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Biden tells Trump to sign the COVID bill NOW with $600 checks for Americans so 'millions can make ends meet' and avoid 'devastating consequences' after President demanded $2,000 direct payments

President-elect Joe Biden is urging President Trump to sign the new coronavirus economic relief bill into law now or risk 'devastating consequences,' following Trump's Saturday morning Twitter rant.  

'It is the day after Christmas, and millions of families don’t know if they’ll be able to make ends meet because of President Donald Trump’s refusal to sign an economic relief bill approved by Congress with an overwhelming and bipartisan majority,' Biden said in a statement Saturday. 

Biden added that 'This abdication of responsibility has devastating consequences.'

President-elect Joe Biden (pictured) released a statement Saturday demanding President Trump sign the new coronavirus relief bill or risk 'devastating consequences'Trump

President-elect Joe Biden released a statement Saturday demanding President Trump sign the new coronavirus relief bill or risk 'devastating consequences' 

Biden is pictured here, on his way to church in Wilmington, Delaware, on Saturday

Biden is pictured here, on his way to church in Wilmington, Delaware, on Saturday

He then went on to enumerate what happens if Trump doesn't sign the bill. 

Biden said that about 10 million Americans will lose unemployment insurance benefits starting Saturday, while government funding will expire in a few days, which puts 'vital services and paychecks for military personnel at risk.'

He also said that the moratorium on pandemic evictions will expire in less than a week and that small businesses will also be forced to close because they 'won’t survive this dark winter because they lack access to the lifeline they need.'

The bill, Biden noted, also provides funding for the distribution and administering of coronavirus vaccines to frontline health care workers and millions of other Americans. 

'This bill is critical. It needs to be signed into law now,' Biden said in the statement, noting that the bill is 'a first step and down payment on more action that we’ll need to take early in the new year to revive the economy and contain the pandemic.'

Biden ended his statement by applauding Congress' bipartisan cooperation on the bill and saying that 'President Trump should join them, and make sure millions of Americans can put food on the table and keep a roof over their heads in this holiday season.'    

Biden's statement was issued just hours after President Donald Trump's Saturday morning Twitter spree, during which he angrily tweeting about his claims of voter election fraud, called Biden a 'Fake President' and slammed the Supreme Court, Bill Barr and the GOP, while also calling for an increase in direct payments from the COVID-19 stimulus bill. 

The lame duck president started his morning slamming the $740billion defense bill that he vetoed Wednesday, calling it a 'gift to China, Russia & Big Tech' that fails to 'terminate' Section 230, which gives social media companies legal immunity over the content put on their platforms.  

Trump said in the early Saturday tweet: 'Our $740 defense bill is a gift to China, Russia & Big Tech. It fails to terminate the internationally dangerous Section 230, won’t allow us to bring our troops back home (where they belong), renames & destroys our forts & National Monuments, & makes 5G almost impossible!

'I will not stand by and watch this travesty of a bill happen without reigning in Big Tech,' he continued into the next tweet. 'End Section 230 now, before it is too late. So bad for our Country. Show courage, and do what’s right!!!'

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The lame duck president started his morning slamming the $740billion defense bill that he vetoed Wednesday, calling it a 'gift to China, Russia & Big Tech' that fails to 'terminate' Section 230

The lame duck president started his morning slamming the $740billion defense bill that he vetoed Wednesday, calling it a 'gift to China, Russia & Big Tech' that fails to 'terminate' Section 230

'I will not stand by and watch this travesty of a bill happen without reigning in Big Tech,' he continued into the next tweet. 'End Section 230 now, before it is too late. So bad for our Country. Show courage, and do what’s right!!!'

'I will not stand by and watch this travesty of a bill happen without reigning in Big Tech,' he continued into the next tweet. 'End Section 230 now, before it is too late. So bad for our Country. Show courage, and do what’s right!!!'

Turning his attention toward the election, Trump then shaded Senator Mitch McConnell and Senate Republicans for doing 'nothing' to stop the 'rigged and stolen' election.

'If a Democrat Presidential Candidate had an Election Rigged & Stolen, with proof of such acts at a level never seen before, the Democrat Senators would consider it an act of war, and fight to the death. Mitch & the Republicans do NOTHING, just want to let it pass. NO FIGHT!'

Trump then slammed Bill Barr, the Justice Department and the FBI for also doing 'nothing about the 2020 Presidential Election Voter Fraud.' 

'The “Justice” Department and the FBI have done nothing about the 2020 Presidential Election Voter Fraud, the biggest SCAM in our nation’s history, despite overwhelming evidence,' he claimed. 'They should be ashamed. History will remember. Never give up. See everyone in D.C. on January 6th.'

Turning his attention towards the election, Trump then shaded Senator Mitch McConnell and Senate Republicans for doing 'nothing' to stop 'rigged and stolen' election

Turning his attention towards the election, Trump then shaded Senator Mitch McConnell and Senate Republicans for doing 'nothing' to stop 'rigged and stolen' election

Trump then slammed Bill Barr, the Justice Department and the FBI for also doing 'nothing about the 2020 Presidential Election Voter Fraud'

Trump then slammed Bill Barr, the Justice Department and the FBI for also doing 'nothing about the 2020 Presidential Election Voter Fraud'

On three separate occasions, Trump made the same tweet about wanting to get Americans $2000 in COVID-19 relief after days of slamming the $600 agreed upon by Congress.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi has called Trump's bluff and moved to pass a measure for the $2,000 checks in the House on Thursday morning. But House Republicans snuffed out the move – failing to accept the offer in a rare Christmas Eve session and forcing the proposal to get shelved on a parliamentary procedure.  

'I simply want to get out great people $2000, rather than the measly $600 that is now in the bill,' Trump stated. 'Also, stop the billions of dollars in “pork”.'

Trump would turn his focus back to his disputed claims of election fraud, calling for the Durham Report before slamming the U.S. Supreme Court. 

On three separate occasions, Trump made the same tweet about wanting to get Americans $2000 in COVID-19 relief after days of slamming the $600 agreed upon by Congress. Pictured with First Lady Melania on Wednesday

On three separate occasions, Trump made the same tweet about wanting to get Americans $2000 in COVID-19 relief after days of slamming the $600 agreed upon by Congress. Pictured with First Lady Melania on Wednesday

'I simply want to get out great people $2000, rather than the measly $600 that is now in the bill,' Trump stated. 'Also, stop the billions of dollars in “pork”'

 'I simply want to get out great people $2000, rather than the measly $600 that is now in the bill,' Trump stated. 'Also, stop the billions of dollars in “pork”'

'Where the hell is the Durham Report? They spied on my campaign, colluded with Russia (and others), and got caught,' he said. 'Read the Horowitz Reports about Comey & McCabe. Even the Fake News @nytimes said “bad”. They tried it all, and failed, so now they are trying to steal the election!'

He added: 'The U.S. Supreme Court has been totally incompetent and weak on the massive Election Fraud that took place in the 2020 Presidential Election. We have absolute PROOF, but they don’t want to see it - No “standing”, they say. If we have corrupt elections, we have no country!'

President Trump finished his tirade calling the 2020 Election an election of a 'third world country,' referring to President-elect Joe Biden as a 'Fake President.'  

On Christmas day, Trump doubled down on his demand to Congress to increase payments from $600 to $2,000 in the spending and COVID-19 stimulus bill that lawmakers already sent to the president's desk. 

Trump would turn his focus back to his disputed claims of election fraud, calling for the Durham Report before slamming the U.S. Supreme Court

Trump would turn his focus back to his disputed claims of election fraud, calling for the Durham Report before slamming the U.S. Supreme Court

Trump added: 'The U.S. Supreme Court has been totally incompetent and weak on the massive Election Fraud that took place in the 2020 Presidential Election. We have absolute PROOF, but they don’t want to see it - No “standing”, they say. If we have corrupt elections, we have no country!'

Trump added: 'The U.S. Supreme Court has been totally incompetent and weak on the massive Election Fraud that took place in the 2020 Presidential Election. We have absolute PROOF, but they don’t want to see it - No “standing”, they say. If we have corrupt elections, we have no country!'

President Trump finished his tirade calling the 2020 Election an election of a 'third world country,' referring to President-elect Joe Biden as a 'Fake President'

President Trump finished his tirade calling the 2020 Election an election of a 'third world country,' referring to President-elect Joe Biden as a 'Fake President'

'Made many calls and had meetings at Trump International in Palm Beach, Florida,' the president tweeted after being spotted with Sen. Lindsey Graham heading to his golf club on Christmas morning. 'Why would politicians not want to give people $2000, rather than only $600? It wasn’t their fault, it was China. Give our people the money!' 

Earlier, Politico's Playbook reported that the president was complaining that the giant package had too much 'pork.'   

The bill was flown from Washington, D.C. to Mar-a-Lago and had arrived, a person familiar with the situation told DailyMail.com.   

Politico also reported lawmakers had no idea whether the president will sign the bill, veto it or do nothing - which would prompt a government shutdown at midnight Monday. 

Republican sources told Axios that they expected Trump to sign the bill in the 'nick of time,' as reporter Mike Allen put it. 

Additionally, 14 million Americans are slated to lose unemployment aid on Saturday. 

'The best way out of this is for the president to sign the bill. I still hope that that’s what he decides to do,' Sen. Roy Blunt, a Missouri Republican, told the Politico newsletter Thursday.

The president hasn't talked to reporters since arriving in Florida. 

President Donald Trump (left) and Sen. Lindsey Graham (right) headed to the president's West Palm Beach golf club on Christmas morning as the fate of the massive stimulus and spending bill remains in limbo

President Donald Trump and Sen. Lindsey Graham headed to the president's West Palm Beach golf club on Christmas morning as the fate of the massive stimulus and spending bill remains in limbo 

Trump doubled down on his demand of Congress to increase the stimulus checks to Americans from $600, which is in the legislation, to $2,000

Trump doubled down on his demand of Congress to increase the stimulus checks to Americans from $600, which is in the legislation, to $2,000 

Trump is captured waving to supporters on his return trip to Mar-a-Lago on Christmas Day

Trump is captured waving to supporters on his return trip to Mar-a-Lago on Christmas Day 

Trump's motorcade is photographed as it leaves Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida for his nearby West Palm Beach golf club. The president also spent part of Christmas Eve on the course

Trump's motorcade is photographed as it leaves Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida for his nearby West Palm Beach golf club. The president also spent part of Christmas Eve on the course 

The president's motorcade drove Trump and Graham to the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida Friday morning

The president's motorcade drove Trump and Graham to the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida Friday morning 

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi immediately said she would accept Trump's call for larger $2,000 checks – and put the idea to the test on the House floor Thursday, but Republicans objected

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi immediately said she would accept Trump's call for larger $2,000 checks – and put the idea to the test on the House floor Thursday, but Republicans objected

WHAT WILL HE DO? President Donald Trump shared this image on his Instagram account on Christmas day. Lawmakers told Politico's Playbook that they had no idea what Trump plans to do about the giant spending and stimulus package, which was flown to Florida

WHAT WILL HE DO? President Donald Trump shared this image on his Instagram account on Christmas day. Lawmakers told Politico's Playbook that they had no idea what Trump plans to do about the giant spending and stimulus package, which was flown to Florida 

The Republican National Committee also sent out a signed Christmas card from the president and first lady

The Republican National Committee also sent out a signed Christmas card from the president and first lady 

He went golfing on Christmas Eve and now Christmas Day and shared Christmas messages on his social media accounts. The Republican National Committee also sent out a signed Christmas card from the Trumps. 

The White House released a Christmas presidential message Friday morning. 

And the first lady sent out a tweet from her official government account.

'I send our best wishes to all who celebrate this wonderful time of the year. Let’s remember our brave service members, elderly & others who may not be able to be with their loved ones today. #MerryChristmas!' Melania Trump said. 

White House spokesmen Judd Deere said the president had been briefed on the Friday morning explosion in Nashville, Tennessee. 

'President Trump has been briefed on the explosion in Nashville, Tennessee, and will continue to receive regular updates,' Deere said. 'The President is grateful for the incredible first responders and praying for those who were injured.' 

Trump shocked Washington when, on Tuesday, he announced that he had problems with the giant package, which contains both government funding and COVID-19 relief. 

Until then, the president had sat out of negotiations for months.  

He asked Congress to send him a bill that gave Americans $2,000 checks - not the $600 that was negotiated - and he railed against items like foreign aid. 

On Thursday, during a Christmas Eve session, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi tried to appease Trump with a stand-alone measure that would bump the checks up to $2,000, but members of his own party wouldn't sign on.   

PRESIDENTIAL MESSAGE ON CHRISTMAS 2020 

The First Lady and I send our warmest wishes to all Americans as we celebrate Christmas. While our gatherings might look different than in years past, this Christmas, like every Christmas, is an opportunity for us to celebrate the birth of our Savior, Jesus Christ, and show our heartfelt gratitude for the abundant blessings God has bestowed upon our lives and country.

In this season of peace, we cherish the warmth, generosity, and faith that breathe life into our holiday gatherings. The love we share with our family and friends fills our hearts with joy, just as the story of Christ’s birth inspires people all over the world. This year, we come together as proud Americans—grateful for our sacred right to worship freely and to openly profess our trust in the enduring light and promise of the coming of God.

To military families who are unable to celebrate Christmas together this year, our Nation humbly thanks you for your service and sacrifice. We are forever indebted to those who courageously serve our country in uniform - and those who walk alongside them. We also thank our Nation's first responders, law enforcement officers, and frontline medical professionals who work tirelessly to serve and protect our communities. Your daily contributions are an example of the selfless love of God and remind us of the noble principles we strive to live by, especially during this special time of year.

To all Americans, and to all our friends around the globe celebrating today, we wish you a very merry Christmas and a peaceful and prosperous New Year.

After the measure was killed, the House formally enrolled the mammoth 5,593-page bill to provide relief and keep the government from shutting down.  

'The bipartisan COVID relief & omnibus bill has been enrolled. The House & Senate are now sending this important legislation #ForThePeople to the White House for the President’s signature. We urge him to sign this bill into law to give immediate relief to hard-working families!' wrote Pelosi.  

With the legislation in Trump's hands, the president can either sign it, veto it, or wait - but the government runs out of funding Monday night. 

The bid in the House to rush relief to millions of Americans amid the pandemic all came down in a few minutes of floor action Thursday morning, after House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland tried to offer Pelosi's proposal on the floor.

It could have sailed to immediate approval in the House had Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California agreed to it.

But Rep. Debbie Dingell, a Michigan Democrat, who was sitting in the chair for the brief pro forma session of the House, instructed him that it wouldn't past muster, since she 'is constrained not to entertain the request' by House rules – with most members already at home in their districts for the holidays, some having already received new coronavirus vaccine shots in their arms.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy railed against 'billions in foreign aid' in a spending bill he helped negotiate, parroting what Trump had said in the president's Tuesday night video

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy railed against 'billions in foreign aid' in a spending bill he helped negotiate, parroting what Trump had said in the president's Tuesday night video 

The only way to get around it would be for House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy to agree. 

McCarthy had already telegraphed that he wouldn't allow that to happen – after Trump through a wrench into the heavily negotiated bill by demanding larger checks and blasting spending on foreign aid his administration had previously proposed.

To drive home the point of who was stopping the proposed change to the deal and holding up the checks, Hoyer made a 'parliamentary inquiry' – which prompted Dingell to say that only when 'the minority leader' has no objection could he make such a move.

Republicans tried instead to make their own move and alter a $1.4 billion spending bill to comport with Trump's post hoc demands for changes – but that, too wasn't allowed.

'Merry Christmas!' Dingell intoned as she gaveled down the session – a rare Christmas eve meeting that hasn't occurred in years.  

McCarthy wasn't there for the brief action. 

He posted a picture on Instagram of himself seemingly at home in front of a Christmas tree with his two dogs, with his arm in a bandage. 

'Verified I had surgery on my elbow yesterday. Luckily, Teddy and Cash are here to help,' he wrote on Instagram.

Virginia Republican Rep. Rob Wittman appeared in his stead. 

Democrats will try again on Monday when the House meets, this time introducing a bill that includes the boosted $2,000 checks – the same day government funding is set to run out.

McCarthy fell in line behind President Trump and savaged a COVID relief bill he helped negotiate after the president stunned lawmakers by lambasting it in a video the president posted on social media. 

Congressional leaders combined the $900 billion relief bill with a spending bill to keep the government running, only to see Trump trash it as wasteful spending after it cleared both chambers by wide margins. 

'Americans have needed relief from the coronavirus and lockdowns for months. House Republicans have attempted to pass relief over forty times but each time, Speaker Pelosi has ignored our fellow citizens, saying 'nothing is better than something,' he wrote lawmakers in a 'Dear Colleague letter.

'Worse than that, by waiting days before Christmas, Speaker Pelosi tried to use the American people as leverage to make coronavirus relief contingent on government funding – which includes billions of foreign aid at a time when there are urgent needs at home. Our government's top priority must be our families, communities, and small businesses as we get through this pandemic and restore our country,' he wrote.

The public wants the bill passed, with 86 per cent of voters for it, according to a CBS/YouGov poll. 

Trump in his own remarks ripped several foreign aid programs providing funds to Central America, Pakistan and other nations. It was immediately revealed that his own budget had proposed funding amounts that were in fact higher than the totals included in the continuing resolution spending bill he had blasted. 

Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday aim to win quick passage of legislation providing $2,000 in direct payments to Americans as part of a coronavirus economic relief initiative after President Donald Trump unexpectedly insisted on the provision.

McCarthy is expected to object and offer his own proposal, which will offset spending on state and foreign operations – but also likely doom the proposal from advancing.

The stakes in this long-shot bid are enormous, as millions of Americans desperately await some sort of new assistance from Washington in a COVID-19 pandemic that is spiraling out of control in the United States and other nations.

Late on Monday, Congress overwhelmingly approved an $892 billion emergency coronavirus aid bill that contains a one-time, $600 payment to individuals to help them cope with a U.S. economy hobbled by the pandemic.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who negotiated on behalf of the White House, had said the $600 checks could make it to Americans by next week.  

The aid was attached to $1.4 trillion in funding to keep the federal government operating through this fiscal year, which ends on Sept. 30, 2021.

It is unclear how Trump plans to respond. He vetoed a massive defense bill this week despite potential political blowback for denying a pay raise to troops as well as billions for weapons programs.

'McCarthy said he talked to Trump and it's not a sure thing what he'll do,' a source who was on a Wednesday conference call among House Republicans told The Hill.  

But defying expectations, Trump on Tuesday hinted he might veto the gigantic legislation if the direct payments were not increased to $2,000 per person and if a slew of unrelated government spending projects, including foreign aid, were not jettisoned.

Trump, who was awaiting receipt of the $2.3 trillion bill from Congress, did not explicitly say he would veto the bill in its current form.

But with his warning, he put the coronavirus aid in limbo as well as the ability of the federal government to operate normally beyond next Monday, when existing money runs out.

In a challenge to congressional Republicans who labored to keep the cost of the coronavirus aid bill below $1 trillion, Democrats joyfully embraced Trump's demand for bigger stimulus checks for Americans.

On Wednesday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi tweeted: 'Mr. President, sign the bill to keep government open! Urge McConnell and McCarthy to agree with the Democratic unanimous consent request for $2,000 direct payments! This can be done by noon on Christmas Eve!'

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, the top two Republicans in Congress, and their aides have been silent on Trump's demand for bigger checks.

But McCarthy, in a letter late on Wednesday to his fellow Republicans, described a counter-move his party planned to make on Thursday that would seek changes to the foreign aid component of the spending bill.

Each side might end up blocking the other's proposal in a stand-off that would leave the bill that passed on Monday unchanged.

Employing a procedural maneuver rarely used for major legislation, Democrats early on Thursday were expected to try to ram the $2,000 payment initiative through the House in lightning speed with a unanimous vote. 

But to prevail, all House members of the 435-seat chamber would have to go along by not objecting to the maneuver.

If the Democrats' gambit fails, it would be up to Trump to either sign the combined $2.3 trillion in coronavirus aid and government funding into law, or veto it.

Congressional backers might have the votes to override a veto. 

If not, Congress and the White House would be in a potentially chaotic showdown just weeks before Trump is replaced by President-elect Joe Biden, a Democrat, on Jan. 20.

In order to avoid a government shutdown, Congress could keep operations running by passing a fourth stopgap funding bill before midnight Monday. 

For that option to work, lawmakers would need Trump's cooperation at a time when he is still consumed by his loss to Biden in the Nov. 3 presidential election.

The stopgap bill would not include coronavirus aid, however.

In another showdown with Trump, Congress wants to override his veto on Wednesday of a bill authorizing U.S. military programs. 

The House aims to vote on Monday and the Senate could follow up as early as Tuesday.

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