American workers and families are hurting, our small businesses are desperately trying to stay afloat, and communities across the country are struggling. Three months ago, the House of Representatives passed another round of comprehensive emergency legislation, called the Heroes Act, to address both the health and economic impacts of the pandemic. Despite our repeated efforts, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has refused to even allow a vote on that bill. Instead, he has sent Senators back to their home states and told them to be on standby for a possible vote on a deal. That is irresponsible. As I said on the Senate Floor this week, the coronavirus pandemic is not taking a day off and neither should the Senate.
That is not the kind of leadership our country needs during a crisis that has caused recession-era unemployment levels. In fact, McConnell has said that many Republican Senators think we have already passed enough relief. That’s also why the Trump Administration walked away from the negotiating table, because they knew that if they reached a deal, the majority of Republicans in the Senate would likely oppose it. This is not the way to conduct the Senate and it puts Americans and our economy dangerously at risk.
Instead of working with Democrats and Republicans alike to reach a bipartisan deal, the President opted for show over substance. He released a series of inadequate and unworkable executive actions that don’t seriously address the health and economic crises facing our country. For example, what he heralded as an “eviction moratorium” is nothing more than a directive to federal agencies to “consider” the issue. His executive gimmicks don’t include critical provisions from the House-passed Heroes Act – including those to help schools reopen safely, expand real-time testing, support struggling child care providers, provide food and rental assistance for those who are struggling, send critical resources to the Postal Service, support state and local governments whose needs have only risen dramatically, and so much more.
We all know the virus doesn't care if you live in a red state or blue state. This is a red, white, and blue moment. We must treat it as a national effort, which means the White House and Republican Leader McConnell need to come to the table and negotiate in good faith. We need to work together to do something meaningful. The virus isn't taking a vacation; the economic recession isn't taking any time off. Neither should we. We must hammer out a deal that helps the American people and our economy weather this storm. |