Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said yesterday that the Trump administration and Senate Republicans have been in regular contact over possible coronavirus relief measures and the Senate’s top Republican will “hopefully” unveil a new bill next week, Reuters reported. Asked about the collapse of talks with Democrats over aid legislation, Mnuchin said that he and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows have been speaking regularly with Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell. “Hopefully Mitch will enter new legislation next week,” Mnuchin said. No negotiations on another round of coronavirus aid have taken place since early August, when talks collapsed as Congressional Democrats and the Republican Trump administration could not bridge a gap of more than $1 trillion between their proposed relief packages for small businesses, state and local governments, school districts and health care providers. Trump has since signed an executive order extending expired supplemental unemployment benefits and deferring some payroll taxes, but details on implementation have been uncertain. Mnuchin is due to testify today before the Democrat-controlled House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis on the administration’s economic response. Republicans who control the U.S. Senate have discussed proceeding with their own legislation that would be narrower than the House’s $3 trillion plan approved in May, but thus far have not introduced any new proposals. Some Republicans oppose new aid out of concern for a massive and growing budget deficit predicted to approach $4 trillion this year.
