Republicans and the White House are counting on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell reconciling GOP differences with a draft coronavirus relief package that they can take into negotiations with congressional Democrats.

McConnell is set to introduce as soon as Thursday a collection of bills that would represent the Republican counteroffer to the $3.5 trillion plan that Democrats passed in the House.

McConnell is aiming for the bills to total $1 trillion in spending, but some conservatives, including Senators Rand Paul and Ted Cruz, are balking at the price tag. Senate Republicans had initially sought $25 billion in new spending for testing, but the White House resisted that.

“What the leader has decided he wants to do is to have a handful of bills now rather than just one bill,” Missouri Senator Roy Blunt, a member of the GOP leadership, said Wednesday after a meeting with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows. “The goal is tomorrow.”

That meeting with Blunt, Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Richard Shelby of Alabama, and Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Chairman Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, was one of a series between President Donald Trump’s two emissaries and Republican lawmakers. It settled the spending portion of the Republican plan, though some other major details have yet to be resolved.

”We’ve now had three days of meetings and we’re completely on the same page,” Mnuchin said.

Mnuchin, Meadows and the lawmakers involved in Wednesday talks said nothing about the payroll tax holiday that President Donald Trump has said he wants in the package, which has gotten a cool reception from many Republicans and is opposed by Democrats.

And Republicans are still at odds over whether and how long to extend supplemental unemployment insurance, which runs out in days.

Trump and Congress are facing a time crunch to keep the economic damage from the resurgent pandemic from worsening before the November elections. Programs in the last stimulus, passed in March, are beginning to expire and lawmakers are scheduled to leave town for an August break in less than three weeks.

Reaching agreement on the spending portion of the proposal covers a broad swath of the Republican plan. Among the provisions, according to negotiators, are another round of direct payments to individuals; $105 billion in aid for schools, some of it earmarked for those that reopen classrooms; and $25 billion to expand virus testing, of which $16 billion is new money.

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