House set to vote on virus relief, Biden on cusp of triumph

Congress is poised to approve a landmark $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill, placing President Joe Biden on the cusp of an early triumph that advances Democratic priorities and showcases the unity his party will need to forge future victories.
The House was expected to give final congressional
approval Wednesday to the package, which aims to fulfill Democrats’ campaign
promises to beat the coronavirus pandemic and revive the enfeebled economy.
House and Senate Republicans have unanimously opposed the package as bloated,
crammed with liberal policies and heedless of signs the dual crises are easing.
“It’s a
remarkable, historic, transformative piece of legislation which goes a very
long way to crushing the virus and solving our economic crisis,” House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Tuesday.
For Biden and Democrats, the bill is essentially a
canvas on which they’ve painted their core beliefs — that government programs
can be a benefit, not a bane, to millions of people and that spending huge sums
on such efforts can be a cure, not a curse. The measure so closely tracks
Democrats’ priorities that several rank it with the top achievements of their
careers, and despite their slender congressional majorities there was never
real suspense over its fate.
They were also empowered by three dynamics: their
unfettered control of the White House and Congress, polls showing robust
support for Biden’s approach and a moment when most voters care little that the
national debt is soaring toward a stratospheric $22 trillion. Neither party
seems much troubled by surging red ink, either, except when the other is using
it to finance its priorities, be they Democratic spending or GOP tax cuts.
A dominant feature of the bill is initiatives making
it one of the biggest federal thrusts in years to assist lower- and
middle-income families. Included are expanded tax credits over the next year
for children, child care and family leave plus spending for renters, feeding
programs and people’s utility bills.
The measure provides up to $1,400 direct payments to
most Americans, extended emergency unemployment benefits and hundreds of
billions for COVID-19 vaccines and treatments, schools, state and local
governments and ailing industries from airlines to concert halls. There is aid
for farmers of color and pension systems, and subsidies for consumers buying
health insurance and states expanding Medicaid coverage for lower earners.
“It’s not focused
on COVID relief. It’s focused on pushing more of the far-left agenda,” said No.
2 House GOP leader Steve Scalise of Louisiana.
The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs
Research poll found last week that 70% of Americans back Biden’s response to
the virus, including a hefty 44% of Republicans.
Yet the bill’s pathway has underscored Democrats’
challenges as they seek to build a legislative record to persuade voters to
keep them running Congress in next year’s elections.
Democrats control the Senate, split 50-50, only
because Vice President Kamala Harris gives them the winning vote in tied roll
calls. They have just a 10-vote advantage in the House.
That’s almost no wiggle room for a party that ranges
from West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin on the conservative side to progressives
like Vermont independent Sen. Bernie Sanders, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth
Warren and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Progressives had to swallow big concessions in the
bill to solidify moderate support. The most painful was dropping the
House-approved federal minimum-wage increase to $15 hourly by 2025.
Moderates forced tightened eligibility for the $1,400
stimulus checks, now phased out completely for individuals earning $80,000 and
couples making $160,000. The House’s initial extension of the soon-to-end $400
weekly emergency jobless payments, paid on top of state benefits, was trimmed
by the Senate to $300 and will now halt in early September.
Manchin was a leading holdout and in the middle of
talks that resulted in curbing all of those initiatives. The Senate approved
the bill on a party-line 50-49 vote on Saturday.
Dropping the minimum-wage boost was “infuriating,”
said Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., chair of the roughly 100-member Congressional
Progressive Caucus. But she called the overall bill “incredibly bold,” adding,
“It hits all of our progressive priorities — putting money in people’s pockets,
shots in arms, unemployment insurance, child care, schools.”
The independent Tax Policy Center said that the
Senate-passed bill would give almost 70% of this year’s tax breaks to
households earning $91,000 or less. In contrast, the Trump-era GOP tax bill
gave nearly half its 2018 reductions to the top 5% of households earning around
$308,000, said the research center, which is run by the liberal-leaning Urban
Institute and Brookings Institution.
Yet keeping Democrats united won’t get easier as the
party tries advancing the rest of it’s agenda. There are fault lines within the
party over priorities like immigration, health care and taxes.
At some point it seems likely that progressives will
draw their own lines in the sand. They are already demanding that the party
revisit the minimum-wage boost, and amid all this Republicans are already
demonstrating they are ready to pounce.
The American Action Network, tied to House GOP
leaders, said it’s launched digital ads in mostly moderate districts calling
the relief bill “a freight train of frivolous spending to bankroll their
liberal cronies.”
The bill passed the Senate under budget rules that
prevented Republicans from launching filibusters, which require 60 votes for
most measures. That process won’t be available for much legislation moving
forward, but either way any Democratic Senate defections will make most bills
there non-starters.
Even with their procedural advantage, Democrats’ avenue to victory in the Senate was pockmarked with delays. Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., forced clerks to spend nearly 11 hours reading the entire 628-page bill; negotiations with Manchin over jobless benefits lasted around nine hours; and votes on three dozen amendments, virtually all fated in advance to lose, took about 12 hours more.