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Why Congress may yet pass pandemic help for Americans

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Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
Sens. Lisa Murkowski, Jeanne Shaheen, and Mitt Romney listen as Sen. Bill Cassidy speaks during a news conference of bipartisan members of the Senate and House to announce a framework for fresh relief legislation on Capitol Hill, Dec. 1, 2020.

Encouraging noises are coming from Washington about a pandemic relief deal before Christmas 鈥 which means that political reality is sinking in.听

Amid a nationwide surge 鈥 with a record 4 million new cases alone 鈥 important measures to help Americans cope have already expired or will be expiring . The economic recovery has stalled, with November reporting since the spring and the country still 9 million jobs short since March. Meanwhile, states are readying for vaccine distribution, which is underfunded.

Just do something, say the of Americans, according to .

Why We Wrote This

With the pandemic surging and the economy stalling, an overwhelming majority of Americans want Washington to do something. Why both Democrats and Republicans now see the possibility of making a deal.

Therefore, a deal now is better than a deal later 鈥 even if it is limited in size and duration, says G. William Hoagland, senior vice president at the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington. 鈥淎nything is better at this stage, to the extent that it is money that can be gotten out quickly, particularly if the money is for vaccine distribution,鈥 says Mr. Hoagland. Democrats are likely to be disappointed, but they can take 鈥渁nother bite at the apple鈥 next year, he says.

Congress is coming late to a compromise, as it often does until faced with a deadline. At the end of the year, pandemic-related federal unemployment insurance for nearly 12 million Americans and protection from eviction and from student loan payments will expire. The Paycheck Protection Program for small businesses has already lapsed, as has the extra weekly $600 benefit for some 30 million jobless Americans.

鈥淏oth from an economic and a health perspective, and those two are intertwined, the stalling with the stimulus is really creating hardship,鈥 says Jennifer Kates, a senior vice president at the Kaiser Family Foundation.

At a minimum, she says, Congress needs to extend unemployment insurance, support paid family leave, and provide funding for schools to cope with the pandemic. Vaccine distribution is also high on her 鈥渕ust do鈥 list. States have only gotten $200 million for that so far, she says, but she鈥檚 pleased that both parties agree that billions of dollars more are needed.

Politically, both sides appear to be moving. Like the cubist painting 鈥淣ude Descending a Staircase, No. 2,鈥 Democrats keep stepping downward in their dollar demands. In May, House Democrats passed the $3 trillion Heroes Act, which went nowhere. In October, they passed a second version, at $2.2 trillion. Now Democratic leaders Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer are below $1 trillion, embracinga $908 billion deal put forward by a bipartisan, bicameral group of senators and House members this week.听

鈥淢ost Democrats think that bigger and later is better. I think it鈥檚 a false choice. I think we should take whatever we can get and come back the very next day, reintroduce what we want, and say we鈥檙e going to get anything to people that will help them,鈥 says Celinda Lake, a Democratic pollster. 鈥淭o pass nothing hurts Democrats and Republicans. It hurts everyone in Congress. Eighty percent of voters want this.鈥

Indeed, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters on Friday that she鈥檚 now willing to go for a narrower package because Joe Biden will be taking office, allowing Democrats another chance at relief, and because a vaccine is on the way.

For Republicans, the main sticking point is aid to state and local governments, which they see as a 鈥渂ailout鈥 to poorly managed states, says David Winston, a Republican pollster and strategist.

鈥淭heir attitude is 鈥榢eep it to COVID,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not an argument over money,鈥 he adds, though Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has backed a GOP package of about $500 billion, with his stipulation that employers get liability protection from pandemic-related lawsuits.

On Thursday, Speaker Pelosi, of California, and Majority Leader McConnell spoke by phone about funding, with Senator McConnell telling reporters that it would likely be added to a must-pass $1.4 trillion spending bill to fund the federal government when it runs out of money on Dec. 11. He was noncommittal about this week鈥檚 proposed bipartisan plan, spearheaded by Sens. Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, and Joe Manchin, Democrat of West Virginia.

That plan includes additional unemployment insurance, new funding for the Paycheck Protection Program for small-business loans, direct aid for schools, and $16 billion for vaccine development, distribution, and virus testing and tracing. It also provides $35 billion for health care providers, such as hospitals, and assists with student loan forgiveness, rental housing, and child care. The provisions would run through March, including $160 billion for state and local governments 鈥 a significant retreat from the $1 trillion Democrats wanted last spring. Senator McConnell would get the liability protection he seeks, but only for the short term.

Where all this will end up is not clear, but the sides are talking and President Donald Trump says he鈥檒l sign an agreement if Congress can put one together. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing this kind of gathering of momentum,鈥 Sen. Bill Cassidy, Republican of Louisiana, said.

Republicans 鈥渞ealize that things are getting worse. And that if the economy goes into a recession, it really gets worse,鈥 said Senator Cassidy, who backs the bipartisan proposal. 鈥淎nd for the individuals and their families, I mean, they can鈥檛 borrow their way out of this. And they鈥檙e really going to get stuck.鈥澨

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