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Biden's presidency gets going

(CNN) How the next four weeks play out will have immeasurable consequences for millions of Americans as Democrats race to pass their sweeping $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief bill before unemployment benefits lapse.

In the next few days, the House Budget Committee will finish assembling the final bill based off the sections that committees passed last week. This will ensure Democrats are able to get the caucus on board and pass the bill as soon as next week.

A rundown of the complicating factors from CNN's Lauren Fox:

The immediate obstacles. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has a five-vote margin on this bill, and scrutiny on the package -- even by some Democrats -- is more intense than last spring's stimulus.

Watch members' comments over the next several days while they are home on recess to get clues to how much of a lift this is going to be for the House speaker.

The Senate problem. House and Senate Democrats aren't in complete unity right now.

The expectation is that changes to the House bill will happen in the Senate, but not in a formal committee markup like last week in the House. Instead, the current plan for Democrats is to take their bill -- with some potential changes that have been ironed out privately -- directly to the Senate floor.

The minimum wage fight. Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona has made it clear that she will not vote for a Senate Covid relief bill that includes raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour.

Without Sinema, the Senate cannot pass the relief bill, even using the budget process that allows them to pass it with just 51 votes.

It's the unfortunate reality facing Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer right now: Include it, you lose at least one moderate senator. Leave it behind, you risk losing progressives.

On the podcast: Biden's presidency gets going

For more on stimulus negotiations, CNN Political Director David Chalian breaks down the deliberations. Plus, it's looking more and more like there will be a Trump on the ballot in 2022.

Listen to the CNN Political Briefing here.

Citizen by CNN

Join CNN's Dana Bash, David Chalian, John King and Abby Phillip on Tuesday at 10 a.m. ET to talk post-impeachment Washington and Biden's next moves at our latest #CitizenCNN event. RSVP here.

Utah GOP gives Romney a pass

Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah appears to have escaped the fate of other GOP lawmakers who faced fierce backlash from their respective state parties for reprimanding former President Donald Trump.

The Utah Republican Party signaled support in a statement Monday for both Romney, who voted to convict Trump, and Utah's Sen. Mike Lee, who voted to acquit.

Their dueling votes "showcase a diversity of thought," the statement said.

Utah's Republican Party is the exception, so far.

Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina, another Republican who voted to convict Trump, faced a censure vote by the North Carolina Republican Party for his decision.

Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana was quickly censured by the state Republican Party after he voted to convict Trump.

Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the No. 3 Republican in the House of Representatives, was censured by the Wyoming Republican Party earlier this month after she voted along with nine other House Republicans to impeach Trump.

Rep. Tom Rice of South Carolina was censured by the state's Republican Party late last month for his vote to impeach Trump as well.

Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska was already facing a censure effort by the Nebraska Republican Party before his guilty vote. The state party's vote was postponed until March due to concerns over weather conditions there.

And CNN's Dan Merica reports that Pennsylvania's state GOP is planning to meet to discuss what to do about Sen. Pat Toomey, who also voted to convict and who is not seeking reelection in 2022. County parties have already censured him.

Disturbing new Capitol riot footage

New police radio dispatches and security footage from the January 6 US Capitol riot paint an even sharper picture of how the insurrectionists at times showed little fear of the police as they launched a large and coordinated attack.

CNN reviewed more than 800 videos and audio files that the House impeachment managers submitted as evidence for Trump's impeachment trial.

As rioters began to overrun the officers, creating an untenable situation, radio waves filled with desperate shouts and requests for backup:

  • "You're going to need to get more help up here. We don't have enough people to hold the line," one officer said.
  • "We're getting fire extinguishers thrown at us from the top ... in the upper level of the inaugural deck," an officer shouted in another clip.
  • In one dispatch played at the trial, an officer exclaims that the rioters have breached the scaffolding. "They are behind our lines!" he said.

Read more here.

The politics of vaccine hesitancy

The US vaccination effort has ramped up in meaningful ways in recent weeks. Nationwide, we've maintained a seven-day average of about 1.6 million doses per day.

Demand, at the moment, far exceeds supply.

But with Biden declaring there will be enough vaccines for 300 million Americans by the end of July, vaccine hesitancy -- not supply -- could soon become the defining pandemic hurdle.

The good news is more Americans say they will get the vaccine than ever before. A new Axios/Ipsos poll finds that 63% of adults say they have had or are likely to get a Covid-19 vaccination as soon as it's made available to them. That's the highest ever recorded by Ipsos.

The bad news is trust in vaccines is splitting dangerously along partisan lines. In an average of Axios/Ipsos polls taken in January and February, 74% of Democrats said they'd either been vaccinated or were extremely or very likely to get vaccinated as soon it's available to them. Just 51% of Republicans said the same thing. Independents were in the middle of these two groups, at 61%.

Three quick points from CNN's Harry Enten:

  1. We can't be sure why Republicans are now significantly less willing to get the vaccine, but remember Democrats have pretty much always said they were more concerned about Covid-19 than Republicans.
  2. It wasn't until mid-November, just after Trump's defeat in the presidential election, that the partisan gap began to really emerge in the Axios/Ipsos polling on vaccines.
  3. The bottom line is that there's still a lot of work to be done on vaccine hesitancy. Lives literally depend on it.

What else?

CNN 'Presidential Town Hall.' Biden will participate in a CNN town hall in Milwaukee Tuesday night, answering questions from Americans as the nation struggles to contain the coronavirus pandemic and jump-start a troubled economy. The event will air live from the Pabst Theater at 9 p.m. ET.

'We have work to do' on safely reopening schools. That's what the director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, told CNN's Jake Tapper this weekend.

She cited the CDC's latest Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report -- which showed that around 60% of high school and middle school students are reliably masked. "This has to be universal," Walensky said, in addition to practicing 6 feet of distancing and other mitigation measures.

Biden's special Obamacare enrollment period opened today. Here's what you need to know.

'9/11-type commission' coming. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced in a letter to House Democrats on Monday plans for creating a "9/11-type commission" to investigate the January 6 attack on the US Capitol.

Inside the new President's routine. Biden has established a regular schedule, including coffee in the morning with the first lady, meetings and phone calls from the Oval Office starting just after 9 a.m. and a return to his residence by 7 p.m.

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