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Covid relief push: Senate Democrats reach deal to move forward after hours of


Democratic leaders ultimately secured Manchin’s support on a last-minute deal to clear the way for the legislation after Biden himself intervened.

But activity in the Senate first ground to a halt for hours amid a holdup over unemployment benefits, with Manchin being pulled in two directions — by Republicans who attempted to win him over on a proposal they had crafted and by the White House. The dispute was a sign of the centrist Democrat’s power in the 50-50 Senate, where Democrats control the narrowest possible majority, and an example of how a single senator can derail the President’s agenda.

After eight hours of gridlock, Democrats reached a deal they believe clears the way to pass the plan.

The day started after Democrats and the White House reached their own last-minute agreement.

Democrats cut a deal on Friday morning in order to head off a competing amendment by Republican Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, whose plan to extend $300 in weekly jobless benefits might have gotten enough votes to amend the underlying Covid relief bill. So Democrats decided to pare back their own jobless benefits, from $400 in the current bill to $300 per week — and sweeten the pot, allowing people to deduct the first $10,200 from their taxes.

Yet that sweetener only soured Manchin, who had not signed off on the deal before it was announced, prompting a frantic scramble behind the scenes to secure his support after he balked at the proposal.

A Democratic aide told CNN on Friday evening that Senate Democrats now plan to offer an amendment to extend the enhanced unemployment insurance program through September 6 at a rate of $300 per week as part of an agreement that Manchin accepted.

The aide said the agreement will make the first $10,200 in benefits nontaxable and now includes a provision that the West Virginia Democrat secured to ensure that the benefit applies only to households making less than $150,000.

In the end, Manchin also secured a deal where the jobless benefits will expire roughly a month earlier than they would have under the deal cut Friday morning. Under that agreement, benefits would have been extended through September.

A guide to what you can expect to get from the $1.9 trillion Senate stimulus

Manchin released a statement on the deal Friday evening, saying, “We have reached a compromise that enables the economy to rebound quickly while also protecting those receiving unemployment benefits from being hit with unexpected tax bills next year.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said in a statement Friday evening that Biden “supports the compromise agreement, and is grateful to all the Senators who worked so hard to reach this outcome.”

What’s next?

The Senate had braced for a series of politically tough amendment votes that will stretch late into the night Friday and into Saturday, the last major hurdle senators face before voting on Biden’s top legislative priority.

The long series of amendment votes, known as a vote-a-rama, is a Senate tradition that the minority party uses to put members of the majority on the record on controversial issues in an effort to make changes to a bill that they oppose.

But the Democratic negotiations over the unemployment benefits held up that marathon vote series. They’d kept open a vote from earlier Friday morning on the minimum wage while they brokered a deal on the other matter.

The measure to raise the minimum wage to $15 a hour, introduced by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, was an early test of party unity.

Eight senators in the Democratic conference — Jon Tester of Montana, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, Manchin, Angus King of Maine, Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, and Chris Coons and Tom Carper of Delaware — opposed the minimum wage amendment, along with every Republican senator.

The measure failed with the gavel finally going down on the first amendment vote of the vote-a-rama, 11 hours and 50 minutes after it began, making it the longest roll call vote in recent Senate history.

Once they close the gavel on the minimum wage vote, which has been open since about 11 a.m. ET, the Senate will move on to the vote-a-rama, meaning that senators can offer as many amendments as they want.

Senate Minority Whip John Thune of South Dakota, the No. 2 Senate Republican, told reporters that the long delay has only angered Senate Republicans and emboldened them to get votes on their amendments during the vote-a-rama.

Votes follow overnight reading

The Senate’s marathon effort to pass the $1.9 trillion legislation kicked into high gear Thursday when senators voted to open debate, and in a sign of just how thin Democrats’ majority is, Harris broke the tie advancing the bill. But Republicans opposed to the legislation have been taking steps to draw out the process, starting with forcing the 628-page bill to be read aloud.

Under the protocols surrounding the bill, the Senate had up to 20 hours for debate, followed by the vote-a-rama. However, following the conclusion of the bill’s reading around 2 a.m. ET Friday, Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen of…



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