The legislation would provide $908 billion in aid and also shield businesses from coronavirus lawsuits for a few months to allow states to develop their own liability reform politi.co/3qh1rvc
The proposal includes:
• $160B in state and local aid
• $180B in additional unemployment insurance
• $288B for small businesses. I
• $82B for schools
• $45B for transportation
• money for health care politi.co/3qh1rvc
This newest measure is no lay-up, and several congressional aides said the likeliest route to a new round of aid is through McConnell and Pelosi. Congress has not enacted a new significant round of aid since April. politi.co/3qh1rvc pscp.tv/w/1lPJqXQLMdEGb
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
If there's one thing we know about December in Washington, it’s that it gets really … interesting, our @playbookplus authors say. Every year. Without fail. Chaos. Madness. On the brink of a holiday.
• Trump is considering preemptively pardoning much of his immediate family
• Prosecutors have been pursuing an investigation into potential bribery in connection with an effort to secure a pardon from Trump politico.com/newsletters/pl…
• AG Barr says the DOJ has not found any evidence of widespread fraud in the 2020 presidential election
• Yet Trump's lawyer Rudy Giuliani is offering non-specific conspiracy theories about the election politico.com/newsletters/pl…
The Supreme Court will weigh in today on whether President Trump will be able to exclude undocumented immigrants from the census population count, which divvies up the nation’s 435 House seats among the states politi.co/2VfPKqs
The court’s speedy decision to take Trump v. New York means a decision could be handed down before the Census Bureau delivers the population counts to Trump's desk at the end of the year politi.co/2VfPKqs
After SCOTUS rejected Trump’s efforts to add a citizenship question to the census, Trump issued a memo in July asking the Census Bureau to subtract undocumented immigrants from the count for the purposes of the reallocation of the nation's House districts politi.co/2VfPKqs
Nearly 200,000 pre-kindergarten, elementary school and special-needs students will begin returning to in-person learning next week, NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Sunday.
NYC middle and high school students will continue remote education, since they are more likely to spread Covid-19 and can better acclimate to virtual classes, de Blasio said
Families will have to give consent for students to be tested once a week. Those who don't will not be allowed to attend in-person classes, de Blasio said. Only students who opted for in-person learning earlier this year will be able to attend.
This may be the only full week both the House and Senate may be in session during the lame duck Congress and the backdrop is grim.
The pandemic is hitting its height, the economy is showing some signs of struggle, and society is, again, being tested. politi.co/2Vh3pxF
There are only 11 days for Congress to put together a spending bill — either an omnibus or stopgap measure — to avert a shutdown during the last month of Trump's presidency.
There appears to be unity on top-line numbers, but much left to be negotiated. politi.co/2Vh3pxF
The National Defense Authorization Act has passed every year for the last six decades. But renaming bases named after Confederate leaders is still a sticking point. Most lawmakers are OK with it. Trump isn't. politi.co/2Vh3pxF
In Atlantic City, the boardwalk is empty, the beaches are deserted, and the casinos, though partially reopen, are limping into their fifth month of severely curtailed operations after four months of shutdowns politi.co/2JcfPV8
📷 @smahaskey
The devastation of the pandemic is hardly unique to Atlantic City, but few places have fared worse than this historic resort turned gambling mecca. Roughly 1 out of every 3 workers was out of a job here in the late spring and early summer. politi.co/2JcfPV8
📷 @smahaskey
A local food bank recently handed out enough turkeys and food boxes to feed 2,400 families ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday, and hundreds of cars had to be turned away when their supply ran out politi.co/2JcfPV8
📷 @smahaskey
Oklahoma entered the world of legal cannabis late, but its hands-off approach launched a boom and a new nickname: ‘Toke-lahoma’ politico.com/news/magazine/…
Oklahoma is now the biggest medical marijuana market in the country on a per capita basis. More than 360,000 Oklahomans—nearly 10 percent of the state’s population—have acquired medical marijuana cards over the last two years. politi.co/36bKg6d
To meet that demand, Oklahoma has more than 9,000 licensed marijuana businesses, including nearly 2,000 dispensaries and almost 6,000 grow operations politi.co/36bKg6d