The Senate will vote Tuesday on a second round of funding for the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) to help small businesses keep employees on the payroll during the pandemic, and Wednesday on the Republicans’ proposed $500 billion targeted coronavirus relief bill, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) announced on Saturday.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin spoke for an hour and 15 minutes Saturday evening and their staff “will continue discussions, and they have agreed to speak again on Monday,” Treasury spokeswoman Monica Crowley said on Twitter.
Pelosi spokesman Drew Hammill said that there was progress on coronavirus testing but “there remains work to do to ensure there is a comprehensive testing plan.”
Hammill added there are numerous other differences “that must be addressed in a comprehensive manner in the next 48 hours.”
He also said “decisions must be made by the White House in order to demonstrate that the administration is serious about reaching a bipartisan agreement that provides for Americans with the greatest needs during the pandemic.”
Mnuchin and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows the following day called on Congress to pass a bill that would enable the initial usage of billions of dollars in leftover PPP funds. The program was authorized under March’s CARES Act.
“Secretary Mnuchin and Chief of Staff Meadows are right: There is no excuse for Democrats to keep blocking job-saving funding for the Paycheck Protection Program while other conversations continue,” McConnell said at the time, in which he noted that the program had already saved tens of millions of American jobs.
“But it has become yet another casualty of Democrats’ all-or-nothing obstruction,” McConnell wrote.
In September, McConnell estimated the cost of the new PPP program to be around $257 billion.
Narrower Bills
Many Senate Republicans have said that they do not support a big funding package, preferring to focus on the passage of a series of more focused funding bills as Democrats and Republicans continue to disagree on key issues.Asked why Democrats won’t accept narrower bills that tackle issues in small groupings or one by one, Mnuchin said he doesn’t think there’s a good answer.
“I suspect that they don’t want to give the president a win three weeks before the election. But they are holding up relief to hardworking Americans,” he said in an appearance on Fox Business.
McConnell said on Saturday that passing the funding bills was an urgent need for the American people during the tough economic situation brought by the pandemic.
“These are just some of the urgent needs that Washington should meet immediately while debates continue over the rest,” McConnell said.