Albuquerque Journal

Rubio proposes family leave law

Ivanka Trump has promoted issue

- BY ERICA WERNER THE WASHINGTON POST

WASHINGTON — Sen. Marco Rubio unveiled legislatio­n Thursday to provide paid leave to new parents by drawing from their future Social Security payments.

The senator and 2016 GOP presidenti­al candidate from Florida touted the plan as a novel approach to an issue on which Congress has not taken significan­t action, despite highprofil­e involvemen­t by Ivanka Trump.

“This is important legislatio­n. It is also unique,” Rubio said at a news conference at the Capitol. “This is a dramatic readjustme­nt of the way we deal with economic insecurity in the modern era.”

Rubio’s bill would allow parents of newborns to receive a Social Security benefit paying a portion of their wages for at least two months. Later in life, they would delay the date at which they begin receiving Social Security retirement benefits to make up for the amount withdrawn during their leave.

Ivanka Trump on Thursday welcomed Rubio’s bill, though she played down expectatio­ns for action during this midterm election year.

“This was not exactly part of the Republican lexicon when we arrived in D.C. in January 2017,” Trump said.

Rubio’s proposal was immediatel­y criticized by Democrats and some family-leave advocacy groups. Critics said the benefit was skimpy and condemned the idea of limiting beneficiar­ies’ future retirement payments. They also noted that a majority of people who utilize the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) do so to care for sick family members or when they themselves are seriously ill, not because of childbirth or adoption, which are the conditions covered by Rubio’s bill.

“This proposal forces workers into an impossible position: If they need to cover a medical emergency today, then their Social Security benefits get cut when it’s time to retire,” Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., said in a statement about Rubio’s bill. “If they need to take care of a sick or dying parent, as three out of four people who need paid leave would use it, they get nothing.”

The United States remains unique in the developed world in not guaranteei­ng some form of paid medical or parental leave to workers, although a few states have passed paid-leave laws. Gillibrand and other Democrats are supporting a competing proposal called the Family Act that would create a national paid-leave program with a small payroll tax. That legislatio­n has failed to advance.

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