President Obama struck a conciliatory tone in Tuesday’s State of the Union address. But there was one demand that he tried to hammer home with force: extending long-term unemployment benefits, which expired Dec. 31. “Congress, give these hardworking, responsible Americans that chance,” he said to applause from his Democratic colleagues. “Give them that chance.”
His remarks heartened members of Congress who’ve struggled to keep the issue alive as talks over jobless aid have stalled; some even brought unemployed workers as their guests to Tuesday’s speech. In recent days, Democratic Sen. Jack Reed has renewed talks with GOP Sens. Dean Heller and Susan Collins to pull together a new proposal for a three-month extension that would be paid for.
Such a plan would back away from earlier Democratic demands for a year-long extension, or a shorter extension without offets, both of which Senate Republicans threatened to filibuster. But those close to the negotations say that real progress is being made on a new bill, which could surface as soon as Friday morning in the Senate and come up for a vote early next week.
The main idea under consideration would offset an estimated $6 billion in benefits with an extension of pension changes that were originally incorporated into the 2012 highway funding bill. The change, known as “pension smoothing,” raises money by reducing the contributions that private companies make to the federal government to insure their workers’ pensions. The Washington Post first reported the development on Tuesday.









