2K relief payment vote blocked again
There was more drama Thursday over an attempt to have the Senate vote on House-passed legislation that would send qualifying Americans $2,000 stimulus payments.
Once again, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell quashed an attempt -- this one by Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. and Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. -- to call up and vote on the House-passed legislation.
McConnell claimed House Speaker Nany Pelosi and Sanders (the lead sponsor of the House-passed bill in the Senate) were supporting "socialism for the rich" after experts calculated that higher-income earners (up to $350,000 a year) would stand to get some federal relief under the House-passed plan. But the Republican leader made no mention of Trump or Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., also calling for those higher payments.
Schumer fired back, saying he never heard Republicans complain about "socialism for the rich" when they were giving big corporate tax breaks.
Sanders, in his retort, was ready with stats from McConnell's home state, noting that "more than 22% of children" live in poverty and thousands of workers earn sparse wages, saying that "someone should ask them" what they would do with $2,000 payments.
"All I am asking Senator McConnell is give us a vote!" Sanders said. "Give us a vote! What is the problem? What is the problem with having the American people see how their senators vote.”
-ABC News’ Trish Turner