U.S. President-elect Joe Biden address the protests taking place in and around the U.S. Capitol in Washington as the U.S. Congress held a joint session to certify the 2020 election results, at a news conference at his transition headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, January 6, 2021.
Kevin Lamarque | Reuters
President-elect Joe Biden faces a range of pitfalls in trying to push his coronavirus relief plan through Congress.
The Democrat will unveil his aid proposal Thursday and make his case for it in a primetime speech, scheduled for 7:15 p.m. He is expected to push for more direct cash to Americans, an extension of supplemental unemployment insurance, state and local government relief and Covid-19 vaccine distribution funds, among other goals in a plan that Biden said could cost “trillions.”
His call for fresh assistance comes as a rampaging pandemic, which killed a record 4,327 Americans on Tuesday, batters the U.S. economy. Initial jobless claims rose to 965,000 last week, the highest since late August, the Labor Department said Thursday.
- Democrats will hold a slim majority in the House and could need Republican support to pass a bill.
- Biden’s party will control the Senate later this month, but will need 10 GOP votes to approve legislation unless it opts to use a tool that requires a majority vote. The chamber will also have to spend its limited time on the impeachment trial and confirming Biden’s Cabinet.
- Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia has expressed skepticism about $2,000 direct payments, a Biden priority, because of the cost. But GOP Sens. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Marco Rubio of Florida have backed the proposal.
- While Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and many in his party oppose state and local government relief, multiple Senate Republicans have joined Democrats in supporting the aid.
Biden has said reining in the virus and boosting the economy will be his top priorities after he takes office on Jan. 20. He will have to navigate a political mess, which includes GOP resistance to more spending and a coming Senate impeachment trial for President Donald Trump after last week’s U.S. Capitol attack, to get a relief plan through Congress.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Biden’s Democratic Party control the House. Democrats will gain a narrow Senate majority this month when Senators-elect Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff from Georgia are sworn in. Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will hold a tiebreaking vote in the 50-50 Senate.
The slim Democratic majorities in both chambers could create some headaches for Biden.
The House can pass bills with a simple majority of 218 votes in a full chamber. Democrats now hold 222 seats. However, the number will temporarily drop to 219 when three Democrats — Cedric Richmond of Louisiana, Marcia Fudge of Ohio and Deb Haaland of New Mexico — join Biden’s administration.
It will leave Democrats a thin margin for error to pass legislation. The party will either have to win support from all of its members or earn Republican votes to approve a coronavirus aid package.
Biden aims to pass his relief plan with bipartisan support, a person familiar with the transition team’s thinking confirmed to CNBC. GOP backing could prove even more important in the Senate. A bill would need support from all Democrats and 10 Republicans unless Democrats opt to use a procedure called budget reconciliation to pass it with a majority.
Using the process could limit what Democrats can put in a bill, because it applies only to revenue and spending measures. It could also take longer to approve legislation through reconciliation.
In addition, the Senate has to decide how much time it can devote to pandemic aid as it considers whether to convict Trump on charges of inciting an insurrection and moves to confirm Biden’s Cabinet. McConnell said Wednesday that he would not start the president’s trial until Tuesday — the day before Biden’s inauguration — at the earliest. Trump’s first impeachment trial last year took about three weeks.
In a statement Wednesday, Biden said he hopes the Senate can juggle all of those responsibilities at the same time.
“This nation also remains in the grip of a deadly virus and a reeling economy,” he said after the House impeached Trump. “I hope that the Senate leadership will find a way to deal with their Constitutional responsibilities on impeachment while also working on the other urgent business of this nation.”
Make-or-break relief provisions
Congress approved a bipartisan $900 billion aid plan last month. Biden called it a “down payment.”
Congressional Democrats said it did not go far enough to help jobless Americans struggling to afford food and housing. But many Republicans will not want to spend more federal money soon after voting for the last package.
The bill, which came about months after Congress let pandemic-era financial lifelines for individuals and businesses collapse over the summer, included a $300 per week unemployment insurance boost through mid-March. It extended pandemic-era expansions of jobless benefits.
It sent payments of $600, plus the same amount for every child, to most Americans. It also put more than $300 billion into small business support, more than $8 billion into vaccine distribution and $25 billion into rental assistance.
Biden is expected to call for $2,000 checks as part of his plan. He is also set to call to extend pandemic-era unemployment support, send more relief to state and local governments and put more money into the country’s lackluster Covid-19 vaccine distribution effort. A Biden proposal may also include funding for schools and small businesses, along with an expansion of the child tax credit.
The Democratic-held House passed a bill in December to boost the payments in the year-end package to $2,000. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., considers sending more money to Americans a top priority when his party takes control of the chamber.
“Democrats wanted to do much more in the last bill and promised to do more, if given the opportunity, to increase direct payments to a total of $2,000 — we will get that done,” he wrote in a letter to Senate Democrats on Tuesday.
“We will also further support vaccine distribution efforts and help American families, small businesses, schools and state and local governments. As soon as the new Senate is organized and Vice-President Harris has been sworn in, we will immediately set to work to deliver on that goal,” he continued.
Democrats will have to balance tricky political dynamics to get a bill through Congress, as Republicans have signaled a renewed focus on budget deficits now that a Democratic president is set to take the reins.
At least one Senate Democrat, Manchin, has joined the GOP in expressing concerns about the cost of further relief. On Friday, he tweeted: “If the next round of stimulus checks goes out they should be targeted to those who need it.”
The bill House Democrats passed in December set eligibility for checks the same way the bipartisan package did. Individuals who made up to $75,000 in 2019, and couples filing jointly who earned up to $150,000 that year, received the full amount. The payments were reduced by 5% of every dollar someone makes above those thresholds.
Because it would take more income for a larger $2,000 check to phase out under those terms, individuals who made up to $115,000 would receive some amount of direct cash under the House-passed bill.
While Manchin has cast doubts on the larger payments, Republicans such as Rubio and Hawley have supported them.
Democrats will also face some opposition on state and local government aid. Congress set the issue aside during the latest round of relief talks because McConnell would not send more money to the governments without also passing coronavirus-related liability protections for businesses.
A bipartisan group of lawmakers who wrote a framework for the bill that ultimately became law last month failed to agree on both state and local support and a legal shield for businesses.
Still, Democrats may get a handful of GOP senators to support a bill that includes state and local government relief. Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, among other Republicans, has warned states and cities will have to lay off first responders if they do not receive more cash from Congress.
— CNBC’s Tom Franck contributed to this report