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Morning Briefing

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Friday, May 15 2020

Full Issue

House To Vote On Pelosi's $3T Relief Legislation Despite Warnings It Will Be DOA In Senate

Even some Democratic members have voiced opposition to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's (D-Calif.) sweeping plan, but it is expected to pass the lower chamber on Friday. Republicans, who have been taking a wait-and-see approach to offering another round of emergency relief, widely panned the legislation.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi is projecting confidence that the House will pass Democrats鈥 massive coronavirus relief bill Friday, even as she and her leadership team are still working to secure the votes. Both liberals and centrists in the caucus are grumbling about the roughly $3 trillion measure. House Republicans have overwhelmingly said they oppose the bill, and some Democrats are unable to travel to the Capitol to vote amid the pandemic, leaving Pelosi and her whip operation with tight margins to clear the bill. (Ferris and Caygle, 5/14)

Democrats have argued that the sweeping aid package, which allocates funding for state and local governments, coronavirus testing and a new round of direct payments to Americans, is urgently needed to address the unfolding crisis. The legislation, which reflects Democratic priorities and was not a product of bipartisan negotiations, would stand as the largest relief package in US history. (Foran, Byrd and Raju, 5/15)

The proposed legislation includes a second round of direct cash payments to Americans, $1 trillion in aid for local, state and tribal governments drowning under the strain of the novel coronavirus, assistance for essential front-line workers, an extension of unemployment benefits and various other Democratic measures. The proposal, if it clears both chambers, would become the largest, most expensive spending package in U.S. history 鈥 surpassing the $2.2 trillion measure Congress passed in March. (Khan, 5/14)

More than eight weeks and almost $2.8 trillion federal dollars into an urgent response to the coronavirus pandemic, congressional Republicans and the Trump administration have made it clear that they have little interest in engaging with Democrats on another round of costly relief measures. But their resistance 鈥 born of spending fatigue and policy divisions 鈥 is proving increasingly unsustainable, given tens of millions of anxious Americans out of work, businesses and schools shuttered and an election looming. (Hulse, 5/15)

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi lashed out Thursday at Trump administration officials and congressional Republicans seeking to slow work on a fresh round of coronavirus relief. The White House responded minutes later with a threat that President Donald Trump would veto the $3 trillion economic package Democrats have proposed. The bill already had zero chance of passing the GOP-controlled Senate and reaching Trump, making the veto threat a symbolic gesture. Along with caustic criticism by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, the exchange underscored the deep election-year gulch over what Congress鈥 next response to the crisis should be. (Fram, 5/15)

What started just weeks ago as a unified, emergency effort by Congress to get trillions of dollars to ordinary Americans and businesses in record time has now turned increasingly partisan -- as Democrats and Republicans fight over spending more pandemic relief money and how fast to reopen the economy. 鈥淲e cannot borrow enough money to prop this economy up forever,鈥 Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said during a digital appearance for the Trump campaign on Monday. He said lawmakers need to 鈥渂egin to encourage the governors around the country, who have the decision-making ability, to open up the economy. (Pecorin, 5/14)

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said Thursday that Congress would likely need to pass a fifth coronavirus聽relief bill, but declined to give a timeline聽for additional legislation.聽McConnell, during a Fox News interview, said he did "anticipate" that Congress will need to "act again at some point" but that Republicans first wanted to review the roughly $2.8 trillion already appropriated聽by Congress.聽(Carney, 5/14)

When there is an economic crisis, you want a government response that is scaled accordingly. But you don鈥檛 know in advance just how long a crisis will last or how severe it will be. Economists have a crisp-sounding solution: Calibrate government help, such as unemployment insurance and aid to state governments, so that it rises automatically when the economy is weak and falls as the economy returns to health. The unemployment rate or other economic indicators can serve as triggers. The concept of automatic stabilizers is embraced by many centrist and left-of-center technocrats, including the last two leaders of the Federal Reserve. (Irwin, 5/15)

Kaiser Health News: KHN鈥檚 鈥榃hat The Health?鈥: What鈥檚 In The Next Round Of COVID-19 Relief?

House Democrats are moving ahead with another round of COVID-19 relief, including additional funding for state Medicaid programs, an open enrollment period for the Affordable Care Act鈥檚 marketplace plans, and money to pay premiums for newly unemployed Americans to continue on their employer health coverage. Republicans, however, say the Democrats鈥 bill goes too far. Meanwhile, the outbreak of the virus in the White House complex 鈥 including a top aide to Vice President Mike Pence 鈥 has complicated the Trump administration鈥檚 efforts to press for a broader opening of the economy even while the illness continues to spread. (5/14)

Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) walks backs accusations about the Obama administration 鈥

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said on Thursday he was mistaken in claiming that the Obama administration had failed to leave a pandemic playbook for the Trump White House. 鈥淚 was wrong,鈥 McConnell said in an evening interview with Fox News鈥 Bret Baier. 鈥淭hey did leave behind a plan. So, I clearly made a mistake in that regard.鈥 (Choi, 5/14)

The concession comes days after he falsely accused the Obama administration of failing to leave the Trump administration "any kind of game plan" for something like the coronavirus pandemic during a Trump campaign online chat with Lara Trump, the President's daughter-in-law. "They claim pandemics only happen once every hundred years but what if that's no longer true? We want to be early, ready for the next one, because clearly the Obama administration did not leave to this administration any kind of game plan for something like this," McConnell had said Monday. (LeBlanc, 5/14)

Kaiser Health News and Politifact HealthCheck: Evidence Shows Obama Team Left A Pandemic 鈥楪ame Plan鈥 For Trump Administration

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell alleged that the Obama administration did not provide the Trump administration with any information about the threat of a possible pandemic during a May 11 Team Trump Facebook Live discussion with Lara Trump. 鈥淭hey claim pandemics only happen once every 100 years, but what if that is no longer true? We want to be ready, early, for the next one. Because clearly, the Obama administration did not leave any kind of game plan for something like this,鈥 said McConnell. (Knight, 5/15)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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