Debate to begin in U.S. Senate on Biden's $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief
bill
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[March 05, 2021] By
Susan Cornwell and Makini Brice
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A sharply divided
U.S. Senate will begin a contentious debate on Friday on a $1.9 trillion
coronavirus aid bill that is President Joe Biden's first major
legislative initiative, with Democrats pressing ahead without any
Republican support.
The Senate voted on Thursday to take up the bill in a party-line 51-50
vote, with Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris breaking the tie. But
Republicans delayed the start of the debate by forcing the hours-long
reading of the full text of the 628-page measure.
The Senate is expected to debate the bill three hours on Friday before
considering a multitude of amendments, which could require a marathon
voting session, before taking a vote on final passage in a process that
could extend into the weekend. Republicans are expected to use
procedural maneuvers to slow the process.
If the Senate approves the bill, it will have to be sent back to the
Democratic-controlled House of Representatives for final passage.
Democrats hope Biden can sign the bill into law before March 14, when
some of the current benefits run out.
With no votes to spare, Senate Democrats have tweaked the measure to
ensure all 50 of their members would support it. Those changes would
steer more aid to smaller U.S. states and add money for infrastructure
projects, among other adjustments.
But efforts by some senators to alter temporary federal unemployment
benefits failed. The Senate bill keeps the House plan for $400 per-week
payments through Aug. 29. It was unclear whether any senators would try
to change that figure, possibly to $300, during the amendment process in
coming days.
"The time is now to move forward with big, bold, strong relief for the
American people," said Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer,
who has promised to keep the Senate at work until the bill is passed.
Republicans, who broadly backed COVID-19 relief spending early in the
pandemic, have criticized the bill's price tag.
The relief legislation includes funding for vaccines and medical
supplies, extends jobless assistance and provides a new round of
emergency financial aid to households, small businesses and state and
local governments. Opinion polls indicate broad public support.
[to top of second column] |
People wait in line to be inoculated against the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) at a vaccination site at the Esports Stadium Arlington &
Expo Center in Arlington, Texas, U.S. February 12, 2021.
REUTERS/Cooper Neill/File Photo
Senate Democrats on Wednesday tightened criteria for stimulus checks so fewer
high-income households would qualify.
The compromise means that 9 million fewer households would receive a stimulus
payment than in the last tranche of payouts in 2020. It also lowers the cost of
the legislation by $12 billion, according to Senate Democrats.
On Thursday, they said they had increased minimum payments to states with
smaller rural populations to match the $1.25 billion minimum contained in last
year's CARES Act. The bill passed by the House set the floor at $500 million.
The pandemic has killed nearly 520,000 Americans and thrown millions out of
work, although infection rates have eased in recent weeks as more people are
vaccinated.
'BIG, BLOATED, WASTEFUL'
The Senate's No. 2 Republican, John Thune, said larger states like California,
New York and Illinois still got the lion's share in the "big, bloated, wasteful
bill."
"You've got taxpayers in places like South Dakota and North Carolina and Georgia
and other places around the country that essentially are writing checks to
states which really aren't needed," Thune told PBS.
Democrats also included $10 billion for infrastructure, $8.5 billion for health
providers and expanded healthcare subsidies for those who lose their jobs.
In the Senate, bills usually require the support of 60 senators. But the
coronavirus relief bill is being advanced under a legislative maneuver known as
reconciliation that allows passage with a simple majority vote.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell and Makini Brice; additional reporting by David
Morgan and Richard Cowan; Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by Scott Malone
and Peter Cooney)
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