Trump’s executive orders didn’t include a second round of stimulus checks—here’s why – CNBC

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President Trump signed four executive orders on Saturday, granting Americans financial relief in a number of areas. However, the actions did not provide any funding for a second round of stimulus checks. To get those, Americans may have to wait for Congress to pass its much-debated relief package. 

Saturday’s executive orders defer student loan payments and payroll taxes for many through the end of the year, provide some eviction protections and grant enhanced federal unemployment benefits. Some experts have already noted that these relief measures may be difficult to implement and could face legal challenges

But the orders did not include funding for another round of stimulus checks because generally, funds for federal programs need to be authorized through legislation passed by Congress. “The constitution mandates that only Congress has the power of the purse — the president cannot unilaterally tax and spend,” says Kris Cox, senior tax policy analyst for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The authority to spend comes only from legislation passed by Congress, she says. 

The stimulus checks were authorized as a one-time payment through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act, commonly referred to as the CARES Act, passed by Congress in March. President Trump has no legal authority to extend those payments, Cox tells CNBC Make It. 

It will take a new law to implement a second round of stimulus payments, says Richard Kogan, a CBPP senior fellow. When it comes to relief measures affected by Saturday’s executive orders, those programs may have some flexibility in the existing law that the president can utilize to extend them. “That’s different than what we’re talking about in the case of the stimulus payments where they aren’t existing and ongoing — they’ve expired. Period,” he says. “The legal situation there is black and white.”

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/08/10/why-trumps-latest-executive-orders-did-not-approve-more-stimulus-checks.html

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