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Trump’s Bid to Spark Stimulus Talks Fails to Break Stalemate

Published 10/12/2020, 04:00 AM
Updated 10/12/2020, 05:09 AM
© Bloomberg. U.S. President Donald Trump speaks from the Truman Balcony of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Saturday, Oct. 10, 2020. Trump, making his first public appearance since returning from a three-day hospitalization for Covid-19, is setting the stage for a return to the campaign trail even as questions remain about whether he’s still contagious. Photographer: Erin Scott/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- President Donald Trump’s attempt to jolt negotiations on a new economic stimulus plan has left talks at a familiar stalemate with Republicans and well as Democrats balking at his latest offer.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin are expected to talk more this week. Even if they manage to strike a deal, there’s almost no chance of getting legislation written and passed by Congress before the election, in which control of the White House and the Senate is at stake.

Trump’s whipsaw changes last week -- first calling off talks in a tweet, then saying he wanted a bigger package than even Democrats have proposed -- may have hardened Pelosi’s resolve to stick with the Democrat’s $2.2 trillion proposal. Mnuchin has countered with a $1.8 trillion stimulus plan.

On Sunday Pelosi called the White House offer a “miserable and deadly failure.” Trump accused the House speaker of dragging out the talks in an attempt to “influence the election.”

White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow suggested the administration might increase its offer, without giving specifics.

“The bid and the offer is narrowing somewhat between the two sides,” Kudlow said on CNN’s “State of the Union” program.

Republicans Balk

One big issue for the administration may be Senate Republicans.

Multiple GOP senators participating in a Saturday conference call told Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows that any agreement with Democrats that ends up around $2 trillion is too much, according to two people familiar with the call.

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One of the people said Mnuchin’s offer to Pelosi wouldn’t have enough Republican votes to pass the Senate without major changes.

Some senators said that the spending levels being discussed were unacceptable and that ballooning the deficit will damage their standing with voters. Others said that a deal of that size would hand Pelosi and the Democrats a major victory right before the election, the person, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said.

There also were objections to some of the policies, including expanding eligibility for the Affordable Care Act, which Republicans have been trying to dismantle, and aid to state governments.

Mnuchin and Meadows told the senators they would relay their concerns to the president, who last week urged the negotiators to “go big.”

Market Bets

Kudlow, on CNN, dismissed grumbling among Republicans, predicting that if an agreement is reached, many “will go along with it.”

Some traders are continuing to bet lawmakers will move closer to reaching a stimulus deal, and that helped major U.S. stock indexes last week higher.

Federal Reserve officials, led by Chairman Jerome Powell, have also stepped up their calls for a broad relief package to shore up the shaky U.S. economy.

Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said Sunday on CBS’s “Face the Nation” that unless elected leaders take more action, the U.S. will “continue to see a grinding, very slow recovery, with thousands of small businesses around the country going bankrupt.”

‘Targeted’ Aid

Kudlow said the U.S. economy is recovering from the pandemic-induced business shutdowns earlier in the year but there are “some targeted areas of assistance that would help.” He cited aid to the unemployed and to small businesses, and direct payments to individuals.

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Mnuchin and Meadows, in a letter Sunday directed at members of the House and Senate, again called for a more narrowly focused stimulus, citing the same areas as Kudlow.

“The all-or-nothing approach is an unacceptable response to the American people,” they wrote, a reference to Pelosi’s insistence that any relief package be broad and include provisions to stem the spread of the coronavirus and assist state and local governments.

With lawmakers from both parties facing tough re-election races already pushing their leaders for a resolution, they said they would continue reaching out to individual members of Congress on a bipartisan basis.

“The president is available to meet as well,” they wrote. Trump has already spoken to some GOP senators.

Pelosi, in a letter to House Democrats on Sunday said there were major issues beyond money, including testing and metrics for determining the spread of the virus.

“Until these serious issues are resolved, we remain at an impasse,” Pelosi wrote. “However, I remain hopeful that the White House will join us to work toward a relief package that addresses the health and economic crisis facing America’s families and will do so soon.”

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

Latest comments

Nothing changes - liberals would rather tank this economy and put their own constituents in the poor house than give Trump a win before the election
NO for Joe 🚷
You have to be a deranged lunatic to vote for Trump.
Trumps own party doesn't support his stimulus package, so his election scheme won't work.
What?
Bearish in this week ?
What a circus 🎪. Does Larry Kudlow have an economics degree? Is he off the coke or is he drinking again? Mark Meadows, another great negotiator, is the first WH Chief of Staff in my lifetime without a Bachelor's Degree, in something. Nancy Pelosi for the TKO in the last round.
well Nancy Pelosi already won the last fight (for the govt shutdown), so far in this bout she is taking Trumps lunch money without much of a fight
Are you serious dude? Nobody that DIDN'T get at least a 4 year degree should be allowed to do ANYTHING related to working in the White House or running the country. If you think otherwise you are wrong, period, end of discussion!
yeah, cause all those arts degrees out there are really useful.
Pelisi and her PORK.
Trump and his MENTAL ILLNESS.
, Good Morning, Sunday Morning.Lol.
Stimulus is there because economies are doing bad. Still markets go up... Flat markets because of stimulus? I can understand. But up, up, up...?? Makes no sense
Exactly.
Because everyone knows we are getting one eventually and markets tend to look forward. Boomers got to keep the status quo before they die.
"Trump’s whipsaw changes last week -- first calling off talks in a tweet, then saying he wanted a bigger package than even Democrats have proposed"  -- the mango messiah is now literally bidding against himself, no wonder Pelosi is just going to sit back and wait until The Donald hardballs himself into the $2.2b package Pelosi wants...........
Don't think so. This is "No Sale" until the election is done.
Trump CAUSED everyones hatred of Trump! You are all so blind it is frightening!
, hate is a choice...are you saying rascists are created by people of color too? Who is blind?
shrug off and forget. We swithed off to celebrating china surge.
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