Senate Democrats on schedule to pass their version of the stimulus package
It’s a complicated provision. How do you select which companies qualify? How do you determine what the wage should be? Is it $15 or is it less to win support from people like Sen. Joe Manchin, the moderate Democrat from West Virginia? Those questions would have taken awhile to answer.
The next steps
This plan is subject to change, but this is what we are looking at for timing:
- Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat from New York, will bring the package to the floor as soon as Wednesday.
- That version will include changes suggested by the parliamentarian (so no minimum wage increase).
- That begins 20 hours of debate.
- At the end of those 20 hours, the Senate will begin their second vote-a-rama. Given the nature of those marathon votes, we cannot predict exactly when final passage will be, but if past is prologue, look to early Friday morning. The last vote-a-rama ended at 5 a.m. ET.
Something to remember about vote-a-rama
But in the end, Democrats passed an amendment to strip changes from the bill. Those amendments didn’t have the force of law anyway because they were on a budget resolution. This time is different. As one GOP senator told CNN, these are “live bullets” and keeping Democrats unified in the vote-a-rama is going to be key for Democratic leadership. The work to do that is already underway, but it is going to be a tough test for Schumer.
On Tuesday, Biden will join Democrats in their lunch and that will be an opportunity for Biden to deliver a closing argument of unity.
Progressives will keep pushing on minimum wage, but it isn’t likely to change anything
Expect in the next few days, House progressives and outside groups growing louder in their calls that Vice President Kamala Harris needs to ignore the ruling of the Senate parliamentarian and pass the minimum wage anyway. That isn’t going to happen.
Practically speaking, the White House has already said it, repeatedly. The chief of staff has said it. The White House’s own official statement was that they were disappointed in the ruling on minimum wage, but respected the decision. And, on a political level, Senate Democrats cannot lose Manchin and Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, which is exactly what would happen if Harris ignored the parliamentarian.