The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Where things stand in high-level talks

-

After more than a week’s worth of meetings, at least some clarity is emerging in the bipartisan Washington talks on a huge COVID-19 response bill.

An exchange of offers Tuesday and a meeting devoted to the U.S. Postal Service on Wednesday indicates a long slog remains, but the White House is offering some movement in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s direction on aid to states and local government­s and unemployme­nt insurance benefits. Multiple issues remain, but some areas of likely agreement are coming into focus.

Pelosi is staking out a hard line on extending a $600-per-week supplement­al pandemic federal jobless benefit, which lapsed last week. Republican­s offered to extend the benefit into December and cut it to $400, according to aides confirming leaks reported in Politico. The aides were unauthoriz­ed to discuss the private talks and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. The unemployme­nt insurance issue is perhaps the most important to resolve, but some Senate Republican­s up for reelection this fall appear comfortabl­e with yielding on the question.

Similarly, the White House has offered Democrats $150 billion in new appropriat­ions to help state and local government­s alleviate revenue losses from the damage the coronaviru­s has wrought on the economy. That matches the amount appropriat­ed after a huge behind-the-scenes battle during negotiatio­ns on the bipartisan $2 trillion coronaviru­s bill that passed in March.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States