7 things that will change when Democrats control the Senate

Democrats have pulled off an apparent sweep in the 2020 elections, after all.

Incoming President Joe Biden and his fellow Democrats underperformed in the November elections, winning fewer Senate seats than polls predicted and losing seats in the House. Biden himself won several key swing states by a vote margin of less than 1%.

But the surprise wins by two Democratic challengers in the Georgia Senate runoff races on Jan. 5 will give Democrats the narrowest possible majority in the Senate, and total control of government for at least the next two years. That will produce a different set of legislative outcomes than if Republicans had held the Senate and exercised a kind of veto power over Democratic priorities. Here’s what’s likely to change:

Cabinet nominees. Biden is now likely to get most or all of his Cabinet nominees confirmed, instead of battling with Republicans who may have torpedoed nominees they felt were too liberal or otherwise objectionable. That’s good news for Neera Tanden, Biden’s controversial nominee to be budget director, who has clashed with many Republicans and was a possible shoot-down. She’s more likely to make it now. It also allows Biden to tap Judge Merrick Garland as attorney general, as reported, because a Democratic Senate will likely confirm a like-minded judge on the appeals court where Garland now serves. Biden will have a much easier time getting judicial nominees confirmed, as well.

Neera Tanden who President-elect Joe Biden nominated to serve as Director of the Office of Management and Budget, speaks at The Queen theater, Tuesday, Dec. 1, 2020, in Wilmington, Del. President-elect Joe Biden’s Cabinet picks are quickly running into the political reality of a narrowly controlled Senate. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
Neera Tanden who President-elect Joe Biden nominated to serve as Director of the Office of Management and Budget, speaks at The Queen theater, Dec. 1, 2020, in Wilmington, Del. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

More stimulus money. Biden said on Jan. 4 that if Democrats take the Senate, “those $2,000 checks will go out the door.” He was referring to a proposal to send $2,000 stimulus checks to most Americans that the Senate shot down in late December. Congress did approve $600 checks at the end of last year, so Democrats might settle for $1,400 checks, to make up the difference. That’s not necessarily the best use of stimulus money. Targeting aid at the unemployed would probably be more effective. But having made this promise, Democrats probably need to follow through. It will add to the annual deficit but help the economy in the short run.

More aid for cities and state. Senate Republicans shot this down in the last stimulus bill because Democrats wouldn’t agree to their demand for a coronavirus liability wavier for businesses. Democrats won’t have to negotiate on that now, and will probably approve at least $160 billion in state and local aid. The next stimulus package, likely around March, will probably include another extension of supplemental unemployment insurance for those out of work, as well. The current benefit, $300 per week, will expire in March. Some Democrats want to raise this to $600, but that might be too costly if coupled with another round of stimulus checks. All told, new stimulus spending in 2021 could total $1 trillion, double or triple what a Republican Senate might have approved.