Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) gave perhaps his strongest signal yet for another pandemic relief spending package, saying that Congress will deliberate on the details in the coming weeks.
“I believe there will be one,” he told reporters in Kentucky, referring to another piece of legislation. “We will be taking a look at— in the Senate in a couple of weeks—another package based on the conditions that we confront today,” the GOP leader said.
Both the House and Senate are on a several-week-long recess and won’t return to Washington until July 20.
He did not mention stimulus checks as being part of the legislation, although President Donald Trump, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, and other officials have said they will likely be needed.
It comes about three months after the bulk of the stimulus payments and checks were sent out to more than 100 million people. Meanwhile, expanded unemployment insurance payments of $600 per week are slated to end in late July.
Some high-ranking Republicans in the Senate have expressed an unwillingness to send out direct payments.
“About direct payments or some of the checks—that’s something he’s talked about, and some of our members are interested in that as well. There are some of our members who aren’t interested in that, so we’ll see where that goes,” Senate Majority Whip John Thune (R-S.D.) said. Republicans will still need to agree “on a number” and other components.
House Democrats passed a $3 trillion stimulus package that would send out $1,200 payments to eligible Americans and children.