Politics & Government
U.S. House Approves $2,000 Stimulus Checks Backed By Trump
A bill to boost the relief payments cleared the House on a vote of 275-134, with 44 Republicans joining all but two Democrats in support.

By Laura Olson, the Kansas Reflector
December 29, 2020
WASHINGTON β The U.S. House of Representatives approved a measure Monday evening to send $2,000 stimulus checks to many Americans, embracing a call from President Donald Trump to more than triple the direct payments in the massive coronavirus relief package signed into law Sunday night.
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A bill to boost the relief payments cleared the House on a vote of 275-134, with 44 Republicans joining all but two Democrats in support.
But itβs yet to be seen whether the proposal can overcome opposition from Senate Republicans, who on Tuesday blocked a push by Democrats for an immediate vote on approving $2,000 checks. During negotiations over additional pandemic relief measures, the GOP majority had balked at repeating the $1,200 payments sent this spring when unemployment rolls surged nationally.
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Instead, the $900 billion, bipartisan coronavirus relief bill that passed Congress last week included $600 checks to Americans who earn up to $75,000, with additional payments for dependent children and partial payments to those earning above that amount.
After that measure was approved, Trump suddenly dismissed those direct payments as too low, and called on Congress to approve $2,000 checks. Democrats quickly supported that call, saying they had sought more aid to those struggling amid the pandemic.
βI did support the legislation that included the $600 stimulus checks because that was all that we could get the other side to agree to,β said Rep. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.) during Mondayβs floor debate. βBut itβs obviously not enough.β
House Republicans blocked an attempt last week by Democrats to fast-track larger stimulus checks. But in his signing statement Sunday evening, Trump repeated his call for $2,000 checks, declaring that βmuch more money is coming.β
Increasing those $600 checks to $2,000 would cost $464 billion, according to an analysis from the Joint Committee on Taxation, which prepares cost estimates for Congress. Thatβs roughly half of the cost of the overall relief package passed last week.
βDo we really think the way to improve the quality of life for many Americans is to just print more money from the Fed?β Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-Wis.) asked.

The Kansas delegation split along party lines in the Monday evening vote with Democratic Rep. Sharice Davids in favor of the $2,000 stimulus checks and Republican Reps. Ron Estes and Roger Marshall opposed. Republican Rep. Steve Watkins, who lost a primary challenge in August, didnβt participate in the vote.
βIβm voting to provide $2,000 payments to hardworking families who desperately need help,β Davids said. βThough Iβm glad the president finally signed the relief bill, itβs still only a first step. These payments now have bipartisan support, and itβs time for action in a national crisis.β
Itβs not clear what comes next in the Republican-controlled Senate, where Democrats also are pushing for a vote. In his statement Sunday evening after Trump signed the coronavirus relief bill, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) did not mention the presidentβs comment that the Senate would βstart the process for a voteβ to boost those checks.
On the Senate floor Tuesday, McConnell noted Trumpβs calls not only for the larger checks but also for action on two other matters: a repeal of liability protections for social-media companies, and an investigation into the integrity of the November election.
βThose are the three important subjects the president has linked together,β he said. βThis week, the Senate will begin a process to bring these three priorities into focus.β
Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), a member of GOP leadership, told reporters last week that he did not believe a bill on $2,000 stimulus checks would clear the Senateβs 60-vote threshold.
But several Senate Republicans have signaled that they would support it, including Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, who said in a statement Monday that Congress should quickly approve the larger checks.
βI share many of my colleaguesβ concern about the long-term effects of additional spending, but we cannot ignore the fact that millions of working class families across the nation are still in dire need of relief,β Rubio said.
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