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Rare words from an incoming president: "Our darkest days in the battle against COVID are ahead of us, not behind us," President-elect Biden warned Tuesday afternoon during remarks in Wilmington.
Why it matters: Biden is promising to tell America the truth, which includes the reality of many more horrific months, no matter who is in charge.
- If we're lucky, vaccinations will provide enough herd immunity to allow some normality by this summer or fall.
Another blunt reality: Most of the benefits in the $900 billion coronavirus rescue package expire months before America has any hope of being back to normal.
- The $300 boost for unemployment benefits expires in March.
- The new $284 billion round of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) is meant to last 3 months.
- There's no new funding earmarked for state and local governments.
The other side: There's funding for schools and childcare and mass transit and vaccination distribution, which helps bail out the above from those obligations.
- The entertainment sector got $15 billion, helping out theaters and museums and live entertainment venues.
- $600 checks will start showing up next week for individuals making under $75,000 (phases out for incomes above that), with an extra $600 per child.
The bottom line: Georgia's Jan. 5 Senate runoffs could be the difference between a big stimulus under Biden, or more trouble for parts of the U.S. hospitality sector.
Go deeper: Inside the $900 billion stimulus compromise