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‘We're not budging’: Pelosi not hopeful ahead of Meadows coronavirus call

‘We're not budging’: Pelosi not hopeful ahead of Meadows
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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi offered a grim prediction Thursday for Republican efforts to restart stalled coronavirus negotiations, saying the talks are fruitless unless GOP negotiators agree to a massive $1 trillion concession.

Pelosi is scheduled to talk by phone to White House chief of staff Mark Meadows on Thursday afternoon, the first significant communication between the two since the coronavirus relief talks collapsed in early August.

“That could be a very short conversation if they’re not willing to meet in the middle,” Pelosi told reporters during her weekly press conference. “We’re not budging. Understand this … they have to move.”

Pelosi wasn’t optimistic that the call with Meadows would amount to much, even dismissively describing him as “what’s his name?” to reporters and declaring that he was only “staffing” the lead GOP negotiator, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin.

“They aren’t trying anything. We have said to them, ‘We’re willing to meet you in the middle,’” Pelosi said.

“If they are willing to meet us in the middle, then we can sit down and talk. So this is, ‘You called me? I’m returning your call. Are you ready to bring much more money to the table?’”

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Talks between the two sides have been essentially nonexistent since negotiations fell apart earlier this month, with a trillion-dollar gulf separating the two parties and messy rounds of finger pointing about who is to blame. Democrats have offered to negotiate a massive relief package around $2 trillion, far less than the $3.4 trillion bill the House passed in May. But Republicans have balked at that price tag, refusing to move beyond a $1 trillion target.

The resulting impasse has lingered for weeks, even as tens of millions of Americans face economic disaster, after Congress allowed increased federal unemployment benefits and an eviction moratorium to lapse at the end of July.

Senate Republicans have been preparing a pared-down coronavirus relief bill over the August recess, which could be attached to any short-term funding bill to keep the government open beyond Sept. 30.

But Democrats have rejected the GOP “skinny” bill, saying it falls far short of what’s needed to help Americans recover both personally and economically from the ongoing devastating toll of the pandemic.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell reiterated Thursday at an event in Kentucky that talks are “at a stalemate” and said he couldn’t predict whether there would be a breakthrough.

“I can’t tell you today we’re going to reach an agreement on another rescue package, but here’s what I do think, I think we need another one,” McConnell said. “I’m hoping that we can come together once again because the coronavirus is not involved in the American election. It does not care who wins.”

Although Meadows has made an overture to Pelosi to restart talks, he wasn’t optimistic that a deal would actually be reached before the government funding deadline next month.

“It’s really been Speaker Pelosi really driving this train as a conductor more so than really anybody,” Meadows said in a POLITICO Playbook interview on Wednesday. “And I think privately she says she wants a deal and publicly she says she wants a deal, but when it comes to dealing with Republicans and the administration, we haven’t seen a lot of action.”

The resulting coronavirus relief standoff could result in high-stakes negotiations starting in mid-September, when both chambers are scheduled to return from August recess. If that’s the case, leaders in both parties would be trying to wrangle a potentially multitrillion-dollar relief package along with a massive short-term deal to keep the government open, all just weeks before the presidential election.

Some senior Democrats pitched Pelosi on passing some piecemeal economic relief legislation last weekend when the House returned for an emergency session to consider a $25 billion rescue bill for the U.S. Postal Service. Pelosi and her leadership team ultimately decided against the idea.

Marianne LeVine contributed to this story.

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