KEY POINTS
  • Larger direct payments of $2,000 looked all but doomed as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he would not separate the checks from unrelated demands from President Donald Trump.
  • McConnell introduced legislation to tie the checks to measures backed by Trump related to internet platforms and elections, which the Republican knows would not get Democratic support.
  • Meanwhile, the Treasury Department started to send out the $600 payments included in the year-end $900 billion coronavirus relief plan.

Efforts to boost the direct payments in the year-end coronavirus relief bill to $2,000 appeared all but doomed Wednesday as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he would not separate the plan from President Donald Trump's unrelated demands on technology and election policy.

"The Senate is not going to split apart the three issues that President Trump linked together just because Democrats are afraid to address two of them," he said on the Senate floor.