Topline
President Donald Trump on Tuesday threatened a veto unless Congress makes major modifications to the omnibus costs bundle and Covid-19 relief bill that passed both houses of Congress with bipartisan, veto-proof bulks Monday night which members of his own administration assisted to work out

United States President Donald Trump looks on during a ceremony presenting the Presidential Medal of Liberty to … [+] wrestler Dan Gable in the Oval Office of the White Home in Washington, DC on December 7, 2020.
Key Facts
In a Tuesday night video posted on Twitter, Trump asked Congress to increase the direct stimulus payments in the costs to $2,000 per individual, more than three times the $600 checks lawmakers settled on, an amount he called “unbelievably low.”
The president also informed Congress to eliminate what he described as “inefficient and unneeded” arrangements, but much of the examples he provided– consisting of foreign help programs– belonged to the larger omnibus costs costs, not the Covid-19 relief area.
Trump said he could leave the work of passing a Covid-19 relief bill to the next administration if he doesn’t get the changes he requested.
Essential Quote
” I’m asking Congress to … send me a suitable costs, otherwise the next administration will have to deliver a Covid relief plan, and perhaps that administration will be me,” Trump said Tuesday.
What To Look For
If Trump vetoes the bill, the federal government will remain funded till Monday, when a substitute procedure to prevent a government shutdown ends. Your Home and Senate might vote to override Trump’s veto before then, but it’s likely to delay Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin’s pledge that stimulus checks could begin reaching American homes next week.
Tangent
Quickly after Trump’s video was published, Speaker of your home Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) tweeted that Home Democrats are open to $2,000 stimulus checks.
Key Background
On Monday night, Congress passed a $900 billion Covid-19 relief plan and a 2021 fiscal year costs plan in one enormous expense, the outcome of weeks of settlements in between congressional Democrats and Republicans. Mnuchin applauded the bill after it was passed, and both parties’ congressional leaders advocated for it.
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