- The House approved the $900 billion stimulus agreement, sending it to a vote in the Senate.
- The package contains $600
stimulus checks and $300 federal weekly unemployment benefits among other measures like small business aid and funds for vaccine distribution. - The $900 billion package is just under half of the spending level that Democrats wanted before the election, and they say will press for more federal aid once Biden takes office.
The House of Representatives passed the long-awaited $900 billion stimulus plan, sending it to the Republican-controlled Senate for a vote on Monday evening. They also approved it.
The 5,593-page bill was passed overwhelmingly 359 to 53 in the House
Speaker
"I look forward to a strong bipartisan vote today on this legislation," Pelosi said. "Respecting it for what it does, not judging it for what it does not. But recognizing that more needs to be done."
The Senate approved it around two hours after the House, where it garnered an substantial majority of votes as well. Congressional leaders are operating on a swift timetable, seeking to merge the relief package with a $1.4 trillion government funding bill and pass them before midnight Monday, the new deadline for federal funding to lapse.
Lawmakers had little time to review the massive piece of legislation once it was introduced early Monday afternoon.
The rescue package would direct hundreds of billions of dollars into many sectors of the
The package also contains $284 billion in small business aid and $45 billion in federal funds for transportation. Meanwhile, the government funding bill would cover federal agencies through September 2021, and it also includes a bevy of tax breaks for businesses next year.
The legislation, though, is a significant step down from the amount of spending Democrats once sought. The chamber approved a sweeping $3.4 trillion stimulus package in May called the HEROES Act, but Republicans dismissed it outright.
Then, in October, House Democrats passed a $2.2 trillion relief bill to kickstart stalled negotiations with Republicans. It ultimately went nowhere. But Pelosi drew criticism from some Democrats for rejecting the Trump administration's $1.8 trillion stimulus offer. Her defenders argue Senate Republicans would never have supported a plan with a large price tag.
After Biden's election, Democrats embraced a $908 billion relief plan unveiled by a bipartisan group of moderate senators. It was later whittled down to a $748 billion piece of legislation, which Democrats increased to its current level of $900 billion by backing the addition of stimulus payments.
But they set aside one of their key priorities in the final rescue legislation, aid to states and municipalities struggling with large budget shortfalls. In exchange, Republicans dropped their demand for a liability shield to insulate businesses from virus-related lawsuits. Both parties will likely seek to address both of those measures early next year.