WASHINGTON – Democrats are preparing to bypass Republican objections to speed up President Biden’s $ 1.9 trillion economic aid package through Congress rather than slashing it significantly to win Republican votes, even if government officials and Congressional moderators are hoping to pass a law with significant bipartisan support.
On a day that new data from the Commerce Department showed that the economic recovery was slowing late last year, Democratic leaders in Congress and administration officials said publicly and privately on Thursday that they had committed to a large-scale relief bill and would move next Week to start a process that would allow him to survive with only democratic votes if necessary. Behind closed doors, congressional committees are already drafting legislation to translate Mr Biden’s plans into law.
Party leaders remain confident that Mr Biden will be able to incorporate his so-called American bailout plan into law by mid-March at the latest, even if competing demands for an impeachment trial against former President Donald J. Trump, due to begin the week of February 8, are due to begin.
“We want it to be bipartisan at all times, but we can’t surrender if they don’t,” California spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi said at a press conference on Capitol Hill.
“I think we have more influence on cooperation on the other side when they know that we also have an alternative,” she added.
Officials across the administration are having a series of virtual conversations with key lawmakers, governors, mayors, civil rights leaders, and a variety of lobby groups to build as much support as possible for the aid package. It includes $ 1,400 in checks for many individual Americans, expanding the additional net safety benefits through the fall, and hundreds of billions of dollars in vaccine use and other measures to help contain the coronavirus pandemic.
However, there are early signs that Mr Biden will have to cut his ambitions, at least in part, to also ensure his party’s full support in the Senate – which he will almost certainly have to do to pass a law.
Some moderate Democrats, along with many Republicans, have urged the government to limit the scope of direct controls recipients in order to more directly target low- and middle-income Americans. Such a move would save hundreds of billions of dollars from the total price of the proposal. Officials privately admit that they would consider lowering the income threshold at which the size of checks for individuals and families would expire.
Mr Biden did not announce thresholds on the checks in his proposal, but in December, Congress Democrats proposed $ 2,000 individual checks that would slowly expire for those earning more than $ 75,000 a year – and allow some families to go up to 430,000 Receive smaller payments to earn USD per year.
In a private caucus call with Senate Democrats and Brian Deese, director of Mr Biden’s National Economic Council, Georgia Senator Jon Ossoff urged the party to come up with a comprehensive package that included another round of business cycle reviews, arguing that the problem was loud two people familiar with the comments helped the Democrats win both seats in the state Senate and get a majority. Mr Ossoff declined to comment on the call as it was private.
Some moderate lawmakers have also urged the government to justify the need for nearly $ 2 trillion in additional relief, warning that the money already approved by Congress in previous rounds of relief – including the $ 900 billion passed in December Dollar package – has not yet been spent. Some Democrats also fear that if the bill bypasses the filibuster through what is known as budget balancing, it is unclear whether Mr Biden could do so by parliamentary rules that would force Mr Biden to drop his demand for a minimum wage of $ 15 an hour Get the votes for it even if some Democrats believe it would be eligible.
Mr Biden has repeatedly said that he will work with Republicans to work out a bill that could merit bipartisan support, and moderate Republicans have warned that excluding their party from the process will undermine Mr Biden’s demands for unity and future attempts at negotiation would endanger.
But White House officials said Thursday that Democrats could act quickly without sacrificing bipartisanism.
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Jan. 28, 2021, 5:57 p.m. ET
“The president wants this to be a bipartisan package regardless of the mechanisms,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters. “Republicans can still vote for a package even if it goes away with reconciliation.”
Mr. Biden recently called two Republican Senators, Susan Collins from Maine and Rob Portman from Ohio, who are members of a non-partisan group that aims to bridge the divide between the two parties. Ms Psaki said the president will be making more calls to Republicans and Democrats this week.
“He didn’t call me – he calls her and that’s good,” Illinois Senator Richard J. Durbin, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, told reporters. “I’m not critical at all. But I believe the president has contacted these Republicans directly in person in the hope that we can do so in a non-partisan way. “
But several Republicans, including those in the bipartisan group who agreed to negotiate a small package, warned that continuing the reconciliation process and bypassing their conference would harm relations. (When Republicans controlled both chambers and the White House in 2017, they used the procedure twice.)
“Covid Relief has the best bipartisan pathway right outside the door,” said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia and a member of the bipartisan group. She rammed a bill through reconciliation, adding, “Is a signal to any Republican that your ideas don’t matter, and I think – does that end? No, but it adds color. “
Administration officials have shown little willingness to come up with a much smaller bill than Mr Biden has suggested. They privately fear moving a package that includes only the provisions most likely Republican support – the direct controls and the money on vaccines – other elements of the plan they consider critical to the recovery, like Hundreds of billions of dollars in the state, could shake and local aid.
Mr Deese pushed back such suggestions during the call with Democrats and in a post on Twitter. “The needs of the American people are not partial. We can’t do this piece by piece, ”he wrote.
Many Democrats privately say they see little hope of attracting the 10 Republican votes they would need to overcome a filibuster and avoid the budget vote process to move the bill unless they reduce the ambitions of Mr. Biden considerably. Haunted by what New York majority leader Senator Chuck Schumer called a “mistake” of 2009 when the Democratic Party was in control of both chambers and the White House, but “too shy and limited in its response to that. ” global financial crisis ”, top Democrats urge not to be satisfied with a small package.
“If our Republican colleagues decide to oppose this urgent and necessary legislation, we must move forward without it,” said Schumer, adding that he would like to push for a budget resolution as early as next week.
The effort is hampered by the Democrats’ weak hold over power in the Senate, which is split between 50 and 50, but where Vice President Kamala Harris can break ties in favor of her party. Those numbers give tremendous influence to the most conservative members of the Democratic caucus, including Senators Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, and Jon Tester of Montana. Either of them could defy the magnitude of Mr. Biden’s demands and force a smaller package.
Mr Tester pointed out such possibilities in a nomination hearing for Cecilia Rouse on Thursday in Mr Biden’s decision to head the White House Council of Economic Advisers. He raised concerns about federal borrowing and repeatedly urged Ms. Rouse to commit to “targeted” spending programs to stimulate the economy.
“They need to be targeted,” replied Ms. Rouse. “You have to be smart. You need to be in those areas where we know the economic benefits outweigh the costs. “
Administrative officials are juggling the bailout package with a broader proposal Mr Biden calls a recovery plan that would spend trillions more on infrastructure improvements, clean energy and a number of other initiatives based on Mr Biden’s “Build Back Better” agenda from the presidential campaign. This plan is funded in whole or in part through corporate and high income tax increases. Mr Biden has promised to make it public next month.
Nicholas Fandos contributed to the coverage.