World

‘Pressured’ Trump signs US$900 bil Covid-19 relief bill

With his signature, US govt avoids shutdown

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 28 Dec 2020 11:20AM

‘Pressured’ Trump signs US$900 bil Covid-19 relief bill
For days, United States President Donald Trump had refused to sign a US$900 billion relief package approved overwhelmingly by Congress following months of negotiation, calling it a ‘disgrace’. – AFP pic, December 28, 2020

WEST PALM BEACH – After delaying for nearly a week and under pressure from all sides, United States President Donald Trump finally signed a massive US$900 billion (RM3.6 trillion) stimulus bill yesterday, in a long-sought boost for millions of Americans and businesses battered by the coronavirus pandemic.

The package “providing coronavirus emergency response and relief” is part of a larger spending bill that, with Trump’s signature, will avoid a government shutdown tomorrow.

“I am signing this bill to restore unemployment benefits, stop evictions, provide rental assistance, add money for PPP, return our airline workers back to work, add substantially more money for vaccine distribution, and much more,” the president said in a statement from his Christmas vacation at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.

For days, Trump refused to put his signature on the relief package approved overwhelmingly by Congress following months of negotiation, calling it a “disgrace”.

Two federal unemployment benefit programmes approved in March as part of an initial Covid-19 relief plan expired at midnight on Saturday, cutting off an estimated 12 million Americans, according to The Century Foundation think-tank.

The relief package, passed by Congress on December 21, will extend those benefits as well as others set to expire in the days ahead.

But in his statement, Trump continued to push for the US$600 direct payments to US taxpayers spelled out in the bill to be more than tripled, and argued the legislation included too much excess spending on unrelated programmes.

He has not said why he waited until the bill was already approved to make his views known.

President-elect Joe Biden, due to be sworn in January 20 after beating Trump in November’s election, had warned of “devastating consequences” on Saturday if the president continued his refusal.

‘Chaos and misery’

Earlier Sunday, before the bill was signed, some Republicans urged Trump to change course.

“I understand he wants to be remembered for advocating for big cheques, but the danger is he’ll be remembered for chaos and misery and erratic behaviour if he allows this to expire,” Republican Senator Pat Toomey said yesterday.

Democrats in Congress sought on Thursday to approve a measure to increase the direct payments in line with what Trump wants, but Republicans blocked it.

It was seen largely as a theatrical move with little hope of passage designed to expose the rift between Republicans and the outgoing president.

Senator Bernie Sanders said yesterday that “what the president is doing right now is unbelievably cruel”.

“Many millions of people are losing their extended unemployment benefits.

“They’re going to be evicted from their apartments because the eviction moratorium is ending,” he said.

Sanders urged Trump to sign the bill and said increased direct payments could be approved in the coming days. – AFP, December 28, 2020

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