Congress heads home for Thanksgiving without pandemic relief deal
But staff talks have begun about adding relief to a must-pass spending bill.
Congress will head home for a week-long Thanksgiving holiday recess without passing any sort of compromise coronavirus relief bill as the U.S. death toll passes 250,000 and millions of Americans remain on unemployment.
But there is some hope that renewed talks could see some sort of coronavirus relief aid in the coming weeks even with little time remaining on the legislative calendar before the end of the year.
Democratic aides have told ABC News that staffers of the congressional ‘Big Four’ met Thursday to discuss ways coronavirus relief could be tacked on to a must-pass spending bill that needs to clear both chambers of Congress by Dec. 11 to avert a government shutdown. The ‘Big Four’ includes House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.
Democratic and Republican leaders had previously shot down the idea of combining the massive omnibus spending bill with any sort of coronavirus relief – saying the two issues need to be dealt with separately – but as the pandemic rages on with stark numbers of those infected and dying, and millions of people without employment and economic relief, this could be lawmakers’ last chance at getting legislation that addresses both spending matters across the finish line before the end of the year.
"Last night, they've agreed to sit down and the staffs are going to sit down today or tomorrow to try to begin to see if we can get a real good COVID relief bill," Schumer told reporters Thursday in New York. "So there's been a little bit of a breakthrough in that McConnell's folks are finally sitting down and talking to us."
Schumer and Pelosi are scheduled to meet with President-elect Joe Biden Friday in Wilmington, Delaware. Earlier this week, Biden called on Congress to immediately pass a relief package.
Republican aides told ABC News that discussions between staffers Thursday were strictly about passing the omnibus spending bill – which would fund the government through next year – and were unrelated to any additional coronavirus relief.
The back and forth comes amid concerns about the toll of the coronavirus on the U.S. economy as crucial pandemic relief programs are due to shut down by the end of the year.
Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation, which provides an additional 13 weeks of unemployment insurance and the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Program, which aids self-employed or part-time workers, are set to expire Dec. 31.
The nationwide eviction moratorium will expire at the end of the year, as well as the student loan forbearance program, which President Donald Trump implemented by executive order.
Tax credits for required paid sick leave and for family sick leave for self-employed individuals will also expire.
The Paycheck Protection Program to assist small business owners stopped taking applications in August. And the boosted $600 in federal unemployment insurance ran out in late July.
"The COVID-19 pandemic and economic recession will not end without our help. It is essential that this bill have sufficient funding and delivers meaningful relief to the many Americans who are suffering. For the sake of the country, we ask that you come to the table and work with us to produce an agreement that meets America’s needs in this critical time," Pelosi and Schumer wrote in a letter addressed to McConnell earlier in the week, urging the Republican leader to meet them at the negotiating table.
Congress remains at a standstill on a relief package, as Democrats are calling for more than $2 trillion in new relief money, whereas Republicans in the Senate have set their sights on a much lower $500 billion figure.
"To sum it up, I'm open to a targeted bill, roughly of the amount that we recommended - a half a trillion dollars which is not nothing - narrowly targeted at schools, and health care providers, at PPP, and of course liability reform, to keep America from being engaged in an epidemic of losses on the heels of the pandemic. Very open to that. But I've seen no evidence yet as several of my colleagues have suggested that they're open to it," McConnell told reporters during his weekly press conference Tuesday.