As GOP Holds Up Unemployment Extension, Nearly 200,000 Lose Their Benefits

First Posted: 11- 3-09 12:20 PM   |   Updated: 03-18-10 05:12 AM

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In the world outside the Senate, time is money; inside it, time is everything. Senate Republicans are taking full advantage of that reality, using every parliamentary device at their disposal to slow down an extension of unemployment insurance benefits -- even after Democrats added billions for big business to sweeten the pot.

The saga is a cast study both in the difficulty of passing even popular legislation in the Senate and the lengths to which the GOP is going to slow down the process.

The extension overwhelmingly passed the House 331-83 in late September. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) made a motion to pass it by unanimous consent in early October; it was blocked by GOP objections.

After negotiations, Reid filed for cloture on Oct. 21 to break a GOP filibuster. On October 27, the Senate voted 87-13 on a motion to proceed to consider the bill, breaking the filibuster.

But under Senate rules, the GOP is still allowed 30 hours of "debate." There actually isn't much debate, but the clock is ticking while senators take to the floor to make speeches about whatever they like.

To get things moving, Democrats sweetened the pot, adding in billions in tax breaks for business -- a net operating loss carry-back provision that the GOP has long favored -- and an extension of the homebuyer tax credit. Reid introduced the goodies in a substitute amendment with Sen. Max Baucus (D-Mont.), a champion of the business tax break.

"The two were put together as a means of greasing the skids. You know how things work around here," Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) told HuffPost. "Could we have gotten UI through otherwise? Yes, we could have, but it would have taken us several days. And we don't have that kind of time. And the minority is then able to, because of the time, demand certain things."

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The skids properly greased, Reid filed for cloture again on Oct. 29th. It came to a vote Monday night, Nov. 2nd, where it passed 85-2.

Still, the GOP fights, requesting that the 30 more hours of "debate" elapse. That'll take the Senate to late Tuesday night. If Reid invokes cloture again to proceed to the underlying bill, another 30 hours would take the Senate to Thursday morning at the earliest for -- at last -- a vote on the bill itself.

Following such overwhelming votes, a measure usually passes the Senate by a quick voice vote. "The common practice is when you get cloture on motion to proceed, you quickly allow it to pass," says Jim Manley, senior communications adviser for Reid.

Manley and other Democratic aides argued that the goodies given to big business are acceptable to Democrats as ways to boost the economy rather than pure giveaways. The first-time homebuyer tax credit is wildly popular and Democrats had planned to pass it at some point before it expired at the end of the month.

"There are only so many ways to strengthen the economy that can get 60 votes and get enacted quickly -- these happen to be two of them," said Manley.

The GOP says it's been working constructively with Reid. "Sen. McConnell offered to complete the bill last week on Thursday. Sen. Reid objected," said Don Stewart, a spokesman for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).

The objection came, Manley said, because Republicans were trying to introduce unrelated amendments attacking ACORN and the financial-industry bailout, among other things. Stewart countered that Democrats, having attached a hate-crimes measure to a defense-authorization bill, have little room to talk about unrelated amendments. He added that Republicans offered to withdraw several of the objectionable amendments.

It all sounds complicated, but it's simple: Behind all the bickering back and forth sits the reality that the GOP, as the minority party, has the right to slow down the Senate and is fully exercising that right. With days and days of floor time eaten up by a simple extension of unemployment benefits, chances dwindle that the Senate will be able to complete in time the appropriations bills that fund the government.

"What's really going on is that the Republicans are trying to slow-walk everything, to make it as difficult as possible for Democrats to accomplish much," said Manley. "This won't be the first time that they slow things down as much as possible, then vote for final passage. While they are intent on obstructionism, they don't want the blame for opposing popular policies."

In the meantime, according to a Senate Democratic ticker, more than 185,000 people have lost their unemployment benefits.


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In the world outside the Senate, time is money; inside it, time is everything. Senate Republicans are taking full advantage of that reality, using every parliamentary device at their disposal to slow ...
In the world outside the Senate, time is money; inside it, time is everything. Senate Republicans are taking full advantage of that reality, using every parliamentary device at their disposal to slow ...
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crazylikeafox   02:24 PM on 11/05/2009
Do you understand what happened people?

Reid threw a few crumbs to the unemployed that will run out in a few months and not likely be extended.

Meanwhile businesses get tax breaks that won't create one single job. All of the money will go into the pockets of the owners.

Sell out of the American people to the rich as usual.
olds73   04:44 AM on 11/05/2009
just a though on the GOP stalling the unemployment bill over and over and over again. do you think that the GOP are smart enough to know that they are going to lost a lot of seats come election time? do you think the GOP knows that the middle class are the ones who will vote them out of office? Do you think the the GOP knows that the the least likely to vote are the poor and homeless? Do you think that the GOP thinks, if we hold up the unemployment bill it will send million of unemployed into poverty, so the people that are going to vote us out are now the people who are the least likely to vote. If these people don't vote we don't lose or jobs. by holding up this bill the GOP has put 7000 people a day into poverty and thus less likely to vote against them. Just a though.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JanPoore   06:16 PM on 11/04/2009
Senate just unaminously passed HR 3548 Unemployment Extension 98-0.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JanPoore   04:21 PM on 11/04/2009
The Senate is starting to vote on HR 3548 - unemployment bill.
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lafayette2009   03:54 PM on 11/04/2009
Here are the Republicans who are either up for reelection or are retiring and not running in November 2010 so there are 18 Republican seats on the ticket PLUS the seat of Arlen Specter which is classed as a seat for the Republicans because he was one when voted in so there are actually 19.

If you truly feel strongly about how they are behaving in the Senate in terms of holding up bills that re important to you then you have the power VETO with your VOTE. If you feel strongly and don't VOTE then you have no right to complain.

You can check daily who voted for what at: http://www.senate.gov/ and just click on the "VOTES" link. In today's vote, DeMint was the only NAY vote and there were 2 No Votes, one of whom was Byrd.

2010 Republican Seats up for Reelection:

Robert Bennett (UT)
Christopher Bond (MO) - retiring
Sam Brownback (KS) - retiring
Jim Bunning (KY)
Richard Burr (NC)
Tom Coburn (OK)
Mike Crapo (ID)
Jim DeMint (SC)
Chuck Grassley (IA)
Judd Gregg (NH)
Johnny Isakson (GA)
Mel Martinez (FL) - retiring
John McCain (AZ)
Lisa Murkowski (AK)
Richard Shelby (AL)
John Thune (SD)
David Vitter (LA)
George Voinovich (OH) - retiring
CherokeeAmerican   03:51 PM on 11/04/2009
Why do you think Bush and Kerry were both members of the skull and bones at Yale?
The political parties work together for the benefit of elites. The m3dia is like the Pravda newspaper, a mouthpiece owned by wealthy for the wealthy.

see jclifford's article Democrats Join Republicans To Defeat Health Care Reform

This morning, Senator John Rockefeller proposed an amendment to the pro-insurance legislation crafted by Max Baucus. The Rockefeller amendment would have added Barack Obama’s public option back into the legislation. Unfortunately, 5 Democrats, including Baucus, joined the Republicans to defeat the amendment. The vote was:
CherokeeAmerican   03:44 PM on 11/04/2009
Sorry, the diagram didn't turn out too well in the post below. Just think of the parties as two walls, each proping up the other.
CherokeeAmerican   03:42 PM on 11/04/2009
Remember this basic diagram and you will fully understand the political process. The two major parties prop each other up so that people do not become angry enough to rev0lt. The elite play one side against the other to remain in control. With only one party, the shifting tide of public opinion would easily topple the elite from their perch. This is not conspiracy theory. It is simply truth.
ELITE
OO
O O
DEMOCRATIC O O REPUBLICANS
LEADERS O O LEADERS
O O
O O
people ..............> O O ..................
cokids   01:47 PM on 11/04/2009
We will remember. Yes, Republicans we DO remember and we DO vote!!
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Grannysue   12:58 PM on 11/04/2009
I've been unemployed since July, if the GOP thinks these kind of tactics endear them to anyone they have their collective heads up their asses!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JanPoore   01:47 PM on 11/04/2009
You're lucky. Try being unemployed for 3 years as a 63 professional in this economy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dianhow   12:53 PM on 11/04/2009
Repubs say NO to extension NO surprise there
If it helps average folks-they always
VOTE NO
yvonne61   12:31 PM on 11/04/2009
DEMINT VOTING NO JUST NOW
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JanPoore   01:48 PM on 11/04/2009
Tell us something we don't already know.
yvonne61   12:29 PM on 11/04/2009
WHY YOU THINK THE REPUBLIC BEING NICE TODAY BECAUSE THEY WON 2 ELECTION LAST NIGHT.
yvonne61   12:25 PM on 11/04/2009
IF IT PASS HOW FAST WOULD IT REACH THE PEOPLE.
yvonne61   12:20 PM on 11/04/2009
SOME REPUBLIC STILL VOTING NO ON THIS BILL
yvonne61   12:31 PM on 11/04/2009
I THOUGHT WRONG

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