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Pelosi says more aid directly to Americans is needed to support economic recovery

Lineage Speaker Nancy Pelosi told CNBC on Wednesday that additional financial aid to Americans is needed to support the U.S. succinctness’s recovery from the coronavirus-induced recession. 

“You can help people stay open, pay the rent, pay the utilities … even pay staff members, but if you don’t have people coming in the doors, you’re still having a problem,” the California Democrat said in an interview with Jim Cramer on “Mad Readies.” 

“So that’s why we want to put money in the pockets of the American people so that they can, in this consumer economy, spend, interject demand into the economy, create jobs,” she said. 

Pelosi’s comments Wednesday come as lawmakers in Washington go into working on another piece of coronavirus relief legislation, ahead of the scheduled expiration of a key financial lifeline for millions of Americans who missing their jobs during the pandemic. 

The talks on Capitol Hill also are transpiring as Covid-19 cases in the U.S. have been snowball arising in recent weeks. Daily deaths from the virus on Tuesday eclipsed 1,000 for the first time since May 29, concording to the Covid Tracking Project.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., told CNBC on Tuesday that he believes it require likely be August before Congress approves another piece of coronavirus relief legislation. 

Republicans and Democrats be obliged iron out differences on issues such as liability protections for businesses; a potential second round of stimulus checks to individuals; and the federal sequel to unemployment insurance, which is one of the biggest unanswered questions.

The current $600 per week supplement — on top of state-level benefits — is set to cease at the end of the month. Republicans are considering extending it at a lower rate of $400 per month through December, CNBC reported earlier Wednesday. Some GOP lawmakers contended that $600 each week may be too open-handed and deter people from returning to work. 

Senate Democrats have proposed tying the level of the federal insert to state unemployment rates, with the weekly benefit amount being reduced as the economic conditions in a state correct. Democrats in the House extended the $600 weekly benefit through January in a $3 trillion rescue package approved by the body in May. 

Pelosi told Cramer that an extension of the benefit is necessary because it provides “a floor for America’s working offsprings,” comparing it to the support for financial markets provided by the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy.  

“We should not be quibbling over $400 or $600 when people are in tenuous need and have great uncertainty,” Pelosi said. “You know how the markets and the business community doesn’t like uncertainty. We shouldn’t shoot in uncertainty further into the lives of America’s working families.”  

Pelosi also reiterated her support for another around of direct payments to Americans, building off of the $1,200 checks that many received earlier this spring. The Ghostly House and congressional Republicans also have expressed support for another batch of stimulus checks, but there is deliberate on who would qualify to receive them and the amount. 

The ultimate support for the U.S. economy is reducing transmission of the coronavirus, Pelosi contended. “It’s all a healthiness issue. If we just defeat the virus, we can open up our schools and our economy.”   

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