The U.S. Senate on Tuesday narrowly cleared the first procedural hurdle to temporarily extend federal benefits to the long-term unemployed. And Republicans are busy strategizing the best way to convince America that they are the ones who are compassionate, and that somehow the Obama administration is trying to make unemployment in the country “easier to tolerate.”
A memo sent by House Republican leaders to their caucus, obtained by NBC News, lays out talking points lawmakers should use while discussing the debate over whether unemployment insurance benefits should be extended.
The coaching tips remind House Republicans — who are widely expected to oppose the extension of jobless benefits — to emphasize that unemployment is a “personal crisis for them and their family,” and to focus instead on the “dozens of House-passed jobs bills” that have never been considered by the Senate. Another suggested message: Liken the benefits to a handout.
“Washington has lost its priorities if it’s more focused on making unemployment easier to tolerate than it is getting people back to work and restoring independence all together,” the memo says.
That’s exactly the message GOPers delivered at a news conference on Wednesday.
“The American people are still asking the question: Where are the jobs?” House Speaker John Boehner said. “We’ve passed dozens of bills here in the House that continue to await action in the Senate that would help improve our economy.” Boehner said the House would only consider extending emergency unemployment benefits if “It was paid for and if there were provisions that we could agree to that would get our economy moving again.”
Rep. Chris Stewart of Utah said Dems are trying to create the impression that Republicans like him are “cold-hearted” toward American workers. “The reality,” Stewart claimed, “is this president is failing American workers.”
In the Senate, the bill to extend the benefits for three months surprisingly advanced by a 60-37 vote after six Republicans joined the Democratic majority. Democrats needed at least 60 votes to push the legislation past the threat of a GOP filibuster and begin debate.
Long-term jobless insurance expired for 1.3 million Americans on Dec. 28. Senate Dems argued that a failure to pass an extension would hurt the economy and devastate Americans who would be left hanging. Republicans, meanwhile, argued that the renewal, set to cost about $6 billion, should be offset by cuts in other parts of the budget.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid urged GOPers to agree to the extension without demanding spending reductions. He pointed out that such benefits were extended many times under President George W. Bush without being offset in the budget.
“I am opposed to offsetting the cost of emergency unemployment benefits,” he said on the Senate floor, adding that he’s willing to discuss “reasonable ways” to pay for the benefits, but that lawmakers should not in the meantime “punish 1.3 million Americans struggling to find work.”









