The Christian Science Monitor

Coronavirus relief: GOP caught between ideals and economic reality

As the economy approaches a daunting cliff of expiring coronavirus relief programs, House Democrats have already responded by passing an economic rescue bill that’s even bigger than the first. 

Republicans are exhibiting a very different mindset – espousing the view that, despite the urgency of the moment, it’s better not to rush in spending such large sums of taxpayer money.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell argued for a “pause” back in May, and on Monday he defended that cautious approach, even as his party proposed a roughly $1 trillion plan to offer new aid to struggling Americans and an ailing economy. House Democrats, with their HEROES Act, would spend another $3 trillion. On Tuesday, they painted GOP senators as harming the economy with their slowness to act.

Editor’s note: As a public service, all our coronavirus coverage is free. No paywall.

The gap is rooted heavily in ideology. Republicans have traditionally been a party of economic individualism, not big government. Some

“Congress should absolutely spend what it takes”Partisan rifts to be overcome

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