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Politics

Historical past-Making Vote on Israel Coalition Comes With a Skinny Margin

The political fate of Israel’s longest serving leader, Benjamin Netanyahu, is set to be decided on Sunday afternoon, when Parliament will hold a vote of confidence in a new government that would topple Mr. Netanyahu from power for the first time in 12 years.

Mr. Netanyahu’s opponents hope that the vote, if it passes, will ease a political stalemate that has produced four elections since 2019 and left Israel without a state budget for more than a year. It will also end, at least for now, the dominance of a politician who has shaped 21st-century Israel more than any other, shifted its politics to the right and overseen the fizzling of Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations.

Mr. Netanyahu is set to be replaced by his former chief of staff and now political rival, Naftali Bennett. A former high-tech entrepreneur and settler leader, Mr. Bennett opposes a Palestinian state and believes Israel should annex much of the occupied West Bank.

If confirmed by Parliament, Mr. Bennett would lead an ideologically diffuse coalition that is united only by its antipathy toward Mr. Netanyahu. The bloc ranges from the far left to the hard right and includes — for the first time in Israeli history — an independent Arab party.

On Sunday, one hard-right lawmaker was considering whether to resign from his party, but still vote for the coalition. And an Arab lawmaker was debating whether to abstain in the vote.

If it holds, the coalition will control just 61 of Parliament’s 120 seats, and its fragility has prompted many commentators to wonder whether it can last a full term. Should it hold until 2023, Mr. Bennett will be replaced as prime minister by Yair Lapid, a centrist former television host, for the remaining two years of the term.

The parliamentary session to confirm the new government is scheduled to begin at 4 p.m. local time. Mr. Bennett is expected to speak first, followed by Mr. Lapid and then Mr. Netanyahu.

Parliament is then expected to vote for a new speaker — likely to be Mickey Levy, from Mr. Lapid’s centrist party — and finally for the government itself. If the vote passes, the government will be sworn in immediately, formally replacing Mr. Netanyahu’s administration.

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World News

A Fragile Israeli Coalition, With Some Underlying Glue

JERUSALEM — A new Israeli government united in its determination to oust Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but in agreement on little else, is set to take office Sunday under a right-wing leader whose eight-party coalition includes the left and, for the first time, an independent Arab party.

It looks like a recipe for chronic instability.

Even Sunday’s confidence vote in the Knesset, or parliament, that would usher in the first change in Israeli leadership in a dozen years is not a done deal, given the razor-thin majority of Naftali Bennett’s coalition with its 61 seats in the 120-member chamber. But every indication is that the votes to make Mr. Bennett prime minister are locked in, absent some 11th-hour drama.

A signed coalition agreement was formally presented to the Knesset secretariat Friday, the last step before a vote and the swearing-in of the new government.

Survival will then become the issue. Israel’s parliamentary democracy veered in a presidential direction under Mr. Netanyahu. In the end, his increasingly dismissive style had alienated too many people, especially among nominal allies on the right.

Agreement to return to democratic norms may be the underlying glue of the unlikely coalition.

“The parties are disparate, but they share a commitment to reconstitute Israel as a functioning liberal democracy,” said Shlomo Avineri, a prominent political scientist. “In recent years we saw Netanyahu begin to govern in a semi-authoritarian way.”

After agreement was reached Friday on the government program, Mr. Bennett said: “The government will work for all the Israeli public — religious, secular, ultra-Orthodox, Arab — without exception, as one. We will work together, out of partnership and national responsibility, and I believe we will succeed.”

Success will require constant compromise. “They will not deal with the highly contentious issues between left and right,” said Tamar Hermann, a professor of political science at Israel’s Open University.

In practice, that means a likely concentration on domestic rather than foreign affairs. Israel has not had a budget in more than two years of political turmoil and repetitive elections. Mr. Bennett, a self-made tech millionaire, is determined to deliver higher standards of living and prosperity to a population weary of such paralysis.

The delicate questions to be deferred or finessed would include any renewed peace negotiations with the Palestinians and any major settlement expansion in the West Bank.

Although Mr. Bennett was once a leader of the main settler movement in the West Bank and has called for the annexation of parts of the territory Israel captured in 1967, he seems certain to be constrained by centrist and left-wing members of the coalition and by the pragmatism that survival demands.

Establishing good relations with the Biden administration, a priority, and improving relations with America’s majority liberal Jewish community, another significant goal, will also require centrist restraint.

“Hard core people of the right, we have the evidence, become more centrist in office,” Ms. Hermann said. “Bennett was not prime minister when he made his pro-settlement statements.”

Mr. Bennett, 49, like other prominent members of the prospective cabinet, has waited a long time to emerge from Mr. Netanyahu’s shadow. Yair Lapid, 57, the incoming foreign minister, and Gideon Saar, 54, who would become justice minister, are other prominent politicians of a generation weary of being sidelined by the man many Israelis had come to dub the King of Israel. They will not want to return to the shadows.

Mr. Lapid, a leading architect of the coalition, would become prime minister in two years under the deal that made an alternative to Mr. Netanyahu possible — another incentive for him to help make the government work.

Still, it may not. The parties, ranging from Mr. Bennett’s Yamina party on the right to Labor and Meretz on the left, disagree on everything from L.G.B.T.Q. rights to public transportation on Shabbat.

They will come under withering, constant attack from Mr. Netanyahu’s center-right Likud party. It is conceivable that Mr. Netanyahu will be ousted from Likud at some point, whereupon the right-wing members of the coalition may return to their natural alliances.

Understand Developments in Israeli Politics

    • Key Figures. The main players in the latest twist in Israeli politics have very different agendas, but one common goal. Naftali Bennett, who leads a small right-wing party, and Yair Lapid, the centrist leader of the Israeli opposition, have joined forces to form a diverse coalition to unseat Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-serving prime minister.
    • Range of Ideals. Spanning Israel’s fractious political spectrum from left to right, and relying on the support of a small Arab, Islamist party, the coalition, dubbed the “change government” by supporters, will likely mark a profound shift for Israel.
    • A Common Goal. After grinding deadlock that led to four inconclusive elections in two years, and an even longer period of polarizing politics and government paralysis, the architects of the coalition have pledged to get Israel back on track.
    • An Unclear Future. Parliament still has to ratify the fragile agreement in a confidence vote in the coming days. But even if it does, it remains unclear how much change the “change government” could bring to Israel because some of the parties involved have little in common besides animosity for Mr. Netanyahu.

“It’s not going to be easy,” said Avraham Diskin, a political scientist at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. “I really doubt that Lapid will become prime minister two years from now.”

Among measures the prospective government has agreed on is legislation that would set a two-term limit for prime ministers. In effect, this would preclude Netanyahu redux.

Four ministries will be shut down, including the digital and strategic affairs ministries. Mr. Netanyahu had a cabinet so large and unwieldy he could argue that he had to make decisions himself.

The prospective government will also pursue legislation designed to make it more difficult to change Israel’s basic laws, which serve as the constitutional foundation of the country in the absence of a constitution. Mr. Netanyahu, who had been indicted on fraud and other charges, appeared to seek a curtailing of the powers of the Supreme Court and immunity from prosecution as prime minister.

The presence of Raam, an independent Arab party, in government, will affect policy to some degree.

The disparities in living standards, education, and access to land between Israeli Jews and the Palestinian citizens of Israel, who account for some 20 percent of the population, has become a burning issue. Violent clashes between the communities last month were the worst in two decades. Tensions remain high.

The government looks set to allocate almost $10 billion to close gaps between the communities over the next several years, freeze demolitions of unlicensed homes in Arab areas, recognize three Bedouin villages in the Negev desert, improve public transportation, and increase policing in disadvantaged Arab communities suffering from drug dealing and violence.

The posts promised to Raam to secure its support include deputy minister in the prime minister’s office and chairman of the Knesset committee for Arab affairs.

But tensions could flare at any moment. Most immediately, a nationalist march through Muslim-majority areas of Jerusalem’s Old City has been rescheduled for Tuesday. The original Jerusalem Day march last month was canceled because of Hamas rocket fire and clashes between the police and Palestinian protesters.

The issue remains highly sensitive, charged with the same emotions that led to a short war last month, despite efforts to agree on a less sensitive route for the march. The political adroitness of Mr. Bennett and Mr. Lapid will be quickly tested.

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World News

Deliberate Israel Coalition Brings Palestinians Aid however No Rejoicing

The agreement on a coalition that would oust Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and include an Arab party in government has prompted indignation and relief in roughly equal measure among Palestinian citizens of Israel.

Indignation because Naftali Bennett, who will become prime minister until 2023 if Parliament approves the proposed eight-party coalition, is a right-wing leader aligned with religious nationalists in strong opposition to a Palestinian state.

Relief because Mr. Netanyahu, while sometimes courting Israeli Arabs of late, has often used their presence to generate fear among his base, famously warning in 2015 that they were voting “in droves.” He has fanned division where possible and declared that Israel is “the nation-state, not of all its citizens, but only of the Jewish people.”

These provocations, and the passing of a nation-state bill in 2018 that said the right to exercise self-determination was “unique to the Jewish people,” contributed to the anger evident in violent confrontations in several cities last month between Arabs and Jews.

That a small Arab party known by its Hebrew acronym, Raam, agreed to join the government so soon after the clashes reflected a growing realization that marginalization of Arab parties brings only paralysis. It also suggested a desire among some Palestinians citizens, who account for 20 percent of the Israeli population, to exert more political influence.

Raam, with four seats in the current Parliament, would be the first independent Arab party in an Israeli government, although it would not have any cabinet members.

“I do not think that the two-state solution or reconciliation with the Palestinians will be achieved in the coming year or two,” said Jafar Farah, the director of the Mossawa Center, an advocacy group for Arab citizens of Israel. “But I do think that it is an opportunity for the Palestinian community in Israel to become a game changer.”

Others were more sceptical. “I have debated Bennett, and he says quite openly, ‘You are not my equal,’” said Diana Buttu, a prominent Palestinian lawyer based in Haifa. “Did I want Netanyahu out? Yes. To the extent of wanting Bennett as prime minister? No.”

Alluding to Mansour Abbas, the leader of the small Arab party that signed an agreement to join the government, she added: “He has done this to make his mark, but he will not get anything. He is effectively backing a government led by an ultranationalist who wants to expand settlements.”

How Mr. Bennett would exercise power in a coalition with many members well to the left of him, including the chief architect of the agreement, Yair Lapid, remains unclear. But Mr. Netanyahu’s hold on Israeli society and the Israeli imagination has been such over the past dozen years that his eventual departure inevitably seems synonymous with new possibility.

Commenting in the newspaper Yedioth, Merav Batito wrote: “Abbas’ signature is much more than a formal token of agreement. It symbolizes the possibility of a return to normalcy of Israeli society.” She added, “The first concrete wall built between Arabs and Jews by the Parliament deep in Israeli society has been breached.”

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Politics

Broad Coalition of Democrats Presses Biden to Broaden Medicare

WASHINGTON – A broad coalition of Democrats from across the ideological spectrum plans on Thursday to begin what it promises to be a loud and sustained campaign to pressure President Biden to add a major Medicare addition to his infrastructure package.

More than 150 House Democrats – including Representative Pramila Jayapal of Washington, chairman of the progressive wing of the House, and Representative Jared Golden of Maine, one of the chamber’s most centrist Democrats – have teamed up in what is far from certain to draw Republican opposition but contains suggestions that are popular with a broad segment of the electorate.

Disappointed that Mr Biden has not yet responded to an election promise to expand Medicare benefits, members of the group, which together represent nearly 70 percent of House Democrats, have signed a letter starting their print campaign. The organizers say it will contain opinion pieces and press events. Representatives Conor Lamb from Pennsylvania and Joe Neguse from Colorado are also leading the push.

“It is really unusual for a health proposition to reach this intensity,” Ms. Jayapal said in an interview.

At the heart of the plan is to call for the Medicare Eligibility Age to be lowered from 65 to 60 and to enroll approximately 23 million Americans on the federal senior health program, which will cost $ 200 billion over 10 years. Lawmakers are also pushing for Medicare benefits to be extended to include teeth, eyesight and hearing, which would cost approximately $ 350 billion over 10 years.

Legislators say the third element of their package more than offsets the cost: Medicare’s power to negotiate drug prices. Ms. Jayapal said change – one that Democrats have been unsuccessful in promoting for years – could generate as much as $ 650 billion in a decade, although the Congressional budget bureau has estimated the savings at about $ 450 billion over that period.

Mr Golden, who has historically opposed some large-ticket spending, including the nearly $ 1.9 trillion stimulus bill, said the Department of Veterans Affairs, which has the power to negotiate drug prices for veterans, is paying far less for prescription drugs than the rest of the government.

The Government Accountability Office found that the prescription drug division paid an average of 54 percent less than Medicare in 2017.

Lawmakers have made Zoom calls with White House officials over the proposal, which they hope Mr Biden will include in a large spending package that can lead the Senate through accelerated budget reconciliation this year.

It is not clear whether Mr Biden and other Democrats in Congress will accept the move, as Democratic leaders have focused on competing efforts to achieve a permanent increase in health subsidies under the Affordable Care Act in the Boom Act. There is widespread support for this proposal, including from hospitals who want to get the higher private insurance rates and insurers who want more people to buy their products. Any attempt to expand Medicare is likely to encounter opposition from the same groups.

Updated

May 26, 2021, 9:17 p.m. ET

However, Ms. Jayapal argued that the two health care proposals were compatible. She said negotiating lower drug prices could generate enough money to pay for the changes to the Affordable Care Act as well. If not, “there are many sources of income that are possible and necessary,” she said.

The Medicare proposals have proven popular with so-called Front Democrats – those who represent conservative districts. More than a dozen have joined the effort, underscoring its bipartisan appeal.

After meeting with White House officials on the matter, Neguse argued that Democrats could go further and lower the Medicare Eligibility Age to 55 to cover more than 40 million additional people.

“Many seniors in our nation cannot treat their illnesses because Medicare benefits are not as comprehensive as they should be,” he said.

Democrats say that at least 75 percent of Medicare beneficiaries who require a hearing aid do not have a hearing aid, and much of the country has low rates for dental visits or eye exams.

Mr. Golden said when speaking to voters he had heard repeatedly that the change would help the residents of his district.

“How crazy is it that we have been paying into Medicare all our professional lives, and at the time when your dental care is likely to be the most important, Medicare doesn’t even cover it?” he said. “I know seniors get frustrated with this.”

Nearly 20 Senators, led by Senator Bernie Sanders, the independent Vermonter, have joined forces on a similar call for White House action on the matter.

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World News

In Nigeria, ‘Feminist’ Was a Frequent Insult. Then Got here the Feminist Coalition.

LAGOS, Nigeria – During the largest demonstrations in Nigeria’s recent history, 13 women came together to support their fellow citizens who risked their lives to march against police brutality.

The women were all in their 20s and 30s. All at the top of their fields. Many had never met in person. They found each other months earlier on social media and called their group the Feminist Coalition. They jokingly called themselves “The Avengers”.

“We decided that if we don’t step in, the people who suffer the most would be women,” said Odunayo Eweniyi, a 27-year-old technology entrepreneur and founding member of the Feminist Coalition.

They raised hundreds of thousands of dollars through crowdfunding websites last year to support protesters who took to the streets to denounce human rights abuses by a police unit called the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS). The Feminist Coalition provided the demonstrators with basic services: legal aid, emergency food, masks, raincoats. But when peaceful protesters were shot by the military and the demonstrations ended, the Feminist Coalition did not.

Now their goals are set higher. They want equality for Nigerian women and focus on issues such as sexual violence, women’s education, financial equality and political representation.

The struggle for equality will not be easy. A gender equality law first introduced in 2010 has been repeatedly rejected by the male-dominated Nigerian Senate.

And then it comes down to being proud feminists in a country where the word feminist is often used as an insult.

For years it has been difficult to identify as a feminist in Nigeria. The coalition’s decision to use the word on behalf of the organization and the female symbol in its yellow logo was highlighted. Many of the protesters who benefited from their support were men – and not all had supported women’s rights.

“We only used the word because we wanted to let them know where the money was coming from,” said Ms. Eweniyi.

We spoke to some women behind the Feminist Coalition about why they joined and what they want to change in Nigeria.

Before Oluwaseun Ayodeji Osowobi founded her non-profit Stand To End Rape in 2014, it was common practice to open the newspaper in Nigeria and find a picture of a rape victim in crime coverage without thinking about what that public identification might be affecting her life. Women were raped and killed without consequences. Many health care providers had no idea how to gather evidence of rape.

Ms. Osowobi, 30, seeks to change attitudes by changing public order and practices. Her nonprofit runs seminars to help people prevent sexual violence and a rape survivor network where survivors can share experiences, care for one another, and feel less alone. She has worked on laws that prohibit sexual harassment and violence.

But usually men decide whether or not to pass such laws.

“We need more women to get into these rooms and make important guidelines and decisions that reinforce other people’s voices,” said Ms. Osowobi.

It was Tito Ovia’s National Youth Service who made it clear to her that she wanted to work for public health. At the Nigerian AIDS Control Agency, she found that a lack of data made it difficult to tell whether the money spent on HIV / AIDS prevention made a difference.

Ms. Ovia, 27, co-founded a company with friends in 2016 to ensure that health care across Africa is driven by data and technology. Helium Health has helped hospitals and clinics build electronic health records and hospital management systems.

She said she did not expect the Feminist Coalition’s work to be serious enough to support protesters as they risked their lives to try to change a police system that brutalized young people.

“I thought it would be a lot more fun, don’t let me lie,” she said with a laugh. “I thought we would meet, we would drink, we would complain about men. We would work a little. I didn’t know life was going to be threatened. “

Before joining the Feminist Coalition, 30-year-old Damilola Odufuwa founded Wine and Whine, a self-help group for Nigerian women.

She wanted to create a safe and fun place where young women could get together, have a drink, and complain about sexual harassment in the workplace, marriage pressures, the patriarchal system and its gatekeepers, and other frustrations – and then start finding solutions.

Ms. Odufuwa, the Africa public relations director for a major cryptocurrency exchange, had recently returned to Lagos from the UK to start Wine and Whine. She was impressed with the way women were treated in Nigeria.

She and her co-founder Odunayo Eweniyi – the same duo behind the Feminist Coalition – ensured that Wine and Whine also wore his feminism as a badge of honor.

“We’re a feminist organization,” Ms. Odufuwa told a male talk show host in a 2019 interview about Wine and Whine.

“Oh!” replied the hostess, sounding surprised when she used the word.

“We are very feminist,” she replied with a laugh. “Your reaction tells me that feminism is perceived as that bad thing.”

Odunayo Eweniyi, a 27-year-old tech entrepreneur, wasn’t sure how big it would be to put “feminist” in the group’s name.

“It shouldn’t be a hunt for the entire movement,” she said. “To be honest, I am now very proud that we used the word feminist because people are dealing with it in a way that the word feminist does not equate with the word terrorist.”

Although Nigeria has a history of feminist movements, identifying as a feminist is seen as radical.

Ms. Eweniyi recently got tattoos of her favorite equations: Schroëdinger’s equation, the golden ratio and the uncertainty principle.

She works to reduce the insecurity in the lives of Nigerian women.

The savings app startup Piggyvest, launched by Ms. Eweniyi in 2016, addresses one of the main problems identified by the Feminist Coalition – financial equality for women. The idea is that people should be able to save and invest even small amounts of money. It has more than 2 million customers – men and women.

As the anchor of one of the biggest Nigerian television news shows, Laila Johnson-Salami vividly remembers her male co-host who told a producer to say his name first.

But she was fearless. Via Newsday, the program on the television channel Arise, she kept Nigerians informed of the protests, which adopted the hashtag #EndSARS.

At 24, she is the youngest member of the coalition. Their main goal is to attract a younger audience. And recently she started a podcast that can help with this.

She uses her platform to hold politicians accountable but said, “If there’s one thing I know for sure in this life, it’s that Laila will never get into politics.”

The interviews that Ms. Johnson-Salami conducts on the Broken Record Podcast are very different from her television interviews. They talk extensively about everything from the importance of vulnerability to adoption and investment.

“Time is up, it’s over,” tweeted Fakhrriyyah Hashim in February 2019. “You are done getting away with monstrosities against women.”

Her tweet started the #MeToo movement in northern Nigeria. In it, Ms. Hashim coined the hashtag #ArewaMeToo – Arewa means “north” in Hausa, a West African language spoken by most northern Nigerians.

In a very conservative region where Ms. Hashim, 28, called a “culture of silence,” #ArewaMeToo has sparked a flood of testimonies about sexual violence. The Sultan of Sokoto, the highest Islamic authority in Nigeria, banned it when it spilled into street protests from social media.

Another campaign launched by Ms. Hashim, #NorthNormal, urged Nigerian states to implement laws that criminalize violence and broaden the definition of sexual violence.

Her women’s rights activism has brought her death threats and abuse. Now she has put some distance between herself and the people behind these threats after accepting a scholarship at the African Leadership Center in London.

The Feminist Coalition members all worked from home because of the pandemic. She was also able to raise awareness and resources online during the #EndSARS protests in London.

“I knew we would achieve all of the goals and targets we set,” said Ms. Hashim.

An estimated two-thirds of Nigerian girls and women do not have access to sanitary towels. You can’t afford it.

Karo Omu, 29, has been fighting for four years to bring sanitary towels and other hygiene items to Nigerian girls. It focuses on girls in public schools who come from low-income families and girls who have had to flee their homes and live in camps.

There are 2.7 million internally displaced people in northeastern Nigeria as a result of the violent and uncontrolled uprising by the Islamist group Boko Haram and its offshoots. And for many women and girls who live in the camps, it is a struggle to get enough food and clothing, let alone expensive sanitary towels.

Her organization, Sanitation Aid for Nigerian Girls, is handing out reusable pads bought with money crowdfunded by Ms. Omu and her colleagues to help girls worry less. Some of the girls they helped had never had a block before.

“Women’s problems are fought by women,” she said.

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Biden White Home builds enterprise coalition to assist plan

President Joe Biden, accompanied by Vice President Kamala Harris and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen (not pictured), attends a meeting with business executives in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on February 9, 2021.

Carlos Barria | Reuters

The White House has reached out to executives in various industries to raise support for the Biden government’s $ 1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief plan, according to those familiar with the matter.

Over the past week, administration officials have made at least two calls to executives from various business areas, including Wall Street and technology, said those people who refused to be called to speak freely.

Brian Deese, President Joe Biden’s top economic advisor, participated in some of the calls, one respondent said. Most of the calls were anchored by the Office of Public Engagement, headed by former MP Cedric Richmond, another person said.

According to a White House official who refused to be named, the administration has dealt with companies and groups, including:

  • American Airlines
  • The U.S. Chamber of Commerce
  • The business roundtable
  • serious
  • The National Association of Manufacturers
  • General Motors
  • The Black Economic Alliance

That development comes a day after Biden and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen met with several key CEOs in the Oval Office to discuss the relief plan. The government and Congress Democrats want to pass the measure by mid-March.

President Joe Biden sits next to US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen (R) as he meets with business leaders on a Covid Relief Bill in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC on February 9, 2021.

Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images

With these calls, Biden officials want to form a coalition to support the president’s relief plan, said those familiar with the matter. Most attendees expressed their support for much of Biden’s proposal, people said.

“They make sure everyone supports it,” said one person familiar with the range. “Nothing is too big,” added this person, explaining the consensus view of business leaders.

The administration is also consulting with business leaders, lawmakers, and other stakeholders to find ways to potentially improve the legislation, the White House official said.

Discussions focused on various aspects of the plan, including the total price, direct payments of $ 1,400 to Americans, and the prospect of a federal minimum wage hike, the official added. The administration has also asked executives for feedback on how they have dealt with the pandemic.

Some of the leaders the White House has dealt with are against certain aspects of Biden’s plan.

Outgoing U.S. Chamber of Commerce CEO Tom Donohue, who met with Biden on Tuesday, warned against raising the minimum wage to $ 15. The increase in the minimum wage is part of Biden’s Covid relief plan. The chamber has said it supports Biden’s overall proposal to combat the coronavirus pandemic.

63 percent of small business owners support the Covid aid package worth $ 1.9 trillion. This comes from the most recent quarterly CNBC | SurveyMonkey Small Business Survey.

Biden himself has begun meeting with high-level executives about the proposal and future policy plans.

Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and Yellen met with JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon on Tuesday. Doug McMillon from Walmart, Sonia Syngal from Gap and Donohue.

Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, attends a meeting US President Joe Biden held with executives on a Covid-19 Relief Bill on February 9, 2021 in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC.

Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images

The discussion started with a 15-minute speech from Biden, who emphasized the need to fight the virus while helping the economy. Marvin Ellison, CEO of Lowe, who also attended the meeting, spoke about the importance of jobs, while Dimon spoke about the need for policies that lead to healthy economic growth.

Meanwhile, Democrats in Congress appear to be on their way to getting the plan through without the help of Republicans, who have called for a far smaller package.

Democrats in both the House and Senate recently passed a budget resolution that could help pass with willing without Republican support. House spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., Said after the budget decision was passed, Democrats in her chamber will try to pass her party’s aid proposal in two weeks.

The resolution instructed the committees to develop a range of coronavirus support measures included in Biden’s proposal, such as: B. $ 1,400 in direct payments, a weekly increase in federal unemployment of $ 400 per week, $ 350 billion in state, local and tribal aid, funding for Covid-19 vaccines and testing, and rent and mortgage aid.

Still, some Democrats have raised concerns about the direction of the $ 1,400 check. For example, Senator Joe Manchin, DW.Va, said he feared the stimulus checks will go to too many high-income people who may not necessarily need the help.

Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., Said there shouldn’t be an income limit on who can receive checks from the federal government.

Biden has said he is open to solvency negotiations, which under the current proposal would apply entirely to individuals with incomes up to $ 75,000 and couples with incomes up to $ 150,000.