- Top congressional leaders clinched a stimulus deal on Sunday after months of on-again, off-again negotiations.
- The federal coronavirus relief package will contain $600 checks and $300 in added weekly unemployment benefits.
- Votes on the package are expected to take place Monday.
Congressional leaders on Sunday struck a long-awaited deal on a $900 billion federal rescue package, clearing final policy hurdles and paving the way for passage in the House and the Senate amid an especially dark stretch of the coronavirus pandemic.
Senate Majority Leader
"The four leaders of the Senate and House finalized an agreement," the Kentucky Republican said. "It will be another major rescue package for the American people."
Schumer said the federal rescue proposal was inadequate to address the economic crisis at hand but called it a "down payment" meant to "give the new president a boost."
If signed into law, the emergency spending package will funnel hundreds of billions of dollars to unemployed Americans and struggling businesses, among others. It's the second-largest such package in US history after the $2 trillion CARES Act, which Congress authorized in March as the coronavirus began to create economic turmoil in the US.
The pace of negotiations picked up in the past week with a series of back-to-back meetings involving House Speaker
Congressional Democratic leaders announced that the package contained, among other provisions:
- $600 direct payments for most adults, plus an extra $600 per child.
- $300 a week in federal unemployment insurance for 11 weeks through March 14.
- $284 billion in extra small-business aid through the Paycheck Protection Program.
- $82 billion in funds for schools and universities.
- $25 billion in emergency rental assistance along with an extension of the eviction moratorium.
- $13 billion in more food-stamp assistance.
- $10 billion to aid childcare providers and keep their doors open.
The deal nearly fell through after a late push from Republicans to restrain the Federal Reserve's lending authority. The two parties compromised after a frenzied stretch of negotiations over the weekend. Also key to the breakthrough was Republicans' setting aside a liability shield to protect firms from virus lawsuits and Democrats' forgoing aid to states and municipalities. Those two issues, which generated significant acrimony, were not addressed in the package.
Congressional leaders are setting up a swift timetable. The House and the Senate cleared a one-day stopgap funding bill to keep federal agencies open while they draft the final legislation, which still has not been released. Lawmakers are also attempting to authorize a $1.4 trillion spending bill to fund the government into next year.
It could lead to a rapid-fire series of votes in both chambers of Congress on Monday only hours before the deadline for government funding expires at midnight. Lawmakers will have a slim margin for error as they try to pass the two bills and avert a government shutdown. A
Senior Republicans and Democrats want to merge the two pieces of legislation, meaning lawmakers could have a limited amount of time to review a broad tax-and-spending package costing over $2 trillion.
Both $600 in direct payments and $300 in federal weekly unemployment aid would be half of the amounts Congress and Trump enacted in March.
A congressional summary obtained by Business Insider indicated that the income thresholds would be the same as the first round of federal payments. Individuals earning up to $75,000 would qualify to receive the full $600, plus an extra $600 for each child. Couples making $150,000 would also get the full amount, or $1,200.
A family of four could receive $2,400 in financial relief. Mixed-status households also would qualify after being excluded in March.
In addition, the rescue package would renew the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Program for gig workers along with another measure providing federally funded jobless aid for people who exhausted state benefits. The federal unemployment supplement would lapse on March 14 and is not retroactive to make up for missed months.
'Anyone who thinks this bill is enough does not know what is going on in America'
The agreement comes as the economic recovery is showing signs of slowing down with no new federal aid in nine months. States are enacting new restrictions to suppress the rapid spread of the virus. There's been a steady uptick in the number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits in the past three weeks, and job growth is in danger of fizzling out. The
But virus cases and deaths are reaching new highs. The pandemic has continued devastating the lives of Americans, and many small businesses are on the brink of financial ruin. A new study from the University of Chicago and the University of Notre Dame indicated 7.8 million people had fallen into poverty since late July.
Half of all small businesses in the country may have to close for good in the next year, according to a survey from the US Chamber of Commerce.
Congress is running up against the expiration of multiple federal benefit programs set up in the spring. Nearly 14 million people are threatened with the loss of all their unemployment assistance if some federal measures are not renewed this week, per Labor Department data. A moratorium on evictions also expires December 31.
Congressional Democrats made clear on Sunday this was not the last time they would press for more federal aid. They sought a much larger relief package heading into the election, and the deal they embraced was only a fraction of its size.
In a press conference, Schumer and Pelosi said Democrats would prioritize more relief spending after President-elect Joe Biden takes office in January.
"Anyone who thinks this bill is enough does not know what is going on in America," Schumer said.
"This bill gives us hope and confidence that we can do more, and we will do more," Pelosi said. "We must do more."
Biden issued a statement on Sunday evening hailing the rescue package, which he had urged Congress to approve in its lame-duck session. The president-elect said "our work is far from over," however, and outlined priorities for his first 100 days in office, which included vaccine distribution and additional economic aid.
"Congress will need to get to work on support for our COVID-19 plan, for support to struggling families, and investments in jobs and economic recovery," Biden said. "There will be no time to waste."