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Republicans Plan Scaled-Back Proposal for Virus Relief Bill

Published 08/17/2020, 07:03 PM
Updated 08/17/2020, 07:27 PM
© Bloomberg. The U.S. Capitol is seen from the Russell Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2020. President Donald Trump's weekend set of executive actions aimed at shoring up the U.S. economy while stimulus talks remain stalled in Congress seems to have done little to add urgency to the negotiations.

(Bloomberg) -- Senate Republicans plan to introduce a scaled-back stimulus bill amid the standoff over a new virus relief plan that’s dragged on for weeks, according to two Senate Republican aides.

The legislation would include a $300 a week enhanced unemployment benefit, money for small business aid, additional U.S. Postal Service funding and protection for employers against lawsuits stemming from Covid-19 infections, according to the aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the plan isn’t public.

The proposal would represent a slimmed-down version of the $1 trillion legislation GOP senators introduced at the end of July as a counter-point to the $3.5 trillion plan Democrats passed in the House in May.

The plan was reported earlier by Politico.

There were no immediate signs that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell would call senators back from their August break to vote on it. Any legislation would need to get at least some Democratic support to get through the Senate, and that now is unlikely. The proposal also could serve as the latest Republican offer in talks on a new stimulus, which may not resume until September.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer have offered to trim their proposal by $1 trillion, but repeated rejected any smaller stimulus or doing a virus relief package piecemeal.

With just 78 days until the general election, the President Donald Trump’s White House and congressional Republicans have been in a deadlock with Democrats over bolstering the U.S. economy with millions of people still out of work and many businesses struggling with pandemic-induced shutdowns.

That is despite warnings from Federal Reserve officials, economists, governors and mayors that, with much of the earlier stimulus exhausted, the risk to the economy grows every day that goes by without a deal.

McConnell said earlier Monday at a news conference in Kentucky that he still hopes they can cut a deal with Democrats, but didn’t offer any guarantees.

“I can’t tell you with certainty we’re going to reach an agreement,” he said.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

© Bloomberg. The U.S. Capitol is seen from the Russell Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2020. President Donald Trump's weekend set of executive actions aimed at shoring up the U.S. economy while stimulus talks remain stalled in Congress seems to have done little to add urgency to the negotiations.

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