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What’s in the new stimulus bill? Who voted for and against it in the Illinois delegation?

The latest stimulus bill passed the House of Representatives in a 219-212, largely party-line vote. Who voted for it? More importantly, what’s actually in it?

The House bill provides $1.9 trillion in aid to help struggling American families, frontline workers, state and local governments, small businesses, and the nation’s schools and public health systems. In addition, the bill aims to help stabilize the economy, beat back the pandemic, and set the stage for a recovery.

So what is in the bill? Here are some of the key provisions.

Relief Checks

The direct payments are worth up to $1,400 per person. Families must earn less than $200,000 and individuals must earn less than $100,000 a year. A phase-out begins for individuals earning $75,000 and couples earning $150,000 per year based on tax returns from 2019 or 2020. In addition to the December round of stimulus checks, the payments to qualified individuals top out at $2,000.

Child Tax Credit Boost

In addition, provides most families with a larger child tax credit. For families with children under six, the tax credit is $3,600 per child. For children older than six and younger than eighteen, the credit is $3,000 per child. That’s up from the current child tax credit of $2,000 per child.

Unemployment Assistance

Unemployment benefits are set to expire in mid-March. The bill from House Democrats extends unemployment benefits through August 29 and provides a weekly bonus of $400. Freelancers can also remain in the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program under the bill.

Food Stamps

Recipients of food stamps see a 15 percent benefit increase under the House bill. The food stamps benefit increase would extend through September 2021 instead of expiring at the end of June.

Minimum Wage

The House bill includes a provision that would gradually raise the federal minimum wage to $15 per hour. The current minimum wage is $7.25 per hour and has remained unchanged for over a decade.

However, the minimum wage increase’s future is unclear in the Senate where there is uniform Republican opposition and reluctance from conservative Democrats. With no Republican support, Senate Democrats would need to vote unanimously as a caucus along with Vice President Kamala Harris.

Who voted for it?

Most House Democrats voted in favor. All House Republicans and two Democrats voted against the latest round of pandemic-related economic stimulus.

In terms of the Illinois delegation, the vote breakdown looked like this:

REPRESENTATIVEPARTYDistrictVOTE
BostRepublicanIllinois 12Did not vote
BustosDemocraticIllinois 17Yes
CastenDemocraticIllinois 6Yes
Davis, Danny K.DemocraticIllinois 7Yes
Davis, RodneyRepublicanIllinois 13No
FosterDemocraticIllinois 11Yes
GarcíaDemocraticIllinois 4Yes
KellyDemocraticIllinois 2Yes
KinzingerRepublicanIllinois 16No
KrishnamoorthiDemocraticIllinois 8Yes
LaHoodRepublicanIllinois 18No
MillerRepublicanIllinois 15No
NewmanDemocraticIllinois 3Yes
QuigleyDemocraticIllinois 5Yes
RushDemocraticIllinois 1Yes
SchakowskyDemocraticIllinois 9Yes
SchneiderDemocraticIllinois 10Yes
UnderwoodDemocraticIllinois 14Yes

What’s next?

The House bill now moves on to the Senate where changes are expected. Democrats must contend with a non-binding ruling from the Senate parliamentarian that the minimum wage increase cannot be included using the budget reconciliation process, which only requires 50 votes plus the vice president.

However, there is precedent for overruling the parliamentarian or even replacing them. In 2001, former Senate majority leader Trent Lott, a Republican, fired the parliamentarian for ruling against the GOP. Democrats could attempt something similar, although there is no indication yet that it is under consideration.

Photo Credit: John Brighenti, Flickr, CC BY 2.0

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