Nancy Pelosi rips Mitch McConnell for touting stimulus aid for Kentucky: 'Vote no and take the dough'
- Nancy Pelosi rebuked Mitch McConnell for touting state aid for Kentucky from the stimulus.
- "I didn't vote for it, but you're going to get a lot more money,' McConnell said to local lawmakers.
- Some Republicans have touted parts of the law in recent months, even though none voted for it.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi slammed Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell for touting the benefits of the stimulus law for his home state of Kentucky. The $1.9 trillion coronavirus-relief law cleared Congress in March without any Republican support.
"Vote no and take the dough," Pelosi wrote on Twitter.
At an event in Kentucky on Tuesday, McConnell swung between noting his opposition to the federal rescue package and crediting it with providing substantial financial relief for Kentucky.
"Not a single member of my party voted for it. So you're going to get a lot more money," McConnell said. "I didn't vote for it, but you're going to get a lot more money. Cities and counties in Kentucky will get close to $700-$800 million."
The Kentucky Republican said the state was projected to get $4 billion as a result of the stimulus law. "So my advice to members of the legislature and other local officials: Spend it wisely because hopefully this windfall doesn't come along again," McConnell said.
Republicans were staunchly opposed to Biden's stimulus law, which contained $1,400 direct payments, a renewal of federal unemployment benefits, and aid to state and local governments. They argued it was too large and costly after lawmakers had approved a $900 billion federal rescue package late in 2020. Not a single Republican in Congress voted for it.
But at least a dozen congressional Republicans have since touted parts of the law, such as small-business aid, even though they didn't support the law's passage. Biden rebuked the GOP earlier this year for "bragging" about the law, saying, "some people have no shame."
Also on Tuesday, McConnell pledged a bruising political brawl over Democratic efforts to bypass Republicans to implement their infrastructure-spending plans. "This is not going to be done on a bipartisan basis," he said. "This is going to be a hell of a fight over what this country ought to look like in the future, and it's going to unfold here in the next few weeks."