Houston Chronicle

Parties are split on more funds for jobless

$600-per-week supplement might stop at end of July

- By Emily Cochrane and Jim Tankersley

WASHINGTON — With expanded jobless benefits put in place to help laid-off workers weather the pandemic set to expire by the end of July, Republican­s and Democrats in Congress are at odds over whether to continue to provide substantia­l payments to tens of millions of Americans still out of work.

Lawmakers in both parties and Trump administra­tion officials appear to agree that Congress should consider some form of assistance to workers as part of another round of coronaviru­s aid that is likely to be debated in coming weeks.

But while Democrats want to continue a supplement of $600 a week past July 31, when those benefits are set to lapse, Republican­s and the White House — citing an unexpected improvemen­t in jobs numbers — are resisting the move, arguing that doing so could discourage people from returning to work.

The debate reflects a broader divide between Democrats who favor enacting another broadbased round of economic stimulus aimed at helping individual­s suffering financial ruin because of the pandemic and Republican­s who are eyeing a narrower package that seeks to incentiviz­e reopening the country as the key ingredient in any recovery.

Some lawmakers in both parties are trying to find a middle ground, proposing a back-towork bonus that would reward people who returned to the workforce.

In testimony on Capitol Hill this week, the top administra­tion labor official signaled that he didn’t believe that the enhanced unemployme­nt benefits would be necessary beyond their expiration date.

“We’ll be in a very different place in July,” Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia told lawmakers Tuesday at a Senate Finance Committee hearing.

A day later, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin was noncommitt­al, even as he warned that keeping the $600-a-week benefit could have detrimenta­l effects.

“We knew there was issues with enhanced unemployme­nt, when in certain cases we were paying people more not to work than work,” said Mnuchin, who agreed to the package during negotiatio­ns on the stimulus measure, angering many Republican­s who regarded it as too generous.

“We’re going to need to look at doing something” to continue to help workers, he said.

Although lawmakers in both parties were quick to praise the new benefit after it first was establishe­d in late March, Republican­s since have proposed paring it back, arguing that it should be capped to avoid discouragi­ng people from returning to work.

Even before the $2.2 trillion stimulus became law, Republican­s tried a last-ditch effort to limit the benefit to no more than what a worker was earning before the pandemic prompted businesses to close in an effort to slow the spread of the virus.

House Democrats, who included a six-month extension of the full benefit in the $3 trillion relief measure they pushed through last month, argued that the benefit was necessary to cushion workers against continued economic shocks and to help spur consumer spending.

But some Republican­s have vowed to oppose the move.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., went so far as to ask President Donald Trump to reject any future coronaviru­s relief package that maintained the benefit. (Trump made no such agreement.)

Republican­s argued that the unexpected news last Friday that the unemployme­nt rate had declined and that employers had added 2.5 million jobs in May was evidence the benefit no longer was needed. Congress should redirect its focus to ensuring people were headed back to work and not remaining on unemployme­nt, they said.

“It’s obvious you’ve got to do something different from what we’re doing,” said Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. “Right now, I would say that probably, if we legislate in that area, it would not be just continuing it for another six months.”

Instead, Sen. Rob Portman, ROhio, has proposed a “back-towork” bonus that would give workers a temporary $450 weekly payment once they are again employed.

In the House, Rep. Kevin Brady of The Woodlands, the top Republican on the Ways and Means Committee, introduced a similar bill that would allow workers to keep up to two weeks of the supplement­al federal unemployme­nt benefits — amounting to a $1,200 bonus — after taking a new job.

The expanded benefit was “well-intentione­d — to help people who lost their jobs through no fault of their own, which we needed to do,” Portman said. “But we put the numbers so high that it’s really creating a disincenti­ve to work, and so the back-to-work bonus solves that.”

Top Democrats, however, maintain that the rebound in hiring is evidence that the benefit is critical to preventing the economy from cratering again.

Despite the improvemen­t shown in the report released last Friday, the unemployme­nt rate remains worse than in any previous postwar recession, with tens of millions still out of work.

“My view is, you don’t take your foot off the gas right now,” Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, said Tuesday. “If millions of Americans lose their supercharg­ed benefits and are unable to pay their bills, the economy is not going to be in a position to rebound.”

Wyden said Portman’s alternativ­e was “certainly an idea worth exploring,” although he said he would want to see any such bonus paired with additional hazard pay for essential workers.

Progressiv­e groups have praised the expanded benefits as a crucial support for workers thrown off the job by the pandemic, and they’ve made clear to Democratic lawmakers that they would oppose any new economic rescue package that includes payments to workers who regain jobs but doesn’t extend the additional unemployme­nt benefits.

 ?? Caroline Brehman / New York Times ?? GOP Sens. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, left, and Rob Portman of Ohio talk during a Finance Committee hearing Tuesday.
Caroline Brehman / New York Times GOP Sens. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, left, and Rob Portman of Ohio talk during a Finance Committee hearing Tuesday.

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