President Joe Biden is pushing for a sweeping $1.9 trillion response
bill, but after Congress approved $4 trillion in spending to address
the pandemic, including $900 billion last month, some prominent
Republicans have pushed back on the idea of passing so large a bill
so quickly.
"We'll try to get that passed in the next month, month and a half,"
said Schumer, whose Democrats control the 50-50 Senate thanks only
to Vice President Kamala Harris' tie-breaking vote.
"Will it be easy in the Senate? No," he told New York City public
transportation advocates. "But it'll be a lot easier because I can
determine what's put on the floor, not (Senate Minority Leader
Mitch) McConnell."
Biden, who has aimed for the package to include $1,400 per-person
payments, said on Monday he was open to negotiating eligibility
requirements for the checks if it would boost support among
lawmakers who want to ensure they go to the neediest people.
Schumer and McConnell - who served as majority leader for the last
six years - are positioning for advantage in the divided chamber and
so far have failed to agree on a power-sharing arrangement to
determine how the Senate will run day-to-day operations for the next
two years.
Biden has made addressing the pandemic, which has killed more than
418,000 Americans and is infecting more than 170,000 people in the
United States each day, a primary initial thrust of his
administration.
Earlier on Monday, Senator Angus King said the Senate was planning
to consider a bill within the next two weeks, while it also moves to
confirm Biden's Cabinet ahead of the start of the Trump trial during
the week of Feb. 8.
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"We're going to try to do
something between now and the time of the
impeachment trial beginning," King told National
Public Radio.
King and Republican Senator Bill Cassidy, who
both participated in a call about COVID-19
relief with Biden administration officials on
Sunday, said there is broad agreement about the
need to move forward on vaccinations.
"We can all agree: we need to have money out there for vaccines,"
Cassidy told Fox News on Monday. "And testing, we can accept that."
King said there was a general consensus on Sunday's call to do
"whatever we have to do to speed up the vaccination process. I don't
think there's going to be any debate about that."
He added that the group on Sunday's call would speak again on Monday
or Tuesday.
The narrow margins of Democratic control in the House of
Representatives and Senate mean that any legislation would need
bipartisan support to become law.
House committees are expected to work on legislation this week, with
the aim of being ready to put a bill on the House floor during the
first week of February.
(Reporting by David Morgan and Susan Heavey; Additional reporting by
Jarrett Renshaw and Alexandra Alper; Editing by Scott Malone, Andrea
Ricci and Sonya Hepinstall)
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