Friday, April 17, 2020

Trump’s name on coronavirus stimulus checks could become a 2020 campaign issue
Coronavirus stimulus checks: Trump signature scramble could delay first batch

Ben Werschkul DC Producer, Yahoo Finance•April 15, 2020

On Tuesday night, the Washington Post published a story that had been bubbling for weeks: The Trump administration was ordering that the president’s name appear on the memo line of the paper coronavirus stimulus checks set to be distributed soon.

The question was whether the change – which the IRS was reportedly only alerted to on Tuesday - would delay the checks actually being disbursed. Millions of Americans will receive their “Economic Impact Payments” via direct deposit which do not include the president’s name.

The Washington Post reported that the process could “slow their delivery by a few days.” Chad Hooper, national president of the IRS-founded Professional Managers Association (PMA), told Yahoo Finance that "reprogramming historically has led to delays.”

In 2001, the government sent a retroactive tax rebate as part of President George W. Bush’s tax legislation. Then, the 2008 Economic Stimulus Act, also during the Bush administration, included checks of $600 per individual with $300 per dependent child. The president’s name did not appear on checks in either of these instances.
President Trump during Monday's the daily briefing of the White House Coronavirus Task Force. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

The Treasury Department denied there will be any delays in a statement to Yahoo Finance. “Economic Impact Payment checks are scheduled to go out on time and exactly as planned—there is absolutely no delay whatsoever,” said a spokeswoman, who added that they expect the first round of physical checks to be in the mail by next week.

Hooper added that “our team works around the clock to try to make changes which would mitigate impact.”

The Treasury Department also recently announced that 80 million Americans will see the money this week via direct deposit. The first batch of printed checks is expected to arrive by April 24. Any delays may only impact the first round of checks, which will be distributed in waves.
An immediate Democratic reaction

The story appears set to become an immediate 2020 issue, especially if any delays materialize. In addition to questions about the appropriateness of the president’s name appearing on the check, Democrats are focused on how any disbursement glitches will play with average voters.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) was one of the most prominent Democrats to weigh in saying in a statement that the effort could delay the payments and “is another shameful example of President Trump’s catastrophic failure to treat this crisis with the urgency it demands.”

Rep. Tim Ryan (D-OH), a former presidential candidate himself, was asked about it on Yahoo Finance. “Are you freaking kidding me?” he responded. He added a possible preview of the message to voters: “I just think that the average person where I grew up, where we come from in Ohio, is just appalled by something so obnoxious as trying to get your name on your check for your own political gain.”

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), the Democratic ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, said that “Donald Trump is further delaying cash payments to millions of Americans struggling to pay the rent and put food on the table to feed his ego.”


Thousands of families are running out of money as they lose their jobs. Days and hours matter.
But Trump comes first. America always come second.
So Trump is delaying the stimulus checks so his signature can be printed on each one.
Him first. You second.
Always.
— Chris Murphy (@ChrisMurphyCT) April 15, 2020

range of Democratic lawmakers on Capitol Hill blasted Trump on Twitter.

A spokesperson for the Democratic-controlled House Ways and Means Committee told Yahoo Finance that “the committee was not consulted” about the addition. Members are closely monitoring the checks and will “be watching for any sort of delay the signatures may cause.”
The Republican pushback

On April 3, Trump was asked if he wanted to sign the stimulus checks himself. At the time, he said no. “There’s millions of checks,” he said. It’s “a Trump administration initiative but do I want to sign them? No.”

On Wednesday, the Trump campaign highlighted the Treasury Department’s statement denying any delays.

That’s not what the article says.

“Economic Impact Payment checks are scheduled to go out on time and exactly as planned—there is absolutely no delay whatsoever,” a Treasury Department spokesperson said. https://t.co/LC0JW2cmo1
— Matt Wolking (Text TRUMP to 88022) (@MattWolking) April 15, 2020

The Treasury Department is focused on what it sees as a larger success story on the stimulus checks, specifically how 80 million payments are set to be made in the first 2-and-a-half weeks of the program. “This in and of itself is a major achievement,” the spokeswoman said.

On Wednesday, the Treasury Department also launched a “Get My Payment” website to allow taxpayers set to receive a paper check to instead get the money more quickly via direct deposit (by inputting their tax and bank account information).
A government check from 2001. Traditionally, government disbursement have only featured the signatures of civil servants, not political leaders. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Either way, the Democratic response has often featured phrases you could easily see in a campaign advertisement this fall.

Speaking about Americans in precarious financial situations, Sen. Gary Peters (D-MI) told Yahoo Finance in an interview that “I hope they realize the reason that the check is going to take so long for them to get is because President Trump wanted his name on it.”

Ben Werschkul is a producer for Yahoo Finance in Washington, DC.

Additional reporting by Jessica Smith and Denitsa Tsekova
Millions of stimulus checks delayed because Trump now wants his name printed on each one

THE INDEPENDENT APRIL 15, 2020


Picture: Alex Wong/Getty Images/Twitter


The Internal Revenue Service is due to send stimulus cheques to millions of households across the United States to relieve the financial burden that some are facing during the coronavirus pandemic.

However, those expecting the cheques will have to wait a little bit longer as in an unprecedented move, the US Treasury Department has ordered the IRS to print every cheque with Donald Trump's signature on it.

Trumps Signature Will be on Stimulus Checks
Around 70 million Americans were expecting the cheques worth $1,200 in the next few days but they will now have to wait longer while the president's name is printed onto the paper, something which has never happened before.

The Washington Post reported on Tuesday that 'president Donald J. Trump' will appear on the left-hand side of the payment but Treasury officials have disputed that delivery of the checks would be delayed.




According to the Post Trump had suggested to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin that the president signs the cheques despite this being a civil servant job and not that of the POTUS. (This ensures that any legal disbursements from the treasury are nonpartisan.)

Therefore, Trump's name will appear in the memo line, below a line that reads, “Economic Impact Payment​," as told to the Post by an administration official. Around 5 million cheques are set to be delivered a week in the US, with the whole process predicted to take around 20 weeks to complete, but the addition of the signature could now add extra days to this operation.



Trump had previously denied that he wanted to sign the cheques. According to CNN, on 3 April he said:
No. Me sign? No. There's millions of checks. I'm going to sign them? No. It's a Trump administration initiative. But do I want to sign them? No.

Regardless of how long this is going to take or if Trump wanted to do it or not, there is no doubt that this is a political move from the president and people are pretty aghast that he would deploy such a tactic in such uncertain and worrying times, when millions could be depending on these cheques to stay afloat.

The cheques are part of the US government's $2 trillion stimulus package to offer financial relief to those most affected by the coronavirus. The US has more than 570,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19, the most in the world, which at the time of writing, has resulted in more than 22,000 deaths.



Trump's signature to be on stimulus checks, delaying mailing process: report

Published: April 14, 2020 By Mike MurphyTrump on a 100 Dollar Bill FAKE MONEY | Vincent-the-Artist

Federal stimulus checks for millions of Americans will be delayed by several days because President Donald Trump wanted his signature to be on them, the Washington Post reported late Tuesday.

 It will reportedly be the first time any president's signature has appeared on checks to taxpayers. 

Since the president is not actually authorized to sign checks from the U.S. Treasury, Trump's signature will appear in the "memo" space on the bottom left, across from the authorized signature of a nonpartisan Bureau of the Fiscal Service official. 

The Post reported the final decision was made Monday night, and will delay the first batch of checks to be mailed out. 

Do you think the Stimulus check is collectible if Trump's ...


Treasury Department officials denied to the Post that Trump's signature caused a delay, saying checks were not scheduled to be mailed until next week anyway. The signature will not appear on direct deposits, only on checks mailed to taxpayers for whom the government does not have banking information.



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