SENATORS HOLD THE KEY TO COVID'S NEXT PHASE — America's ability to face the pandemic's next challengemay depend on a handful of senators . Talks between Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) entered their most urgent stage yet Wednesday, as the two spearhead an effort to allocate $15.6 billion to fight the pandemic, POLITICO's Burgess Everett and Marianne Levine report. The two convened a group Wednesday to see if they have any real chance at a bipartisan bill before the April 9 congressional recess. The meeting broke without a deal but with a vow to keep talking. Lawmakers already disagree on how to claw back cash from unused pots of money dispensed earlier in the pandemic, which they want to use to bankroll the new funding. But a philosophical divide is proving to be more complicated: The two parties disagree on the urgency of allocating more money during the current lull. Given those underlying problems, the big question is whether Schumer and Romney can get the needed 10 Republican senators to sign on, Burgess and Marianne note. "We need to have enough vaccines available for the next surge, whatever it is. No one knows. And you can't just order it the day before," said Senate HELP Committee Chair Patty Murray (D-Wash.). But many Republicans question the urgency and argue they need a more detailed explanation of earlier spending. "If we need it for the American people, we'll do it. We always have," said Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby , the top Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee. "I'm not a scientist. But some of that money's been used for various and sundry things, you know?" THE RIGHT GUY FOR THE JOB? In the weeks since President Joe Biden named public health expert Ahish Jha his new Covid-19 czar, administration officials have privately expressed concerns about how the Brown University School of Public Health dean might lead a complicated, multiagency government response, POLITICO's Adam Cancryn reports. Jha takes over from current czar Jeffrey Zients in a matter of days, a transition that's fueled anxiety within the ranks about how the response effort might evolve. Few question Jha's communication skills, broadly recognized during the pandemic as he's taken to Twitter and television to weigh in on shifting policies and risks. Yet, some question whether the move signals the White House will begin ceding more responsibility for the response to individual health agencies. The uncertainty gripping Biden's Covid team, described in Adam's interviews with 11 administration officials and others close to the response, underscores the delicate transition the White House is navigating. "We've got all these communicators," said one Biden official working on the pandemic effort. "But do we have anyone left who knows operations?" Jha himself appears to be aware of the concerns. According to three people familiar with the matter, he is planning to bring on a deputy with government experience who's well versed in the byzantine structures of the federal government. "Dr. Jha has the calming, steady hand and deep public health and pandemic preparedness knowledge we need," Zients said in a statement. "President Biden wanted a leader who would sustain and build on the progress we've made, been an effective communicator, and help America move forward safely; that is not an easy find, but he found it in Dr. Jha." BIDEN MULLS ENDING DEPORTATION POLICY — The White House plans to revoke a Trump-era deportation policy for migrants who arrive at the Southern border, according to multiple people briefed on the plans. The public health order, Title 42, would be phased out, starting with families and eventually followed by adults, four people familiar with the discussion told POLITICO's Laura Barrón-López, Sarah Ferris and Adam Cancryn. An announcement could come as early as Thursday evening, those sources said, though the implementation of the new policy would take longer. The White House said it continues to defer to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on decisions around Title 42 and any possible announcement on any change in the order will come from the agency. There are divides on the shift. Several border-state lawmakers, including Democrats, have already warned of a potential influx once Title 42 is fully reversed. The order allows immediate deportations on grounds of managing the pandemic's public health elements. Several Democrats have publicly urged Biden not to revoke the policy; others have called its usage a discriminatory remnant of the Trump era.
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