US Congress fails to agree to boost stimulus checks

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WASHINGTON, Dec 25, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Republicans on Thursday blocked an
effort to amend the hard-won pandemic relief package to more than triple
direct payments to struggling Americans, something demanded by President
Donald Trump.

After months of partisan bickering, legislators late Monday finally
approved a $900 billion stimulus package to help families and businesses
struggling to survive the hit to the economy from the coronavirus before
millions lose their benefits.

The legislation includes one-time payments of $600 to most taxpayers, but
Trump dropped a bombshell on the celebrations this week, hinting he might
veto the bill unless the amount was increased to $2,000.

Democrats, who have been pushing for months to increase pandemic support,
cheered his statement, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi challenged Republicans
to support an amendment to boost the dollar amount.

The Democratic-controlled House of Representatives held a Christmas Eve
“pro forma” session, normally a brief affair with little business, in an
effort to win bipartisan approval to send the revised payments to Trump’s
desk for signature.

But Republicans refused to agree to the change.

“So we do not have unanimous consent,” said Michigan Democrat Debbie
Dingell, who was acting as speaker pro tempore.

Pelosi immediately lambasted Republicans and vowed to call the House back
on Monday to approve the amendment in a regular session.

“Today, on Christmas Eve morning, House Republicans cruelly deprived the
American people of the $2,000 that the President agreed to support. If the
President is serious about the $2,000 direct payments, he must call on House
Republicans to end their obstruction,” she said in a statement.

Later Thursday, Pelosi said the bill has been sent to the White House and
called on Trump to sign.

“The House & Senate are now sending this important legislation
#ForThePeople to the White House for the President’s signature. We urge him
to sign this bill into law to give immediate relief to hard-working
families!,” Pelosi tweeted.

– High stakes battle –

The stakes are high, especially if Trump vetoes the bill: About 14 million
jobless workers will lose their pandemic unemployment benefits right after
Christmas, and millions more face losing their homes when an eviction
moratorium expires at the end of the year.

And the stimulus measure is wrapped up with a $1.4 trillion funding bill,
meaning the government will be forced to shut down at midnight Monday if
Trump does not sign the bill.

The chaos comes in the final weeks of Trump’s presidency, as he continues
to insist without evidence that the election of President-elect Joe Biden was
fraudulent, attacking Republicans who refuse to back his false claims.

It is highly unusual for a president to veto legislation that enjoys
overwhelming bipartisan support, but Trump has never shied away from
flaunting tradition.

Late Wednesday he also vetoed the bill that funds defense operations, even
as lawmakers vow to return Monday to override his action and approve the
measure.

They could do the same with the pandemic stimulus bill, but Trump could
simply sit on it, meaning it cannot take effect.

That would kick it to the new Congress that takes office January 3 to vote
on the package again, but not before the economy suffers even more damage.

Recent data have shown worrying signs that the world’s largest economy is
faltering after the sharp rebound in the third quarter fueled by the $2.2
trillion CARES Act that Congress approved in late March, just as the pandemic
restrictions were taking hold.

Job losses have continued and new claims for unemployment insurance have
increased in four of the past six weeks, while consumer spending has slowed
as confidence wanes amid the spike in Covid-19 infections.

“We hope spending will stabilize in January and then begin to creep higher
in February, but the current picture is quite bleak,” said Ian Shepherdson of
Pantheon Macroeconomics.

“We expect to see claims shooting over the one million mark by the first
full week of January,” he said, warning that “a sustained downward trend is
unlikely before early spring.”

The stock market has shrugged off the political chaos, closing higher for
the past two days, focusing on hopes the coronavirus vaccine rollout will
bring an economic recovery.