this package would be, just at best, just a start. And
that’s how we see it as well,” Pelosi said.
The speaker
also defended her decision to hold out for months, demanding a larger deal in
the ballpark of $2 trillion or more, only to agree to negotiate this smaller
package now. McConnell, similarly, refused to come off his much smaller
baseline over the summer — pushing a $500 billion package — resulting in a
standoff between congressional leaders.
“That was
not a mistake, it was a decision,” Pelosi told reporters, saying the dynamics
have significantly shifted since the election of Biden and the quicker than
expected vaccine development. “That is a total game changer — a new president
and a vaccine.”
With
cautious optimism about the prospect of passing some fiscal stimulus to buoy
the American economy during a bleak pandemic winter, lawmakers remain hopeful
that Congress will pull it together before leaving Washington, despite
lingering omnibus headaches.
"You
know this place — turns on a dime,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), who was
elected by the Democratic caucus on Thursday as the next Appropriations chair.
Sarah
Ferris contributed to this story.

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