Obama signs extension of jobless benefits

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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama signed an extension of jobless benefits for the long-term unemployed
Thursday night that will allow those whose benefits expired to apply
retroactively.

When Congress passed the measure earlier in the day,
it ended — at least for now — a partisan stalemate that highlighted
election-year differences over federal spending.

The Senate passed the $18-billion
measure, 59-38, with the support of 54 Democrats, three Republicans and
two independents. Every other Republican opposed it; the other three
Democrats were absent.

Hours later, the House passed the bill, 289-112.

The measure extends jobless aid through June 2.
Democrats, anxious about high unemployment in an election year, are
working on separate legislation to extend benefits through the end of
the year.

Obama urged them to do so and said, in a statement:
“In these tough economic times, it is more critical than ever to bring
relief to Americans who are working every day to find a job, and
families that are struggling to make ends meet.”

He called job creation his top priority and vowed to “fight day and night until every American who wants a good job has one.”

Unemployment benefits expired April 5
for tens of thousands of those out of work longer than 26 weeks. The
issue became a dispute between the parties over whether the cost of the
extension should be offset by spending cuts to keep from increasing the
federal budget deficit. Most Republicans said yes, but Democrats said
the unemployment situation was an emergency and therefore exempt from
offsetting spending cuts.

“Our debt and deficits are as much of an emergency
as unemployment, yet Congress continues to pretend it can spend and
borrow without restraint,” said Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla.

About 212,000 people lost benefits when Congress failed to act, but the measure Obama signed extends the aid retroactively.

“If we do not pass this bill this week, another 200,000 Americans could lose their benefits,” Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., said during debate.

He accused Republicans of “playing games with the lives of unemployed Americans.”

“We should not balance the budget on the backs of the unemployed,” Baucus said.

Republicans were eager to use the bill to try to
show that their party has a stronger commitment to fiscal discipline.
“The Democrats talk the talk but can’t walk the walk when it comes to
getting our nation’s fiscal house in order,” said Sen. Jim Bunning, R-Ky.

But Sen. Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill., said extending the benefits, which average $335
a week, was not only the humane thing to do but would speed economic
recovery by giving money to people who need it most and will spend it
right away.

“I wonder when it was, if ever, that a senator tried to live on $300 a week,” Durbin said.

Sen. Olympia J. Snowe of Maine,
a Republican who voted for the measure, cited the continuing economic
troubles in her state, where 130 workers are losing their jobs this
week with the closing of the nation’s last remaining sardine cannery.
Republicans George V. Voinovich of Ohio and Susan Collins of Maine also supported the bill. Democrats Evan Bayh of Indiana, Bill Nelson of Florida and Mark R. Warner of Virginia were absent.

The bill also extends COBRA health insurance
subsidies and federal flood insurance and restores Medicare payments to
doctors, who were about to absorb a 21 percent reduction in payments.

First-time claims for jobless benefits rose by
24,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 484,000, the highest since
late February

More than 11 million jobless workers are collecting
some form of unemployment benefits, including nearly 5.7 million
receiving extensions, according to the National Employment Law Project.

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