海角大神

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鈥楢n enormous waste鈥: How stimulus checks play in red-state America

Many see the relief bill as padded with unnecessary items, further ballooning the national debt even as the economic outlook is improving.

By Story Hinckley, Staff writerNick Roll, Staff writer
Oneonta, Ala.; and Covington, Ky.

Oneonta is the kind of place where an extra $1,400 could make a big difference. More than 16% of residents in Blount County live in poverty 鈥 a higher rate than the state of Alabama as a whole, which already registers as one of the nation鈥檚 poorest.聽

But as stimulus checks from President Joe Biden鈥檚 $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill make their way to 160 million American households, voters here are showing little enthusiasm for the extra money.聽

鈥淭hese stimulus checks are just a way of making more people dependent on the government,鈥 says Virginia Russell, who owns the Look of Xcellence hair salon in Oneonta. It鈥檚 a view that鈥檚 echoed across this conservative county, where former President Donald Trump聽won 90% of the vote聽last November, and where tattered Trump 2020 flags still line the central highway.

Ms. Russell admits she felt differently last year, when President Trump signed the $2.2 trillion CARES Act into law. Passed with near-unanimous support in Congress in the early weeks of the pandemic, that relief bill won approval from 79% of Republican and Democratic voters, according to a Gallup Poll. To Ms. Russell and the other women in the Look of Xcellence, it was a necessary measure in an unprecedented time.

By contrast, President Biden鈥檚 American Rescue Plan Act, signed last month, garnered no Republican votes in Congress. And while it initially seemed to be popular among both Democratic and Republican voters, Gallup now finds that only 18% of Republicans nationwide approve of the bill.

鈥淭here are some people who the stimulus package really helps, sure. But the people who work,鈥 says Ms. Russell, motioning to herself and the other nodding stylists in the salon, many of whom say they have already received their checks, 鈥渨e are going to be the ones paying for it.鈥澛

This marks the third time in a little over 12 months that Americans making less than $75,000 are receiving payments from the federal government: $1,200 from the CARES Act last spring, another $600 from a COVID-19 relief bill in December, and now $1,400. All the stimulus checks have been framed as an effort to boost the economy and help Americans hurt by the pandemic and its impact.

To some extent, the growing resistance on the right to the flood of government spending may reflect the fact that it鈥檚 now coming from a Democratic, rather than Republican, administration.

But with states across the country ramping up vaccination programs and relaxing restrictions, many Americans have also come to feel that the crisis is waning, making federal aid less necessary. Either way, the lackluster or even negative responses by many Republican voters to extra money in their bank accounts may be an early indication of the resistance President Biden will face as he tries to win passage of a $2 trillion infrastructure bill and other priorities down the line.聽

鈥淪ome people really need [the money], and you can鈥檛 deny them that,鈥 says Dave Lannigan, a retiree who voted for Mr. Trump, standing outside his house in Covington, Kentucky. 鈥淏ut I think there鈥檚 a lot of waste there.鈥

Like Oneonta, Covington is a struggling area in a struggling state: More than 23% of people here live in poverty.聽

鈥淚 got [a check]. I didn鈥檛 need it,鈥 says Mr. Lannigan with a shrug. 鈥淏ut I took it.鈥

Back when Mr. Biden was campaigning for the American Rescue Plan鈥檚 passage in late February, he implored congressional Republicans to vote in favor of the bill, citing its widespread support among voters. And he wasn鈥檛 entirely wrong.聽A Quinnipiac poll from Feb. 3 found more than one-third of Republicans supported the relief bill, and more than 60% supported the $1,400 checks.

The ensuing debate about whether to include a national $15 minimum wage in the bill may have led to some souring among Republicans. But聽after the bill passed, conservative media attacked it in earnest聽as a 鈥淒emocratic wish list鈥 masquerading as pandemic relief.

In addition to the stimulus checks and extending unemployment benefits, the relief bill also included payments to parents, $1 billion for Head Start, housing assistance for homeless populations, and more.聽

鈥淭he child care credit, the expansion of the Affordable Care Act 鈥 it clearly became a bill that was a train for Democratic priorities in addition to immediate rescue priorities, and that made it much more political, especially in the mind of a lot of voters,鈥 says Maya MacGuineas, president of the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

A stylist at the Look of Xcellence salon compares the stimulus checks to 鈥渉ush money,鈥 saying they allowed Democrats to 鈥渦sher other stuff in this bill.鈥

While some conservative voters may have had mixed feelings about last year鈥檚 payments as well, many justified Mr. Trump鈥檚 stimulus checks out of a mixture of party loyalty and the scale of the health crisis back then. But today, they say, America is in a different place.

鈥淚 feel like the coronavirus is pretty much under control now, and people still are using [COVID-19] as an excuse not to go back to work,鈥 says Alex Lenhoff, a server at the Cock & Bull Public House in Covington. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also creating problems in the job market.鈥

Steve Locke, who owns Covington鈥檚 Zazou Grill and Pub, says he鈥檚 having trouble filling open positions at his restaurant. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, nearly 1 million jobs were added in March.聽聽

鈥淓very place is short-handed,鈥 agrees Ms. Lenhoff. 鈥淲e鈥檙e short-handed.鈥澛

A Trump supporter, Ms. Lenhoff has remained employed throughout the pandemic, but says she received all three stimulus checks.

鈥淚 mean, yeah, it was a help. I鈥檝e used it to buy some stuff for my kids and things like that, pay some bills,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut most of it鈥檚 sitting in the bank still.鈥

鈥淭here鈥檚 people that need that stimulus check,鈥 says Mr. Locke. 鈥淏ut all of us didn鈥檛 need it.鈥

In recent weeks, President Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, and their spouses have been touring the nation to tout the relief bill to the American public, in what they鈥檙e calling the 鈥淗elp Is Here鈥 tour. Today, first lady Jill Biden is scheduled to visit Birmingham, Alabama, to explain how it will help alleviate child poverty.

GOP Rep. Gary Palmer, who represents Alabama鈥檚 6th Congressional District, which includes Blount County, voted in favor of the CARES Act in 2020 but against the American Rescue Plan 鈥 despite the fact that it designates more than $4 billion for his state.聽

鈥淚 know it sounds partisan but it鈥檚 not,鈥 says Congressman Palmer. Mr. Trump鈥檚 two relief bills were 鈥渇ocused and transparent,鈥 he says, but Mr. Biden鈥檚 鈥渢akes advantage of the pandemic and of people to [do] things that they otherwise wouldn鈥檛 do on a more transparent piece of legislation.鈥

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 an enormous waste of money,鈥 he concludes.