Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Biden Open To Stimulus Check Limits; House Vote Paves Path For Big Bill
President Biden indicated in a call with House Democrats that he was open to sending $1,400 payments to a smaller group of Americans in the next round of coronavirus relief legislation and changing the overall price tag of his $1.9 trillion plan, according to people familiar with the call. Mr. Biden told House Democrats on Wednesday that he wouldn鈥檛 change the amount of the proposed $1,400 payments, saying people had been promised that amount, according to the people. (Duehren and Collins, 2/3)
The House on Wednesday approved a budget resolution in a 218-212 vote that would allow Congress to pass a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill without Republican support. Two Democrats, Reps. Ed Case (Hawaii) and Jared Golden (Maine), voted against the measure in the otherwise party-line vote. (Elis, 2/3)
The latest proposal Democrats are considering would send $1,400 payments to individuals earning $50,000 or less and $2,800 to married couples earning $100,000 or less. [Here] are more details on the latest plan, which has not been publicly released yet and could still change. (Long and Stein, 2/3)
After two weeks of letting negotiations over a Covid relief package linger in Congress, Joe Biden hit the gas on Wednesday. The president worked the phones and hunkered down with fellow Democrats at the White House, in what aides described as an overt signal that he wants his massive 鈥渞escue鈥 package passed and passed quickly. 鈥淚f we are going to get our arms wrapped around Covid, we have to act fast, we have to act big and the sooner we can start the better,鈥 said White House senior adviser Cedric Richmond. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 how the president looks at it.鈥 (Korecki and Pager, 2/3)
Even as President Joe Biden gathers with senators and works the phones with Capitol Hill to push for a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package, his team is increasingly focused on selling the plan directly to voters. His administration has done 60-plus interviews with national TV and radio shows. There have been spots on local TV news and briefings last week with more than 50 groups that ranged from General Motors to Meals on Wheels America and Planned Parenthood. One of the main goals is to stop people from getting bogged down in the tangle of partisan deal-making and convince them that every penny of the 鈥済o big鈥 package is needed. (Boak, 2/4)
KHN: Hard Bargain: Biden And Congress Agree On Basic Relief, But Chasms Remain On Covid Plan聽
President Joe Biden and a group of Republicans agreed this week on how much Congress should spend on vaccine distribution, covid-19 testing and other health investments that public health officials say are desperately needed to fight the pandemic. But agreement on those popular programs, which make up only 9% of Biden鈥檚 $1.9 trillion relief proposal, is not enough to dispense that money quickly. (Huetteman, 2/4)