One Democrat details the problems with the Republican bill as of now: no strong worker protections, with language that says corporations must keep employees "to the extent possible," allowing them to keep bailout money and still fire workers, the Democrats would offer loan forgiveness to companies that keep at minimum of 90% of employees; the corporate bailout fund has "virtually no restraints," and is all up to Mnuchin to determine—which means the Trump Organization could be getting bailed out with these funds by the Trump administration, as if he hasn't profited enough off the taxpayers at this point; “very weak buybacks restrictions” to keep corporations from using any of the funds to buyback stocks, rather than pump money into operating expenses—and those restrictions that can be waived by Mnuchin; they would impose just a 2 year limit on corporations increasing executive compensation; the assistance to airlines is all in loans rather than grants, which could result in tens of thousands of layoffs (the industry unions want grants).

"We are the ones who are on the front lines fighting the virus," Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants, told the Washington Post. "Our entire economy depends on relief focused on workers. We must keep everyone in their job and connected to their health care."

As of Sunday morning, Pelosi says she's not on board. "From my standpoint, we're apart," she told reporters. Schumer concurs. "I'm just going to tell you that we need a bill that puts workers first, not corporations," he told reporters.

There's still a scheduled cloture vote in the Senate at 3:00 PM ET Sunday.