黑料正能量 Note: States and localities anxiously await the outcome of negotiations that could send $350+ billion to hard pressed community agencies and services.
Democrats’ $1.9T Covid Aid Bill Faces the Senate Chopping Block
By Caitlin Emma Politico February 24, 2021
The Senate is girding for a wonky throwdown on Wednesday that could determine whether major pieces of President Joe Biden鈥檚 $1.9 trillion relief package are left on the cutting-room floor.
In a courtroom-like setting with high-stakes legislative consequences, staffers for both parties will argue over whether critical pieces of Biden鈥檚 coronavirus relief plan run afoul of arcane budget rules. The referee in this dispute: the Senate parliamentarian, or the upper chamber鈥檚 official adviser on procedural matters, who could opine as soon as Wednesday or Thursday on what’s in and what’s out.
Hiking the minimum wage to $15 an hour is on the docket, in addition to pension issues and subsidies meant to help laid-off workers remain on their health insurance plans. Democrats are hopeful for favorable rulings 鈥 and some progressives are determined to retool their proposals if they fall short, eager to get the biggest possible bill under budget rules that allow it to evade a Senate filibuster. But time to sort through potential pitfalls is running short, with House Democrats aiming to pass the package by the end of the week and congressional leaders hoping to send it to Biden鈥檚 desk before unemployment benefits expire in mid-March.
The minimum wage will likely stir up the most drama behind closed doors on Wednesday, with Republicans arguing that such a sweeping policy change doesn鈥檛 pass muster with the budget restrictions guiding passage of Biden鈥檚 pandemic plan. But Democrats are confident that they have a strong case, fueled by recent analysis from the Congressional Budget Office.
鈥淲e鈥檝e got tens of millions of workers working for starvation wages,鈥 Senate Budget Chairman (I-Vt.) told reporters on Tuesday.
鈥淚t is an absolute national disgrace,鈥 he said. 鈥$15 an hour is not a radical idea. A number of states have moved in that direction. Over 60 percent of the American people think that鈥檚 where we should go and that鈥檚 what I want to do.鈥
The back-and-forth with the parliamentarian, slated for 10 a.m., is part of the reconciliation process, which Democrats are using to pass Biden鈥檚 massive bill with a 51-vote Senate majority in the evenly divided Senate, avoiding the need for negotiations with the GOP.
In order to survive under the budget rules, each piece of the Covid aid bill must clear what’s known as the Byrd Rule by producing a significant effect on federal spending, revenues and the debt within a decade, in addition to meeting a litany of other requirements.
All eyes are on Elizabeth MacDonough, the first woman to hold the Senate’s non-partisan parliamentarian position. MacDonough was first appointed to the role in 2012 by then-Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.).
MacDonough will dissect the budget impact of each piece of Biden鈥檚 bill, in addition to considering a number of other esoteric related issues. That includes rules limiting the cost of any provision outside of a 10-year window, and much murkier, subjective restrictions that prevent policies from essentially outgrowing their budget effects.
Democrats could ultimately overrule the parliamentarian on any issue, but that鈥檚 unlikely to happen given that Biden is leaning heavily against the idea, .
While waiting on the parliamentarian鈥檚 opinion, Democrats have been to ensure that the minimum wage ultimately survives the rigmarole, such as capping the increase at less than $15 an hour and including a package of small business tax cuts to bolster its budget imprint.
Lowering the overall wage increase could satisfy centrists like Sen. (D-W.Va.), who opposes the $15 figure and has instead pushed for an $11 hike.
Coming in below both of those proposals is a new GOP plan from Sens. (R-Utah) and (R-Ark.) that would raise the hourly wage to $10 by 2025, while barring undocumented immigrants from getting the boost.
“We’re trying to reach the broadest coalition of senators of both parties as possible,鈥 Cotton said on Tuesday. 鈥淚n many states, it’s still at $7.25. $10 seems like a reasonable wage in many states with lower labor costs.鈥
Health insurance subsidies for laid-off workers face one of the tougher, more subjective Byrd tests 鈥 whether the effects on the federal budget are 鈥渕erely incidental鈥 to the policy being made.
鈥淚 think they鈥檒l be in the final package,鈥 Finance Committee Chair (D-Ore.) said of the health subsidies on Monday. 鈥淭his will help people who are getting hammered by health care costs.鈥
Some outside experts also agree with Wyden.
鈥淔ederal assistance to help people buy insurance is money,鈥 said Stan Dorn, the director of the National Center for Coverage Innovation at Families USA. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not 鈥榠ncidental鈥 鈥 it鈥檚 the core of the proposal.鈥
Alice Miranda Ollstein and Marianne LeVine contributed to this report.