Trump leaves town for Christmas at Mar-a-Lago as Democrats plan to vote on $2,000 stimulus checks
- President Donald Trump left Washington on Wednesday to spend the holidays at his private Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.
- House Democrats, meanwhile, will be attempting to pass a measure on Thursday providing $2,000 stimulus checks as part of the COVID-19 relief package.
- Earlier in the week, Trump called on Congress to increase the size of stimulus payments from the $600 included in the package he was expected to sign.
- If Trump doesn't sign that stimulus package in the next five days, he will have effectively vetoed it, throwing the measure back to Congress.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
President Donald Trump left DC on Wednesday to spend the holidays at his private Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, a day before Congress is set to consider $2,000 stimulus checks as part of the COVID-19 relief package.
On Tuesday night, Trump sent Washington into a frenzy when he bashed the bipartisan stimulus measure that Congress had just passed. On Wednesday afternoon, the lame duck president vetoed the defense spending bill that had passed both chambers with overwhelming support.
It is unclear when Trump will return to Washington. As USA Today noted, an alert from the Federal Aviation Administration indicates he is expected to leave Palm Beach by 6:45 p.m. on January 1. If he stays that long, the already-passed $900 billion stimulus package could be automatically vetoed as a result of his not signing it.
A White House spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment on whether the president intends to veto the current stimulus package.
The White House press office insisted, however, that the president will keep busy, saying in a statement that his schedule "includes many meetings and calls."
In the meantime, Democrats are prepared to bring Trump's stated desire for larger stimulus checks to the House floor on Thursday. According to The Washington Post's Jeff Stein, Democrats will seek to approve $2,000 payments - up from $600 in the existing stimulus package - by unanimous consent, meaning it would pass barring objection from any single member of Congress.
If that effort fails, Democrats will hold a vote on standalone legislation Monday, January 28, the Post reported.
The effort comes after Trump in particular said the package, which he had been expected to sign, did not provide big enough stimulus checks.
Democrats were the ones who first proposed $2,000 direct payments. Vice President-elect Kamala Harris cosponsored legislation in the Senate that would provide the checks each month until the pandemic is over. In the House, centrist and liberal Democrats alike backed a companion measure, but the stimulus packaged that chamber passed in May included only one-time, $1,200 checks.
Republicans, led by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, have sought to limit the size of direct payments to Americans, and now have to decide whether they want to oppose Trump or cave and save face politically.
Most Americans say the $600 checks weren't enough. According to recent polling from Insider and SurveyMonkey, 76% of respondents said the payment should be $1,000 or more, and 43% said it should be $2,000 or more.
Have a news tip? Email this reporter: cdavis@insider.com
- Read more:
- Trump's surprise demand for $2,000 stimulus checks blew up Mitch McConnell's master plan and leaves him in a no-win situation
- Trump just blew up the stimulus and spending bill. What happens now?
- Trump vetoes $741 billion defense bill over his completely unrelated spat with social-media companies and against the wishes of top Republicans
- Trump asks Congress for $2,000 stimulus checks, criticizing COVID-19 relief package he was expected to sign
from Business Insider https://ift.tt/3nLZ9T7
No comments