CONGRESS
House passes Biden's $1.9T coronavirus aid
package
The bill would send $1,400 stimulus checks to millions
of Americans, boost unemployment payments and increase the Child Tax Credit.
By CAITLIN
EMMA and SARAH FERRIS
02/26/2021
11:00 AM EST
Updated:
02/27/2021 02:17 AM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/26/house-biden-covid-relief-bill-passage-471733
The House
approved President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion pandemic rescue plan in a 219 to
212 vote early Saturday morning, sending the measure to the Senate as Democrats
race to pass it into law before boosted unemployment payments expire next
month.
All but two
Democrats supported the sprawling coronavirus relief package, with zero
Republicans backing it — a major step toward enacting the White House’s first
major legislative priority amid dueling public health and economic crises.
“The
numbers speak volumes. 18 million Americans on unemployment. 24 million people
are going hungry,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on the floor just before its
passage. “The time for decisive action is long overdue.”
Days after
the U.S. marked 500,000 deaths to the virus, the Democrats’ Covid aid bill
would send $1,400 stimulus checks to millions of Americans, boost unemployment
payments and increase the child tax credit. It would also provide billions of
dollars in aid to small businesses, states and efforts to test for and
vaccinate against the coronavirus.
But House
GOP leaders, who kept their members in line against the bill, have argued the
price tag is too high, with programs that are unrelated to fighting the virus.
If passed,
the package will be one of the largest ever approved by Congress, and the fifth
major piece of legislation approved since the pandemic began. It is the work of
nearly a dozen House committees, conducted at a breakneck pace over the last 28
days.
“Yes this
package is big, but the scale that families face is enormous,” senior Rep.
Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) said early Saturday morning on the floor. “Half measures
just won’t cut it.”
The Senate
will take up the measure next week, where top Democrats will be forced to
grapple with a major setback to Biden’s plan — their push to include a
long-sought minimum wage increase has officially run afoul of the Senate’s
arcane budget rules.
For now
though, the House package still includes that federal minimum wage hike to
$15-an-hour, assuring minimal drama in the lower chamber, and forcing Senate
Republicans to formally nix it next week.
The party’s
maneuvering over the next two weeks could hardly have more high stakes: Every
Senate Democrat will need to back the behemoth bill, with little time for a
serious overhaul ahead of a critical federal jobless aid deadline on March 14.
The House is expected to vote again on the Senate’s amended measure in two
weeks, before sending it to Biden for his signature.
Democrats
acknowledge they will likely need to ditch that push in order to pass its
behemoth bill with a simple majority, though Senate Majority Chuck Leader and
others are still privately discussing legislative workarounds. One idea is to
add language that would penalize large corporations that fail to pay workers at
least $15 an hour.
Progressives,
meanwhile, have demanded that Democrats overrule the parliamentarian’s
decision, though many privately acknowledge it is a longshot and senior
Democrats say it is unlikely.
"We
will seek a solution consistent with Senate rules, and we will do so soon,”
Pelosi said Friday night.
Some
Democrats privately acknowledge that stripping out the $15-an-hour wage mandate
is likely to ease passage in the Senate, where at least two members are
publicly opposed. But it is also sure to complicate the math for Pelosi and her
leadership team — who can only afford to lose a handful of votes on the floor.
The Democrats’
bill includes a long list of priorities that had been ignored by last year’s
GOP-controlled Senate — including a historic increase in the child tax credit.
Democrats’
bill would almost double spending on the provision, increasing the maximum
credit to as much as $3,600 for children under the age of 6 over the next year.
People would also be allowed to claim it as a monthly payment rather than
waiting until tax season — a kind of guaranteed minimum income for parents.
The bill
also includes $350 billion for cash-strapped state and local governments, a
huge priority for Pelosi after Republicans repeatedly stripped it out of last
year’s bipartisan deals.
Education
makes up another enormous section of the bill, including $130 billion for K-12
schools and $40 billion for colleges to help bring students back for
in-classes.
Democrats
have also devoted a huge chunk for housing — $30 billion in emergency rental
assistance and programs for the homeless — as well as health care, with big
increases in Obamacare tax credits through 2022.
“In all my
years, I am really proud of what we did,” House Ways and Means Chairman Richard
Neal (D-Mass.) said. “For those who ask, is this too much? The answer is no.”
But the two
Democrats who opposed the measure, including centrist Rep. Kurt Schrader
(D-Ore.), did criticize new spending for programs seen as unrelated to the
pandemic or unnecessary for higher-income families, such as the expansion of
the child tax credit.
“It’s not
well thought through, not a lot of amendments were approved or allowed. I came
here to legislate and I’m not being allowed to do that,” Schrader said in an
interview this week. The other Democrat who opposed the bill was Rep. Jared
Golden (D-Maine.)
But for the
most part, Democrats are in lockstep behind their party's bill.
For
Republicans, the vote also represented a major — and much-needed — moment of
unity following months of bitter infighting following the deadly Jan. 6 riots.
House
Minority Whip Steve Scalise said GOP leaders “worked overtime” to ensure that
their troops stayed in line. That included numerous one-on-one conversations
with Republicans who were on the fence and an all-out messaging campaign — pie
charts and all — designed to paint the bill as stuffed with pork-barrel spending.
“It says a
lot about GOP unity, that on something big like this, when President Biden and
Nancy Pelosi shut Republicans out of the process, we will stick together,”
Scalise said in an interview.
Melanie
Zanona, Jennifer Scholtes and Burgess Everett contributed to this report.
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