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Republicans signal they may oppose new covid aid unless White House accounts for existing spending
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In their note, the 36 Republicans stressed they have supported “unprecedented investments in vaccines, therapeutics and testing” in the past, including multiple bipartisan stimulus packages adopted under President Donald Trump. But they fretted it is still “not yet clear why additional funding is needed,” particularly now, given a lack of transparency in the roughly $6 trillion approved to date.
The GOP lawmakers cited a recent investigation from The Washington Post, which documented the U.S. government’s persistent struggles in overseeing its own pandemic stimulus programs. The money remains difficult to track, while federal watchdogs have been outmatched in keeping a close eye on the aid, together resulting at times in rampant fraud. The troubles prompted President Biden to announce a new campaign to combat such criminal activity during the State of the Union address on Tuesday.
In response, Romney and his allies a day later asked the Biden administration for a more thorough accounting as to how the White House might spend $30 billion in new aid. And they further pressed the administration to deliver more detail on how much actually remains in existing programs, including those enacted last year under Biden’s roughly $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan.
“Before we would consider supporting an additional $30 billion” in covid-19 relief, the group of GOP lawmakers wrote, “Congress must receive a full accounting of how the government has already spent the first $6 trillion.” ...
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