Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Congress Moved Uncharacteristically Swiftly On $2.2T Package. Don't Expect Same Bipartisan Smooth-Sailing Ahead.
A Trump administration request for quick approval of $250 billion in additional loans to help distressed small businesses weather the coronavirus crisis stalled Thursday in the Senate after Republicans and Democrats clashed over what should be included in the latest round of government relief. The dispute was a prelude to what is likely to be a far more complicated and consequential set of negotiations over a larger infusion of federal aid that lawmakers expect to consider in the coming weeks on the heels of the $2 trillion stimulus law enacted late last month. (Cochrane, 4/9)
GOP leader Mitch McConnell sought to keep Thursday鈥檚 debate limited to Trump鈥檚 request and wouldn鈥檛 accept Democratic additions. Even if the GOP plan had succeeded in the Senate, the Democratic-controlled House is determined to make changes to ensure small businesses in minority communities benefit from the burst of government funding. Democrats and Republicans agree the aid is urgently needed and talks are sure to continue, but it reinforces that Congress and the White House will need to find bipartisan agreement 鈥 especially with lawmakers scattered in their states and districts and both the House and Senate unable to conduct roll-call votes. (Taylor and Mascaro, 4/10)
Democrats said the small-business loan program, called the Paycheck Protection Program, needed changes to ensure that less-sophisticated business owners can also access the funds. 鈥淚n this process, many people who do not have banking relationships were going to be last in line,鈥 House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) told reporters on a call Thursday. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why when they asked for more money, we said, 鈥楲et鈥檚 help everybody here.鈥 鈥 Mrs. Pelosi said the Senate GOP bill wouldn鈥檛 be able to pass the House, but said it could be the 鈥渂asis for some negotiation.鈥 (Peterson and Duehren, 4/9)
Democratic Maryland Sens. Ben Cardin and Chris Van Hollen each deemed McConnell鈥檚 move a 鈥減olitical stunt鈥 and said the Small Business Administration鈥檚 Paycheck Protection Program doesn鈥檛 need money at the moment. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a good program, we strongly support it. It鈥檚 bipartisan. But this unanimous consent request was not negotiated. There was no effort made to follow the process that we could get this done. So it won鈥檛 get done,鈥 said Cardin, the top Democrat on the Small Business Committee. 鈥淭he majority leader knows that.鈥 (Everett and Caygle, 4/9)
The $350 billion Paycheck Protection Program opened a week ago with loans to companies with 500 or fewer employees and expands Friday to include independent contractors and self-employed individuals. Yet even as the program expands, the first applicants are still waiting for funding, fueling anxiety among business owners whose revenue has tanked and whose bills are piling up. 鈥淭here are very few business owners who have successfully gotten the money,鈥 said Amanda Ballantyne, executive director of the Main Street Alliance, a small-business advocacy group. 鈥淢oney isn鈥檛 flowing yet.鈥 (Hayashi, 4/10)
Senate Democrats are negotiating with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin in hopes of reaching a deal to provide an additional $250 billion for a popular small-business emergency lending program and聽include in the same package more funds for hospitals and state governments.聽 Bipartisan talks are continuing behind the scenes despite a blowup on the Senate floor Thursday morning in which Republicans and Democrats blocked each other鈥檚 proposals to shore up funding shortfalls in the $2.2 trillion coronavirus relief package. (Bolton, 4/9)
Congressional Democrats are trying to add $13 per hour hazard payments for frontline health care workers up to a total of $25,000 in the next coronavirus relief package, along with $15,000 incentives for people who join the medical workforce surge during the pandemic. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said a so-called Heroes Fund could compensate nurses, EMTs and other workers for unanticipated risks as they confront a flood of new cases. (Doherty and Roubein, 4/9)
Mitch McConnell鈥檚 earliest childhood memory is the day he left the polio treatment center at Warm Springs, Ga., for the last time. He was just a toddler in 1944, when his father was deployed to World War II, his mother relocated the family to her sister鈥檚 home in rural Alabama and he came down with flu-like symptoms. While he eventually recovered, his left leg did not. It was paralyzed. (Mascaro, 4/10)