Biden's aid bill wildly popular with Americans -- except Republicans in
Congress
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[February 26, 2021]
Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House is
losing hope that congressional Republicans will back U.S. President Joe
Biden's $1.9 trillion coronavirus aid bill despite a campaign-style push
that has won support from business leaders, local government officials,
unions and voters.
The administration has heavily promoted the "American Rescue Plan" as
crucial to getting millions of unemployed back to work and children back
into schools. The House of Representatives will vote on it as soon as
Friday.
But Republican leaders in Congress are seeking to unify their caucus in
opposition to the plan, and even moderate Republicans who signaled
initial willingness to work with Biden are balking, largely citing the
program's cost.
Utah Senator Mitt Romney, who voted to impeach Biden predecessor Donald
Trump, this week labeled the relief bill a wasteful "clunker."
Pennsylvania's Pat Toomey called it "completely partisan and divorced
from economic reality."
While the relief package can pass without Republican support because of
narrow Democratic control of the Senate, Biden promised a return to
bipartisanship when he entered office in January. His failure to get
Republicans on board here suggests four years of bitter battles in
Washington instead.
The president has "used every opportunity he has to make the case
publicly" for the relief bill, White House press secretary Jen Psaki
told reporters Thursday.
She cited polls that show 70% of people, including a majority of
Republicans, are in favor of the measure. "He is hopeful that
Republicans, many in Congress, will follow what their constituents
want," she said.
Matt Bennett, the co-founder of Third Way, a Washington think tank that
supports "center left" policies, said Americans need to rethink the
definition of bipartisanship.
"Joe Biden doesn’t think about bipartisanship based on a vote count in
Congress. He thinks about it based on how people in the country feel,"
Bennett said.
A CAMPAIGN TO SELL AID
The new aid, which follows two relief packages totaling $2.9 trillion
passed by Congress last year, provides additional spending for vaccines
and medical supplies.
But most of the money addresses the economy with $1,400 relief checks to
individuals, more generous federal unemployment benefits, aid to small
businesses and $350 billion for state and local governments.
The White House's carefully orchestrated promotion, modeled on Biden's
election campaign, has deployed top lieutenants Vice President Kamala
Harris, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and economic adviser Brian Deese.
Campaign aides helped target messages to local markets, minority groups
and industries like restaurants.
Biden last week toured a factory of vaccine maker Pfizer in Michigan and
spoke at a town hall in Wisconsin on the aid plan, two states he
narrowly won in November.
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President Joe Biden displays his face mask as he speaks during an
event to commemorate the 50 millionth coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
vaccination in the South Court Auditorium at the White House in
Washington, U.S., February 25, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The White House has pushed the bill on Spanish language media
outlets like Telemundo and Univision, met with over 300 American
Indian tribal leaders and held a special virtual briefing for 20
African-American news outlets.
REPUBLICAN DONORS, MAYORS ON BOARD
This campaign has gained traction, winning over many people, even
some big Republican donors, state officials and voters.
Nearly seven in 10 Americans in a Quinnipiac University poll this
month said they support Biden's plan. And nearly eight in 10 people
including a majority of Republicans like the $1,400 relief checks
for individuals, the poll found.
More than 100 CEOs in a letter Wednesday called on Congress to "act
swiftly and on a bipartisan basis to authorize a stimulus and relief
package along the lines of the Biden-Harris administration’s
proposed American Rescue Plan."
Their ranks included Stephen A. Schwarzman, the CEO of asset
management firm Blackstone and a major donor to Trump and
congressional Republicans in 2020.
Over 30 Republican mayors have signed on to a letter supporting the
bill as well.
Meanwhile, Republican leaders in Congress have focused on rallying
their caucus against the package as a foundation for unity after
Trump's incitement of a violent attack on Congress in January
exposed gaping divisions.
Republicans in late January offered an alternative $600 billion
COVID-19 relief package that was immediately rejected by the White
House as insufficient.
"Add 'bipartisanship' as another in a long list of Biden’s broken
promises," Republican National Convention rapid response director
Tommy Pigott said in response.
While the White House faces more fights in the months ahead, veteran
Democratic strategists believe the situation is a long-term win for
the party.
In a memo to senior White House staff in February seen by Reuters,
Mike Donilon, a veteran Biden political adviser, said Republican
obstructionism was damaging the party's standing.
"The GOP is putting itself at odds with a rescue package supported
overwhelmingly by the American people" he wrote.
(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw and Andrea Shalal; Editing by Heather
Timmons and Cynthia Osterman)
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