The U.S. Congress that convened for
its limited “lame duck” session this week has a lot on its
plate; it will act - or not act - on some of the pressing
issues facing the nation, wrap up its business and go home
for the holidays. From then until the new Congress convenes
in January there will be a lot of occasions when the members
will have their actual china plates piled high. But for
a lot of people the holiday fare will be skimpier than it
has been for quite a while - especially the nearly 15 million
people out of work.
If Congress does not vote over the
next week and a half to re-authorize federal unemployment
benefits through next year, before they expire November
30, nearly 2 million women and men and their families will
face a dismal holiday season. One estimate is that the number
could reach 4 million by May with the current emergency
benefits program having expired and the additional workers
left unaided. It’s hard to imagine anything more urgent
than this.
The workers who will be affected
by the extension are those who recently lost their jobs.
It would make it possible for them to receive the same number
of weeks of benefits as those who previously lost their
jobs due to the recession. The 2 million figure does not
include those people who have exhausted their jobless benefits
and will be on the streets with little or no income at all.
Nor does it include the young people entering the job market
for the first time.
According to Unemployed Workers.org,
“These benefits have helped keep more than 9 million jobless
workers and their families going this year alone, while
they look for work in a tough economy. More than 5 million
Americans who have been struggling to find jobs for six
months or more currently rely on these federal unemployment
benefits. Combined with state benefits, the expanded federal
unemployment programs kept an estimated 3.3 million Americans
out of poverty in 2009.”
“Never
before has Congress allowed extended unemployment insurance
to lapse when the national unemployment rate is above 7.2
percent,” says Jackie Headapohl of Michigan Job Search at
mlive.com. “We’ll find out later this month if the lame
duck Congress will continue that tradition.”
“It is hard to imagine that Congress
could deny help to out-of-work Americans, except that is
exactly what happened this summer when federal benefits
lapsed for 51 days, cutting off 2.5 million people. Senate
Republicans and a few Democrats insisted that reducing the
deficit was more important,” the New York Times said
editorially last week. “That did not stop many of the same
senators from preserving tax loopholes for certain wealthy
money managers.”
Congress’ failure to pass an extension
this summer took a toll in terms of peoples’ lives in ways
that are seldom chronicled in the major mass media. “I’d
been submitting 20 to 30 job applications a week, and finally
I got a job,” says Lori Hancock, a 52-year-old woman in
Weldon, Ill. who lost her job last November. “But, after working for only 2
weeks, my car was repossessed, and without any transportation
to get to work, I lost that new job,” Writing to wwww.unemployedworkers.org,
a website by the National Employment Law Project, she said,
“If Congress hadn’t let those benefits lapse last summer,
I’d still have my car and my new job. Now I have neither.
What happened to me could happen to almost anybody.”
“Deficits matter,’ the Times
editorial continued, “but not more than a recovery (benefits
are a powerful stimulus) or the economic survival of millions
of Americans. Short-term extensions breed uncertainty and
anxiety, which are also bad for the economy. The best thing
this lame duck Congress can do is extend the benefits for
12 months, with the expectation that things will be better
by the end of next year.”
“Creating jobs remains the biggest
challenge to the American economy,” says Michael J. Wilson,
national director of Americans for Democratic Action. “The
case for public investment seems to have fallen by the wayside
in the face of short-term political considerations.” He
spoke of “the obvious need for the Congress to extend unemployment
benefits this month as a “failure to do so will not only
devastate tens of thousands of families, but will have a
direct impact on the holiday season. We can only hope that
Congress does the right thing in the extended session.”
While the September jobless figures
provided what some have called a glimmer of bright light,
the employment depression shows no sign of abating. As economist
Paul Krugman put it: the “slump goes on and on.”
According to the government, job
openings, or listings, decreased by 163,000 in September
and there were 109,000 fewer jobs listed in August than
previously reported. There were 2.9 million job openings
in September, while the total number of unemployed workers
was 14.8 million, half of whom have been jobless for 21
weeks or more.
President Obama’s welcome announcement
that his trip to India
produced economic agreements that will theoretically result
in 54,000 new jobs should be seen in context. Last month,
the U.S. economy created 151,000 new jobs and the
unemployment rate remained at a stubborn 9.6 percent.
Congressional Republicans and a few
Democrats (fortunately, half of the latter lost their jobs
in the last election) are threatening to stick it to the
unemployed again. Once again they are demanding the White
House cut other vital social programs in return for not
killing the extension. Once
again, some of them are trotting out the demagogic argument
that unemployment insurance discourages people from seeking
work.
Outgoing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
has said one of her top priorities during the lame duck
session will be to reauthorize unemployment insurance. However,
even with Democratic majority in both houses, passing the
measure is uncertain given Republican opposition in the
Senate. Even more ominously, when the Republicans take over
the House it will probably mark the end of any extensions,
despite the fact that joblessness it expect to remain high
or even grow in 2011.
Jamelle Bouie at American Prospect
magazine takes a dim view of the prospects. “Reauthorization
should be a no-brainer in a recession with near double-digit
unemployment. But this isn’t a sane country, and Republicans
have already held up the extension of joblessness benefits
on two separate occasions,” he wrote on the magazine’s web
page. “And despite the importance of extending such support
to help families and improve the economy, there is no guarantee
that Democrats will find enough votes from the GOP - or
within their own caucus - to break a likely filibuster.”
“The people who are advocating an
end to extending unemployment benefits must be getting different
data than everyone else,” said Dean Baker, co-director of
the Center for Economic and Policy Research. “The economy
is, at best, barely creating jobs at a fast enough rate
to keep the unemployment rate from rising. All the projections
show the unemployment rate will be much higher over the
next year than it was when we originally extended benefits.
It is hard to see what the rationale would be for ending
extended benefits.”
“Fiscal watchdogs object to spending
billions more on payouts, adding to the mountainous federal
debt,” wrote staff writer Jeff Harrington in the Times
November 6. “They
cite studies that indicate extending benefits actually lengthens
the period of time people remain unemployed.
“Republican leaders, emboldened by
their renewed legislative clout, have told Democrats they’ll
have to cut up to $14 billion from government programs to
extend emergency unemployment benefits through Christmas.”
“These are scary times,” says activist
Kian Frederick. “It’s getting very difficult and there is
a lot of hardship out there. People are losing their homes;
their children are being placed in foster care. And all
the while people are trying to blame the victims rather
than face up to the problem.”
Frederick is director
of Flasmob4Jobs. Com, a group dedicated to raising awareness
of the plight of the estimated 4.5 million “99ers,” workers
who have already exhausted their 99 weeks of benefits. The
group is calling on Congress to pass Senate bill 3706 which
would add 20 additional weeks (Tier V) of benefits for those
who were laid off early in the recession and ceased receiving
assistance in the spring and for those who will do so in
the future. The proposed legislation’s tile is the Americans
Want to Work Act.
“This is a stand-alone measure,”
Frederick told me. “And like the proposal to extend
assistance to those whose benefits are about to run out,
it is a band-aid. What we really need is a jobs program.
People want to work.”
Last Friday, members of the group
demonstrated outside the Manhattan
office of the Department of Labor where some engaged in
civil disobedience. “We’re trying to send a message; people
have to stand up and be heard,” says Frederick.
Last
Wednesday, about a dozen Ohioans protested outside the Troy
office of incoming Republican House Speaker John Boehner
on Wednesday. They delivered thousands of petitions urging
Congress to concentrate on job creation. The demonstration
was organized by Working America, the community-organizing
affiliate of the AFL-CIO. One of the picketers, Marvin Bohn
said, “Unemployment benefits paid for the gas I needed to
look for work when I was laid off, and they put money into
our communities that supports businesses and creates jobs.
On the other hand, if that money goes to Boehner’s wealthy
donors, it will simply go into buying even more political
attack ads in two years, not creating jobs.”
“Boehner, don’t do us wrong, stop
stringing us along,” the demonstrators chanted.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member Carl Bloice is a writer in San Francisco, a member of the National Coordinating Committee of
the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism
and formerly worked for a healthcare union. Click here
to contact Mr. Bloice.
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