President Joe Biden has backed a plan to cut the income caps for Americans to receive a direct payment as part of the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package set to pass in the coming days, a Democratic source said Wednesday.
The phase-out levels for the $1,400 stimulus checks are:
- $75,000 in income for single filers; the cap for receiving some payment is now $80,000
- $112,500 for heads of households; the cap is now $120,000
- $150,000 for joint filers; now capped at $160,000
The structure would slash the direct payment income caps approved by the House. Under the lower chamber’s bill, individuals making up to $100,000 (and joint filers earning up to $200,000) would have received some amount.
It was not immediately clear how many fewer people would receive a check under the new structure. Asked Wednesday about whether Biden supports the proposal, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said “he is comfortable with where the negotiations stand.”
The changes come as moderate Senate Democrats call to limit the scope of the checks included in the legislation. To pass the relief bill under budget reconciliation, party leaders cannot lose a single vote among the 50 members of the caucus. Democrats are using the process that enables legislation to pass with a simple majority as Republicans question the need for more spending to boost the economy.
Democrats limited eligibility for the checks once before to appease centrist lawmakers.
Disagreements within the party could have threatened Democrats’ plans to get the bill through the Senate by this weekend and to Biden’s desk before unemployment aid programs expire on March 14. The House is expected to approve the Senate’s version of the bill next week.
The Senate plan is set to keep the same unemployment insurance supplement passed by the House. It would add a $400 per week jobless benefit through Aug. 29.
The Senate on Wednesday is expected to take its first procedural vote toward passage of the relief bill. After up to 20 hours of debate on the plan, lawmakers will hold a marathon vote on amendments to it.
Once the chamber votes on all amendments (with no limit on the number proposed), it can move toward approving the legislation.
Along with the checks and unemployment aid, the House-passed bill includes funds to boost Covid-19 vaccinations, an expansion of the child tax credit, new aid to small businesses, money to help schools reopen, and relief for state, local and tribal governments.