Biden's 1st 100 days live updates: Senate passes COVID relief bill along party lines
The final vote was 50-49.
Today is Day 46 of the administration of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.
Latest headlines:
Biden to have call with Democratic senators on COVID-19 relief push
President Biden will have a conference call with Senate Democrats for a second day in a row Tuesday. He will call into their weekly virtual conference lunch. In his final push for his $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package, the president is upping pressure on lawmakers the get the bill passed. Biden had a meeting with Senate Democrats yesterday including moderate Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., who has become a key vote in the 50-50 split Senate, another key moderate Democrat, Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., was also invited to attend, but was unable to because she was traveling.
In the afternoon, Biden will deliver remarks at 4:15 p.m. on the pandemic. Harris will also attend that event.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki will hold a press briefing at 12:30 p.m.
-ABC News' Sarah Kolinovsky
Collins 'increasingly convinced' Dems, White House disinterested in compromise
As the COVID-19 relief debate moves forward in the Senate, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said Monday night that she is "increasingly convinced" there won't be a compromise on a relief bill.
"I'm becoming increasingly convinced that, regrettably, there is not as much interest as that I would like to see on the Democratic side of the aisle and the White House in trying to come to a compromise," Collins said. "And I don't understand how the White House can describe a bill that passed the House without a single Republican vote as being bipartisan -- what was bipartisan was the opposition to the bill."
Collins was part of a bipartisan group that helped move the last COVID-19 relief bill through the Senate. But now, Collins said it's "up to Chuck Schumer and the White House whether they are interested in trying to gain some Republican support or not."
Collins said Democrats are being similarly uncompromising on the minimum wage, which they would like raised to $15.
"The minimum wage could be brought to the floor as a separate bill and I believe that a $10 minimum wage would pass," Collins said. "That would make life so much better for so many low-income workers and yet the approach that's been taken is all or nothing on 15. I don't understand that."
-ABC News' Allison Pecorin
Romney, sporting black eye, quips he went to CPAC
Sen. Mitt Romney returned to the Capitol Monday with a black eye. When reporters asked what happened, he joked that he went to the Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando, Florida, where former President Donald Trump and other conservative opponents had gathered this weekend.
"Yeah, I had kind of a tough, tough weekend," he said. "You see that? Look at what I got. I went to CPAC, that was a problem."
In reality, he said he took a fall and was knocked unconscious while he was in Boston with his grandchildren. He was taken to the hospital and given "a lot of stitches" through his eyebrow and lip.
-ABC News' Trish Turner
Sanders to propose budget bill amendment on minimum wage increase
Sen. Bernie Sanders told reporters Monday night he is determined to fight for the minimum wage increase and will offer an amendment to the budget reconciliation bill.
"To the best of my knowledge there will be a vote on the minimum wage and we'll see what happens but I intend to offer that bill that will raise the minimum wage to $15 dollars an hour and we'll see how the votes go," Sanders said. "There will be a roll call vote and we'll see who is going to vote for it and who is not going to vote for it."
Sanders will try to force a vote on the minimum wage during the upcoming vote-a-rama on the budget reconciliation bill. His amendment, he said, will most likely add the minimum wage proposal back into the budget bill after the parliamentarian ruled last week that the current minimum wage raise cannot remain in the House-passed bill.
Democrats are under a tight deadline to pass President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan before March 14, when some coronavirus stimulus measures expire, including federally boosted jobless benefits.
-ABC News' Allison Pecorin