On The Money: Social Security gives IRS data for COVID-19 relief checks | Senate passes bill heading off Medicare cuts
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THE BIG DEAL — Social Security gives IRS data to speed delivery of COVID-19 relief checks: For millions of vulnerable Americans, help is finally on the way.
The Social Security Administration (SSA) on Thursday sent the IRS data necessary to deliver coronavirus stimulus checks to people receiving government assistance after lawmakers expressed alarm that the payments were delayed.
- President Biden on March 11 signed into law Democrats’ $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package, which provides relief checks of up to $1,400 per person, similar to previous rounds of direct payments.
- But nearly 30 million people receiving Social Security and Supplemental Security Income benefits had yet to automatically receive their checks.
The delay was a result of the SSA being unable to immediately transfer data to the IRS upon the law’s enactment on those beneficiaries who don’t have to file tax returns because their incomes fall below the minimum threshold. The Hill’s Cristina Marcos explains here.
So what went wrong? A spokesperson for the SSA told The Hill on Wednesday evening that the agency didn’t have the authorization to send the beneficiary files to the IRS before the pandemic relief law was enacted, even though they already talked about it with the IRS.
Senior Democrats on the House Ways and Means Committee had demanded Wednesday that the SSA deliver the beneficiary information to the IRS within 24 hours, and the agency sent it over this morning.
“We are gratified that the SSA leadership finally recognized the urgency of the moment and acted swiftly on our ultimatum,” House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal (D-Mass.) and Democratic Reps. Bill Pascrell (N.J.), Danny K. Davis (Ill.) and John Larson (Conn.) said in a joint statement.
“The delays imposed by [SSA] Commissioner [Andrew] Saul defied congressional intent and imposed needless anxiety and pain on taxpayers. Now the IRS needs to do its job and get these overdue payments out to suffering Americans. Further delays will not be tolerated by this committee,” the lawmakers added.
LEADING THE DAY
Senate passes bill heading off Medicare cuts: The Senate on Thursday passed a bill postponing automatic spending cuts to Medicare providers, pushing back an April deadline to December, while also punting on a decision about additional cutbacks at year’s end.
The legislation passed in a 90-2 vote, with only Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) voting against the measure.
The background: The bill was largely prompted by the 2011 Budget Control Act, which instituted annual 2 percent reductions in Medicare payments as part of an effort to rein in spending and push both parties to compromise. Congress has voted to avert planned cuts to the popular program every year, in addition to raising spending caps.
The Hill’s Niv Elis explains here.
Adeyemo confirmed as deputy Treasury secretary: The Senate on Thursday confirmed Wally Adeyemo as the deputy secretary of the Treasury, making him the department’s first Black No. 2 official.
Adeyemo was confirmed Thursday via voice vote, a process through which the Senate can approve non-controversial legislation and nominations without formally recording the decisions of each senator. The Senate Finance Committee unanimously approved his nomination on March 3 after Adeyemo won broad bipartisan praise during his confirmation hearing.
About Adeyemo:
- Adeyemo served in a variety of high-ranking roles during the Obama administration, including deputy director of the White House National Economic Council and deputy national security advisor.
- He was also the first chief of staff of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, an agency created by the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law.
- Adeyemo is expected to focus primarily on international and national security-related issues under Treasury’s jurisdiction, including financial sanctions, amid growing tensions between the U.S. and global adversaries.
GOOD TO KNOW
- Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said in a Thursday interview that he is “not at all satisfied” with the diversity of the central bank’s staff, acknowledging that efforts to hire and develop more economists of color have fallen short.
- The top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee is pressing the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for more information about the agency’s climate change agenda.
- The Senate on Thursday passed legislation extending a popular small-business program created by Congress last year during the coronavirus downturn.
- Initial unemployment claims for the week ending March 20 fell below 700,000, the first time below that number in a year, coming in at a seasonally adjusted 684,000.
- Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said that only 0.1 percent of coronavirus relief set aside by the Trump administration for American farmers went to Black farmers, according to a Washington Post interview published on Thursday.
ODDS AND ENDS
- Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (W.Va.), a key Republican on infrastructure issues, is expressing willingness to work with Democrats on electric vehicle infrastructure, but also disagreed with the size and scope of the current infrastructure package expected to be proposed by the White House.
- The founder and executive director of conservative think tank American Compass on Thursday announced his support for taxing stock trades, a position traditionally associated with progressives.
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