Congressional leaders have reached an agreement on a second COVID-19 relief bill, ABC News reports. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who resisted the idea of additional relief for months upon months, announced the news on the Senate floor Sunday, saying he could “finally report what our nation has needed to hear for a very long time.”
BREAKING: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says leaders of the House and Senate have “finalized an agreement" on COVID-19 relief package. https://t.co/VENzbf6f7Wpic.twitter.com/Z7ZBJTieMY— ABC News (@ABC) December 20, 2020
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The $900 billion dollar package includes an additional $300 a week in unemployment insurance, $600 relief checks for individuals, $25 billion in aid for renters, an eviction moratorium, aid for small businesses, schools, and hospitals, and money for vaccine distribution. A bipartisan effort to increase the relief checks to $1200 was blocked by Republican Senator Ron Johnson. To get the bill across the finish line, Republicans had to give up a COVID-19 liability shield McConnell wanted, which would have prevented employees from having any recourse against their employers for putting them in unsafe conditions where they contracted COVID-19. (Some employers have gone far beyond ordinary negligence: At Tyson Foods, managers not only kept their plants open during an outbreak, but set up a betting pool over which of their employees would catch the deadly disease.) Democrats, for their part, had to give up a package of aid for state and local governments they had wanted. The final sticking point in negotiations, an effort by Republican Senator Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania to shut down some of the emergency lending programs the Federal Reserve set up in response to the pandemic, was resolved with a compromise late Saturday night.