US officials more optimistic on stimulus, timing unclear

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin continue to work on a package to support the US economy

Washington (AFP) - Chances for approving a new spending package to support the US economy improved dramatically on Tuesday after the senior Democratic lawmaker said a bill is in the works and the top Senate Republican said he would bring it to a vote.

Both sides said they made progress in talks, but whether negotiations can be completed in time for Congress to approve the package before the November 3 presidential election remains a question mark.

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Bloomberg TV that legislators are starting to commit the measure to paper.

While the bill must go through legislative steps, including approval by the House Appropriations Committee, "I am optimistic" it can get bipartisan support, Pelosi said, but cautioned "Legislation is tough."

The bill's prospects got a boost after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who repeatedly signaled that he would not support a massive package, said he would bring the measure to the Senate floor for a vote.

"If a Presidentially-supported bill clears the House, at some point we'll bring it to the floor, yes," McConnell told reporters.

Economists say the coronavirus-ravaged US economy has held up well because of the massive injection of about $3 trillion in support for businesses and households earlier in the year, but needs more support to avert another downturn.

After a 45-minute call on Tuesday afternoon, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows said Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin -- who conducted negotiations while on a trip to the Middle East -- made "good progress," but "we still have a ways to go."

The differences still amount to "several hundred billion dollars," he said on CNBC, but added: "Everybody is working real hard to try to make sure that we can get some kind of an agreement before the weekend at least."

In a letter to Democratic lawmakers late Tuesday, Pelosi said that after speaking with Mnuchin she believed that "both sides are serious about finding a compromise."

She and Mnuchin called on Democratic and Republican lawmakers to resolve differences on funding and language in the bill. "Hopefully, we will receive this guidance soon so that the Secretary and I can continue our discussions tomorrow (Wednesday) afternoon upon his return," she said. 

Talks between the White House and congressional Democrats over new stimulus measures have dragged on for months.

Deadline that's not a deadline

Pelosi on Sunday had said there were only 48 hours left to realistically agree on the package that could be approved before the election, but she explained Tuesday that the deadline was simply a process of working back on the timeline from election day.

"It isn't that this was a day that we would have a deal, it was having the terms on the table to be able to go to the next step. Legislation takes a long time," she said.

The House of Representatives approved a $2.2 trillion package while President Donald Trump's administration proposed a $1.8 trillion rescue measure.

Trump, who trails in national polls behind Democratic challenger Joe Biden, signaled he could go bigger, but Senate Republicans strenuously opposed the massive price tag and McConnell was trying to push much smaller, narrowly-targeted measures.

A New York Times/Siena College poll published Tuesday showed 72 percent of likely voters support a stimulus package.

Since business shutdowns began in March, tens of millions of workers have lost their jobs, while the economy saw the worst contraction since the Great Depression.

The $2.2 trillion CARES Act expanded unemployment benefits and provided loans and grants to small businesses. However those provisions expired months ago.

IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath told AFP last week that a US rescue package of around $2 trillion would boost growth in the world's biggest economy by two percentage points next year, over the 3.1 percent GDP rise currently forecast.

© Agence France-Presse