A top House Democrat has a plan for getting unemployment benefits extended, despite Republican opposition: Hold the Farm Bill hostage.
“Under no circumstances should we support the farm bill unless Republicans agree to use the savings from it to extend unemployment insurance,” Rep. Chris Van Hollen told the Washington Post’s Greg Sargent last Friday. Members of the House and Senate are currently negotiating a final version of the Farm Bill in conference committee.
The House has already missed the deadline for avoiding a lapse in unemployment benefits, which will expire on Dec. 28. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has indicated that reinstating the lifeline for jobless Americans will be at the top of the agenda when the Senate reconvenes next year. House Republicans won’t extend the safety net program without a price, however. On Wednesday, Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, made clear he would only bring an extension to the floor “as long as long as it’s paid for and as long as there are other efforts that will help get our economy moving once again.”
That’s where Van Hollen’s plan comes in. He would insist that unemployment insurance be “paid for” with the cuts already baked into the 2013 Farm Bill, a sweeping piece of omnibus legislation which covers farm subsidies, food stamps, and a host of other crucial nutrition and agricultural programs. The Senate Farm Bill would save an estimated $24 billion over the next decade, whereas extending emergency unemployment insurance for another year would cost $25 billion.
Nonetheless, Van Hollen believes holding up the Farm Bill provides the Democrats with “a potential pressure point,” because the law subsidizes dairy production, keeping milk prices far lower than they otherwise would be. The House passed a temporary Farm Bill extension on Wednesday to prevent dairy prices from skyrocketing, but Reid has said there will be no stopgap measures coming out of the Senate.









