Marathon fight to pass U.S. pandemic relief tests Democrats' majority
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[March 08, 2021]
By Susan Cornwell and Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The battle to pass a
COVID-19 relief bill demonstrated how hard things will be for U.S.
President Joe Biden's Democrats in Congress, facing opposition from
right and left as they try to score big wins with small majorities.
A smiling Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer sang the praises of
Democratic unity on Saturday after his chamber approved the $1.9
trillion coronavirus aid plan, one of the largest economic stimulus
packages ever. He predicted it will be approved by the House of
Representatives next week and quickly signed into law by Biden.
But a day earlier, the Senate was paralyzed for hours when just one
Democrat bucked a proposal from his own party affecting unemployment
benefits. Because no Republicans backed the bill in a Senate split
50-50, progress on the legislation stopped cold.
Democrats eventually found a solution that satisfied the senator, Joe
Manchin of West Virginia. They stayed unified and swatted away a host of
Republican amendments in an all-night session. The relief bill passed
50-49, with one Republican absent.
"You've got to work a little bit harder when we have this toxic
atmosphere and the divisions that we have," Manchin told ABC's "This
Week" on Sunday. "I always want that moderate middle to be able to
work."
The episode highlighted the Democrats' razor-thin advantage.
"This was a reminder yesterday that in a 50-50 Senate, if any one member
changes their mind on an amendment, or a vote, or an issue, it can
change the outcome," Senator Chris Coons, a Democrat, told reporters.
Coons said it was "remarkable" that Schumer held together the Democratic
caucus, whose members range from conservatives like Manchin to
progressives such as Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent who caucuses
with Democrats and twice sought the party's presidential nomination.
Some Senate changes to the bill, like reducing its enhanced unemployment
benefits, will upset progressives in the House. The Democratic majority
there has more room for dissenters, with 221 Democrats and 211
Republicans. Nonetheless Democrats can only afford to lose a handful of
their own and pass anything.
At least House rules allow legislation to pass by simple majority.
As Democrats now turn to other priorities such as infrastructure
spending and immigration reform, Senate rules require 60 votes for most
legislation to advance. Generally, the 50 Democratic Senate votes plus
the tie-breaking vote of Vice President Kamala Harris will not be
enough.
A procedural maneuver called "reconciliation" allowed Democrats to get
around the 60-vote hurdle for the COVID-19 stimulus. It lets bills
affecting spending, revenue and debt levels pass with a simple majority.
But there are limits to how often reconciliation can be used and what it
can be used for, as the Democrats learned when the Senate's rules expert
jettisoned Biden's campaign promise to raise the minimum wage to $15 as
part of the COVID-19 package.
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The U.S. Senate passes President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion COVID-19
relief plan in a party-line vote in Washington, U.S. March 6, 2021
in this still image taken from a video. Senate TV/REUTERS TV
BIPARTISANSHIP?
Some progressives have urged ditching the Senate's 60-vote
procedural rule - often called the filibuster - to speed more
legislation through the chamber. But the episode with Manchin showed
the limits of that approach. Without him, the Democrats did not even
have 50 votes.
Manchin and fellow Democrat Senator Kyrsten Sinema do not support
changing the filibuster rule, so there is not a majority to do so.
They say the rule protects the rights of the minority to have a say
on legislation.
Biden, who ran for president promising to ease the deep political
divisions in America, has said he would like to turn down the
partisan heat in Washington and pass legislation with bipartisan
support.
After Saturday's vote, Biden said he believed a lot of Republicans
had been close to backing the COVID-19 bill.
"I still haven't given up on getting their support" on future
legislation, he told reporters.
Biden last week had a bipartisan meeting with members of the House
of Representatives on infrastructure spending, another policy goal.
After that meeting, Republican Representative Sam Graves said his
party's concerns must be taken into account.
"Republicans won’t support another Green New Deal disguising itself
as a transportation bill," he said. The Green New Deal program is
backed by progressive Democrats who want to cut U.S. carbon
emissions and invest in renewable energy.
But the partisan wrangling over the COVID-19 bill may have poisoned
the well for bipartisanship in the near term.
Republicans say the Democrats were not serious about finding a
bipartisan consensus on the coronavirus measure.
"There’s a sense that all of Biden’s calls for bipartisanship were
disingenuous because ... the first major bill he’s got to sign into
law, is a partisan bill that they jammed through without any real
effort to engage Republicans," said Lanhee Chen, a senior fellow at
the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and a former top
adviser to Republican presidential candidates Mitt Romney and Marco
Rubio.
Democrats questioned why Republicans opposed the coronavirus bill
when the aid had broad public support.
“As long as Democrats make an effort to be bipartisan in the eyes of
the American people, then they are going to be forgiven if they need
to take a party-line vote in order to push forward an agenda that is
going to help the American people," said Democratic strategist Bud
Jackson.
But things are unlikely to get any easier for Biden's Democrats with
their current majorities.
"It's possible that the high point for Democrats was just reached,"
said Larry Sabato, professor of politics at the University of
Virginia.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell and Steve Holland; Additional reporting
by Andrea Shalal; Editing by David Gregorio and Daniel Wallis)
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