With Details About Rob Reiner's Son Coming to Light, It Seems This Situation...
FBI Releases New Images of the Suspect in the Brown University Shooting
It's About Time: Trump Has Designated This a Weapon of Mass Destruction
If These Three Words Dominate a News Presser, You Shouldn't Go on Television
After a Shooting the Press Fired Blanks As They Aim for Gun Control;...
The Trial of Milwaukee Judge Hannah Dugan Started Today. Here's the Day One...
From Anxiety to Alignment: What This Week’s Data Tells Us About the Right’s...
Candace Owens Faces Erika Kirk After Months of Promoting Theories About Charlie Kirk’s...
President Trump Files $10 Billion Lawsuit Against the BBC for Edited Jan. 6...
Jake Tapper Says He’s Extra Tough on Trump to Make Up For Failing...
Progressive Podcast Host Says Charlie Kirk 'Justified' His Death Because He Supported Gun...
This Actress Had an Insane Meltdown Over Trump Calling a Reporter 'Piggy'
Sen. John Kennedy Mocks Jasmine Crockett’s Senate Bid: ‘The Voices in Her Head...
Chile Elects Trump-Style Conservative José Antonio Kast as President
Rabbi Killed in Antisemitic Terror Attack Had His Warnings Ignored by the Australian...
Tipsheet
Premium

Chris Hayes Tried to Shame McConnell About Ignoring the House Relief Bill, But His Timeline Was Way Off

AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana

The Families First Coronavirus Response Act is still not up for a Senate vote, despite having been passed by the House on Saturday. Democrats pointed fingers at Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell for the delayed effort, but as more than one Republican has noted, the final House version was not released to the Senate until Tuesday morning at 9:45 a.m. ET.

That tight timeline, however, did not stop the partisan politics. Indivisible KY is a group that describes itself as part of a national grassroots movement whose goal is to stand "indivisibly opposed to Trump and the members of Congress who would do his bidding." The group also prefers to call President Trump "the biggest popular vote loser in history." On Twitter, it accused McConnell of wasting part of his weekend cozying up to his favorite Supreme Court justice instead of taking a vote on the House bill.

MSNBC's Chris Hayes took the group at its word and pushed the same narrative on his own Twitter page.

But the NRSC set him straight. The House bill was under revisions and was not released to the upper chamber until Tuesday morning.

One of the major hangups for Republicans regarding the Families First Act is how it puts small businesses last. The new mandated paid sick leave would devastate businesses, McConnell predicted.

"In particular, it seems increasingly clear that the House's effort to mandate that small businesses provide new worker benefits, just many small businesses themselves are in major jeopardy of their own, might even be actively harmful unless we urgently address a broader package that includes more and broader small business relief," he wrote in a Tuesday press release.

The Senate leader said his caucus will vote on the House bill, but they will also get to work on a much broader bill. He previewed the three phases of that enhanced relief package on Wednesday.

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos