Chattanooga Times Free Press

Jobless benefits expire for millions without pushback from Biden

- BY JIM TANKERSLEY AND BEN CASSELMAN

WASHINGTON — Expanded unemployme­nt benefits that have kept millions of Americans afloat during the pandemic expired Monday, setting up the abrupt cutoff of assistance to 7.5 million people as the delta variant rattles the pandemic recovery.

The end of the aid came without objection from President Joe Biden or his top economic advisers, who have become caught in a political fight over the benefits and are now banking on other federal help and a pickup this fall in hiring to keep vulnerable families from foreclosur­e and food lines.

The $1.9 trillion economic aid package Biden signed in March included extended and expanded benefits for unemployed workers, including a weekly $300 federal supplement to state jobless payments, additional weeks of assistance for the long-term unemployed and the extension of a special program to provide benefits to so-called gig workers who traditiona­lly do not qualify for unemployme­nt benefits. Monday’s expiration means that 7.5 million people will lose their benefits entirely and another 3 million will lose the weekly $300 supplement.

Republican­s and small-business owners have assailed the extension of aid, contending that it has held back the economic recovery and fueled a labor shortage by discouragi­ng people from looking for work. Liberal Democrats and progressiv­e groups have pushed for another round of aid, saying millions of Americans remain vulnerable and in need of help.

Biden and his advisers have pointedly refused to call on Congress to extend the benefits further, a decision that reflects the prevailing view of the recovery inside the administra­tion and the president’s desire to shift his political focus to winning support for his broader economic agenda.

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