One of the critical elements of the $2 trillion economic aid package approved by Congress in March is its “enhanced” unemployment benefits. Democrats crafted a policy in the CARES Act that provides Americans who’ve lost their jobs $600 per week, on top of the benefits available through state unemployment plans.
With tens of millions of Americans pushed from their jobs by the pandemic, the policy is a lifeline to families across the country. It is, however, temporary: the current benefit will expire over the summer.
With this in mind, House Democrats approved a new aid package last week, called the HEROES Act, which would extend the current jobless benefits through January 2021. According to a Washington Post report, Donald Trump has a very different plan in mind.
President Trump on Tuesday privately expressed opposition to extending a weekly $600 boost in unemployment insurance for laid-off workers affected by the coronavirus pandemic, according to three officials familiar with his remarks during a closed-door lunch with Republican senators on Capitol Hill.
This appears to bring the White House in line with some of its key Capitol Hill allies. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), for example, assured business leaders a few weeks ago that current benefits would continue “over our dead bodies.”
Given the number of American fatalities during the pandemic, perhaps the Senate Judiciary Committee chairman could’ve chosen a different phrase.
Nevertheless, it appears Trump is moving in the same direction. It creates an awkward dynamic: Democrats and Republicans don’t disagree on how to help the unemployed; they disagree on whether to help the unemployed.









