Congressman Scott Peters and his colleagues are urging House leadership to vote on reinstating $600/week unemployment benefits for Americans waiting to get back to work, and on tying unemployment benefits to economic triggers to ensure aid continues to reach those who need it. Congressman Peters has advocated for automatic stabilizers since this pandemic began, and will continue to do so in order to ensure adequate funding for COVID-19 relief until the recession ends.
These efforts are described in an August 18th piece for CNBC, posted below:
More than 100 House Democrats urge Pelosi to pass smaller bill to expand unemployment benefits
By Jacob Pramuk
Posted August 18th, 2020
More than 100 House Democrats are pushing Speaker Nancy Pelosi to vote on a bill to extend extra unemployment benefits when the chamber convenes this weekend.
In a letter dated Tuesday, the 114 lawmakers urged the California Democrat and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer to take up legislation that would reinstate the lapsed $600 per week jobless benefit until the coronavirus public health emergency ends, then phase it out as state unemployment rates fall. It would also tie available benefit weeks to the unemployment rate.
The House, which left Washington for its August recess before Congress could pass a pandemic aid package, will return on Saturday to vote on a bill that would fund the U.S. Postal Service and reverse changes Democrats worry will make it harder for Americans to vote by mail in November.
âWe owe it to people waiting to get back to work across the country not only to extend unemployment benefits to help them pay their bills, but to tie these benefits to economic conditions so workers are not held hostage by another cliff like this one,â the representatives wrote, referencing the expiration of enhanced unemployment insurance at the end of July. The letter, signed by roughly half of the House Democratic caucus, was led by Democratic Reps. Scott Peters of California, Don Beyer of Virginia and Derek Kilmer of Washington.
The request to Pelosi underscores the pressure Congress faces to pass more legislation to try to curb an economic crisis as Washington stands at a stalemate on an aid deal. Lifelines such as the jobless benefits, a federal moratorium on evictions and the application window for Paycheck Protection Program small business loans have all expired.
Democratic leaders and the Trump administration have not restarted relief talks since they collapsed earlier this month. Pelosi has put forward a more than $3 trillion rescue package, but Republicans have proposed a roughly $1 trillion plan.
The sides have failed to find common ground.
âWe have to try to come to that agreement now,â Pelosi told Politico on Tuesday. She said Democrats are âwilling to cut our bill in half to meet the needs right now.â
Her spokesman Drew Hammill clarified to CNBC that she was reiterating her previous stance. She has said she would start discussions again if Republicans doubled their roughly $1 trillion relief offer.
NBC News reported Tuesday that the House is considering voting on a reined in version of the more than $3 trillion legislation it passed in May.
On Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told CNBC that Democrats have not offered a âreasonable deal.â He said he hoped the Houseâs return this weekend signaled a willingness by Democrats to come back to the table.
âHopefully since Speaker Pelosi is coming back to look at postal, hopefully sheâll be more interested in sitting down,â he said.
Mnuchin added that the GOP âagreed to increase [its offer] in several areas.â
Democrats repeatedly said they would not pass a narrow bill to address parts of the economic and health crisis and instead wanted a comprehensive approach. Then, the House announced it would come back to vote on the post office legislation.
Trump has also sensed the political pressure to provide more aid as he faces reelection in November. He signed executive orders this month to temporarily extend federal jobless benefits of at least $300 per week, encourage eviction protections, sustain existing student loan aid and create a payroll tax holiday.
It will take a few more weeks for most states to pay out the unemployment insurance. The existing funding Trump could redirect to jobless benefits, because Congress controls new spending, is expected to last for only a handful of weeks after that.