White House chief of staff Mark Meadows
Mark Randall Meadows
Pelosi slams GOP, says .3 trillion in coronavirus relief not enough On The Money: Meadows says Trump willing to sign .3T coronavirus bill | Consumer spending slowed in July as coronavirus surge dampened recovery | Only five states making use of Trump’s expanded unemployment benefits Meadows says Trump willing to sign .3 trillion coronavirus relief bill said Friday that President Trump
Donald John Trump
Kanye West sues to get on Wisconsin ballot after being rejected Mary Trump reveals recordings of Trump’s sister swiping at Ivanka, Eric Leonard Cohen lawyer considers legal action after RNC uses song after Trump acceptance speech would sign a coronavirus relief package totaling $1.3 trillion, an increase over the $1.1 trillion proposed by Senate Republicans.
“The president right now is willing to sign something at $1.3 trillion,” Meadows told reporters at the White House, saying that the figure had been offered privately to Democrats. He had previously said the White House was willing to go “north” of $1 trillion but did not offer a precise figure.
He said, however, that Speaker Nancy Pelosi
Nancy Pelosi
Pelosi slams GOP, says .3 trillion in coronavirus relief not enough Markey leads Kennedy by 12 points in Massachusetts Senate primary: poll On The Money: Meadows says Trump willing to sign .3T coronavirus bill | Consumer spending slowed in July as coronavirus surge dampened recovery | Only five states making use of Trump’s expanded unemployment benefits (D-Calif.) has stood firm in her demand for a $2.2 trillion relief package.
Meadows and Pelosi spoke Thursday afternoon, resuming negotiations on the next coronavirus package that have been stalled for three weeks. Pelosi said Thursday that she offered Meadows a concession by proposing a $2.2 trillion bill, down from a $2.4 trillion offer earlier this month.
“We have said again and again that we’re willing to come down and meet them in the middle — that would be $2.2 trillion — and when they’re ready to do that, we’ll be ready to discuss and negotiate the particulars,” Pelosi told reporters in the Capitol following the phone call with Meadows.
The disagreements largely center over the amount in funding for enhanced unemployment insurance benefits and assistance for state and local governments.
Talks between Meadows, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin
Steven Terner Mnuchin
Pelosi slams GOP, says .3 trillion in coronavirus relief not enough Meadows says Trump willing to sign .3 trillion coronavirus relief bill GOP hunts for leverage in revived COVID-19 talks MORE, Pelosi, and Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer
Chuck Schumer
Pelosi slams GOP, says .3 trillion in coronavirus relief not enough Nadler, Maloney endorse Markey in Senate primary Mnuchin to testify before House coronavirus panel (D-N.Y.) broke down in early August, causing Trump to sign a spate of executive orders aimed at deferring the payroll tax, putting a federal pause on evictions and extending the lapsed enhanced unemployment benefits for a period of time.
Meadows on Friday said it is “incumbent on us to act,” placing the blame on Pelosi for holding up negotiations by not agreeing to a smaller relief package that would cover areas where they have agreement.
“We not only need to help with enhanced unemployment but small businesses, aid to schools, making sure that daycare provisions are augmented in this unprecedented time,” he said.
In May, House Democrats approved a $3.4 trillion relief bill. Senate Republicans unveiled a $1.1 trillion counterproposal at the end of July, when negotiations on the fifth package kicked off.
—Jordain Carney contributed.