Moving quickly Friday, the House passed the Senate's budget resolution to provide $1.9 trillion in COVID-19 relief, voting 219-209. In order to avoid having another entire day or more tied up in debate and procedural votes, the House used a self-executing rule, commonly called "deemed and passed," to clear the way for work to begin in earnest. The special rule allows the House to simultaneously deem the resolution from the Senate considered and pass it, hence its nickname.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told Democratic colleagues in a letter Friday that next week, "we will be writing the legislation to create a path to final passage for the Biden American Rescue Plan, so that we can finish our work before the end of February." The House committees and Senate committees involved have already been working on their respective parts of the final reconciliation package, which can pass in the Senate with a simple majority vote. The deadline Pelosi presents is very real. Republicans created a cliff in the last relief bill passed, ending some programs—including the unemployment benefit extension—on March 14. This bill has to pass well before that deadline for state unemployment systems to avoid a hiccup in providing benefits.
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