Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) failed to strike a deal for a new stimulus package during a 90-minute meeting Wednesday but said they will continue negotiating, with time running out until the election, Bloomberg News reported. “We still don’t have an agreement, we still have more work to do,” Mnuchin told reporters, adding, “We’ve made progress in a lot of areas.” Pelosi said that she and Mnuchin were seeking some “further clarification” on each others’ positions and that “our conversations will continue.” The speaker said that the House will go forward with a vote Wednesday night on a $2.2 trillion Democratic stimulus plan she described as “our proffer” in negotiations with the White House. That legislation is less than the $3.4 trillion bill Democrats passed in May, but still more than Republicans have said they could accept. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said earlier that it was rife with “poison pills” that have nothing to do with pandemic relief. Read more.
In related news, The Trump administration has proposed including a $20 billion extension in aid for the battered airline industry in a new stimulus proposal to House Democrats worth over $1.5 trillion, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said yesterday. “There’s $20 billion in the most recent proposal for the airlines that would give them a six month extension,” said Meadows. Meadows declined to provide the total value of the White House’s latest proposal but said the figure is “certainly above the $1.5 trillion that has been articulated to date.” “As you get above $1.5 trillion, it gets extremely difficult to justify based on the facts,” he cautioned, explicitly stating that $2 trillion was too much. “If it starts with a 2, it’s going to be a real problem,” he added. Read more.
