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But Trump has not given up pushing Republicans in Congress to add up to $2,000 in a stimulus check to Americans who meet income eligibility rules. He also wants a repeal of Section 230, federal legislation from two decades ago stating simply, “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.”
In practice, that shields owners of internet sites from lawsuits generated by their users. And that’s something Trump has personal reasons for wanting to smash.
Here’s Trump making the announcement this afternoon. Do not push the start arrow unless your supply of barf bags is close at hand:
Signing the relief act a day late will mean loss of one week of unemployment benefits for millions of workers and the loss of benefits for one of the 11 weeks of extended benefits included in the relief act. Americans collecting unemployment checks who have been out of work for several months will thus lose the current week’s average of $320 in benefits plus the extra $300 a week Congress approved because Trump refused to sign by the Saturday midnight deadline. That meant the unemployment programs lapsed, which means the process needs to be restarted, which takes time, two-three weeks at least.
Although the signing means millions of Americans can sweat it a little less for a few months, unemployment insurance is not, as many Republicans would have it, an invitation to sloth. Benefit payments won’t even cover rent of many of the jobless, much less all the other things necessary for a decent life in the modern world. But it’s better than empty pockets.
Although his reasons for pushing $2,000 stimulus checks instead of $600 are self-serving and no doubt tied to some degree to keeping those Georgia Senate seats and thus the Senate itself in Republican hands, it is nevertheless something the Senate should pass. Democrats have already said they are on board with this. Trump could, of course, have pushed for this in June or August or October when Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was playing penny ante with the various versions of the HEROES Act, that Democrats passed.
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