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Senate Jobs Bill Vote Passed

ANDREW TAYLOR   02/24/10 08:27 PM ET   AP

Senate Jobs Bill Vote
The Senate is expected to pass a modest jobs bill today.

WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats delivered the first of several promised election-year jobs bills Wednesday, passing a measure blending highway funding eagerly sought by the states with tax breaks for companies that hire unemployed workers.

The bipartisan 70-28 vote to pass the bill sends it to the House, where many Democrats say it is too puny – but where pressure is on to pass it this week anyway to score a badly needed win for President Barack Obama and a Democratic Party that's dropped badly in opinion polls and faces major losses in midterm elections.

It's the first major bill to pass the Senate since the Christmas Eve passage of a deeply controversial health care bill and the subsequent election of Massachusetts Republican Scott Brown, which rocked Democrats by demonstrating their falling standing even among voters who tend to vote Democratic.

Democrats promise additional measures to create jobs, promising help for small businesses having trouble getting loans, aid for cash-strapped state governments, and subsidies for people who make their homes more energy efficient. But budget deficits are a worry, and future measures are going to be more difficult to pass – especially since a top Senate Democrat has blocked unused authority from the Wall Street bailout program from being used to "pay for" jobs initiatives.

The bill contains two major provisions. First, it would exempt businesses hiring the unemployed from the 6.2 percent Social Security payroll tax through December and give them an additional $1,000 credit if new workers stay on the job a full year. The Social Security trust funds would be reimbursed for the lost revenue.

Second, it would extend highway and mass transit programs through the end of the year and pump $20 billion into them in time for the spring construction season. The money would make up for lower-than-expected gasoline tax revenues.

Some House Democrats complained that the Senate bill would unfairly favor states like California and Illinois at the expense of almost every other. But Pelosi spokesman Brendan Daly said lawmakers were working to resolve the issue.

"We are on a path to move forward this week," Daly said in an e-mail.

The Senate's $35 billion proposal – blending $15 billion in tax cuts and subsidies for infrastructure bonds issued by local governments with the $20 billion in transportation money – is a far smaller measure than the $862 billion economic stimulus bill enacted a year ago.

The measure cleared a key hurdle Monday when Brown and four other Republicans broke party ranks to defeat a filibuster. Republican leaders said Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., had used strong-arm tactics to bring the measure to the floor.

Brown took considerable heat from conservative commentators and bloggers for his Monday vote, though 12 other Republicans voted for the bill on Wednesday. Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska was the only Democrat in opposition.

Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, top Republican on the Senate Budget Committee, blasted the measure for increasing the budget deficit to fund highway and transit programs. He said the measure made a joke of Democratic promises to adhere to "pay-as-you-go" budget rules requiring new spending programs to not increase the deficit.

"I don't think you get people back to work in this nation by loading more and more debt onto the next generation," Gregg said.

The bill would be paid for in part by a crackdown on international tax cheats, an issue the Internal Revenue Service and the Obama administration have embraced.

The new hiring tax credit could spur about 250,000 new jobs, according to economist Mark Zandi of Moody's Economy.com. The economy has shed 8.4 million jobs since the recession began in December, 2007.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., a sponsor of the hiring tax break, said it would have an immediate impact since businesses won't have to apply for it when doing their taxes a year from now.

"It immediately takes effect," Schumer said. "It goes right to small businesses."

In addition to the hiring tax incentives and highway funding, the bill would extend a tax break for small businesses buying new equipment and modestly expand an initiative that helps state and local governments finance infrastructure projects.

Before lawmakers can pass more jobs legislation, the Senate will have to first approve a stopgap measure to continue the help for the unemployed and doctors in the Medicare program that Reid had dropped from the earlier jobs legislation. The help currently expires on Feb. 28.

Reid has promised to advance longer-term help for the unemployed and a host of other measures as early as next week.

Senators acknowledged that the bill passed Wednesday will not put a huge dent in the nation's unemployment rate.

"This package is not a panacea. It's not going to solve everything," Schumer said. "But because we have a jobs agenda, not just a jobs bill, we will keep at it and at it and at it."

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WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats delivered the first of several promised election-year jobs bills Wednesday, passing a measure blending highway funding eagerly sought by the states with tax breaks ...
WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats delivered the first of several promised election-year jobs bills Wednesday, passing a measure blending highway funding eagerly sought by the states with tax breaks ...
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02:09 PM on 03/18/2010
862 billion to the asswhipes that got us into all this down economy crap (watch 3/16/10 Daily Show on Comedy Central), and we/the American Workers get 0.02 percent of that amount or 20 billion to stimulate jobs for freeways? Our vehicles can handle the roads, we need more jobs then 300k. Approximately 19.1 million are left with dick/nada/nothing. What a load of crap!!! However, with these idiots - something is better then nothing. Thanks for the bread crumb...
10:01 AM on 02/25/2010
Tax breaks for businesses to hire unemployed workers only empowers rotten employers more. This gives them the advantage to press more on good workers already working hard enough. We are not slaves, this is not a way for workers to work in America. I wish I had a better suggestion to stimulate job growth. I am at a loss as many others are on how to approach this. I just worry that some floodgates are hard to close once you open them.
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DavidShort
05:26 AM on 02/25/2010
This is obviously just a first in a long string of pork projects designed to give Congressmen (persons?) something to point to when they say they are serious about the unemployment situation in the US. What bunk! I was afraid of this, Democrats throwing money around trying to buy their seats, and Republicans doing anything to combat the 'Party of No' tag they have been wearing.

The real reason the recovery is going so slow is governmental policy. Businesses are afraid to move at this point because of 1) slow or no growth in demand for products and/or services, and 2) uncertainty of what will come out of Washington in the form of taxes and additional mandates. What the business world needs is stability, above all else. With the threat of Health Care and Cap and Trade looming, along with their mandates and increased costs, no one is getting crazy with their spending. As long as this is hanging in the air, the recovery will drag along. If they are passed, the recovery will take even longer.

Even on the surface, this bill puts the cart before the horse. Jobs will come back as demand increases. Jobs are a result, not a cause, of economic activity. You can't legislate the result and expect the cause to follow. But, if the Tyranny on the Patomac did what they really should (get out of the way) they would have nothing to crow on about this November.
MyrtleJune
STOP negotiating! End the American hostage crisis!
02:05 AM on 02/25/2010
"I don't think you get people back to work in this nation by loading more and more debt onto the next generation," Gregg said

Oh but I'm sure mr Gregg sure thinks handing out unpaid for tax cuts to inflate the deficit was juuuuuuust fine and dandy for the bushie years! You can't have it both ways here. One depleats the tax base and one INVESTS in this country to build the tax base to pay for the bush tax cuts and the bushie wars. These people should not be allowed to say these crazy things without being called on it!

This article is poorly written.... I mean journalistically. As a republican meme builder it is pretty much par for the course though.
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10:18 AM on 02/25/2010
Speaking of the jobs bill, here's my state Representive's idea for creating jobs: Make the Bush tax cuts permanent! And then pile on more tax cuts for the wealthy!

An excerpt from his email to me as one of his constituents (woe is me):

"*First, the best way to get American families and businesses moving again is to allow them to keep more of their income. I propose a series of broad-based tax cuts:*

*Make the Bush Tax Cuts Permanent.

*Reduce the corporate tax rate to 25% (from 35%, second highest in the industrialized world).

*Reduce tax rates on capital gains and dividends - so we can unleash
the power of entrepreneurs to reinvest in business.

*Permanently repeal the Death Tax – so businesses can transfer business capital to the next generation."
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Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
09:48 PM on 02/25/2010
I love his rationale for repeal of the so-called death tax. Since corporations never actually die, they don't pass on didley to the "next generation". By "businesses" he really means "aristocracy".
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10:20 AM on 02/25/2010
And here's my reply to the distinguished Congressman:

Dear Congressman Lamborn,

Cutting taxes for the wealthy has not had the "trickle down" effect
Republicans consistently insisted would follow. The Bush tax cuts have
allowed corporations and Wall Street gamblers to avoid their fair share
of taxes. This corporate welfare has not resulted in job growth over
the past decade (as labor studies have indicated). Furthermore, these
same corporations have jumped on the band wagon to ship American jobs
overseas and have suppressed wages at an unprecedented level even while
enjoying record tax breaks that working class families cannot claim for
themselves. It is time that corporations and the wealthy begin
contributing their fair share. I look forward to the expiration of the
Bush tax cuts. In light of the record budget deficits accumulated
throughout George W. Bush’s presidency, making the Bush tax cuts
permanent and decreasing taxes further for the wealthy is not feasible.
Even your own conservative Cato Institute agrees:
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=6621

Look around you. Note the suffering of average Americans as opposed to
your wealthy sponsors. Look at what is happening to Colorado cities due
to revenue shortfalls. Do you really expect struggling families to
carry the tax burden alone? If this is the best you can do for Colorado
workers, then what good are you?

Sincerely,
(personal contact information omitted)
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Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
09:34 PM on 02/25/2010
Dear (personal contact information omitted),

Thank you for your letter regarding trickle-down economics. We here at the Congressman Lampoon Corporation are in favor of trickle-down. Thank you for your support. We are also good friends with the CATO Institute Corporation, and we read their publications.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for your generous support of our organization and would like to ask at this time for a donation for the upcoming campaign. Since you are writing a letter to our corporation, we understand that you are our constituent, and therefore, filthy rich. Give us your money. Please click the "donate" link, below.

Colorado has never been better, thanks to the great leadership of Congressman Lampoon. We're sure that you will agree. Please click the "donate" link below.

Sincerely,

Office of Congressman Lampoon
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BigHound1
Above all, seek wisdom and understanding
12:15 AM on 02/25/2010
It is time for our Democratic Senators to grow some teeth. They did a good job on this one. Once the Senators were able to meet the 60 threshold to prevent a fillibuster, 13 Republicans Senators saw the bill good enough to vote for it. I take special note in seeing the two Mississippi Senators voting for the bill after the fact. They would have especially had a tough time telling their "good ole boys back home" that they didn't vote to help them get jobs.

I'm ready to get health care reform passed by Reconciliation and finally show Americans just who are losers and want everybody else to lose.

It's time for our legislators to get on with the business of this country now.
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GoldStarMom
Reading is Fundamentalism ... in Texas.
11:52 PM on 02/24/2010
The bill would be paid for in part by a crackdown on international tax cheats, an issue the Internal Revenue Service and the Obama administration have embraced.

Sounds like a good idea to me. Nail all the corporations that are shipping American jobs out to "sweat shop/slave wage" countries and stuffing what they owe in taxes into off-shore bank accounts. Toss in import tariffs and you might be getting someplace.
09:58 PM on 02/24/2010
One other thing : To create jobs you need to incentivise. This would be an especially good idea for the alternative energy industries or what we hope will become industries. Offer big incentives for investors and manufacturers to research / develop and produce new clean energy gadgets which are economical to buy and install for the consumer. We don't need more road construction we need cheap solar panels and wind energy devices that let us get off the grid and free ourselves from the energy conglomerates. So, you offer incentives to small and large businesses alike and you offer incentives which they are doing (somewhat) to the consumer for buying in. Mass transit and light rail would put thousands of laid off auto workers back to work plus put them back into the hiring busuness. It has been suggested that the idle auto factories could be put to use for exactly this purpose. We need light rail in my city and can't afford to build it. That's just wrong ! Kill two birds with one stone whenever you get a chance but what they seem to be doing is killing the golden goose !
09:42 PM on 02/24/2010
More money to the black hole of the State coffers ! What a waste ! We don't exactly know what hapened to the last round of Stimulus monies. We do know that it may have kept teachers, fire, police and city workers from loosing their jobs ; which is fine. And it may have gotten work for construction workers who were already employed and it may have employed a few more to boot. That leaves the vast majority of unemployed still ...Unemployed ! Two things: First ; the "Make Home Affordable " program should be broadened and simplified and administered directly by the mortage co's instead of their hired collections agencies. Next : The fist Stimulus Package was $862. Billion : Consumer debt is $775. Billion (give or take a billion or two). If the government had paid off all consumer debt they would still have had money left over: They wouldn't have had to bail out banks because they would have been flush w/ the debt payoff $$. Leaving more left over. Consumers freed of debt will spend which creates jobs. They still could have bailed out GM : let Chrystler & AI G fail and been much further ahead. Job losses wouldn't have been near what they are and confidence and approval would have been way up. What do they want to do instead ? The same mistake over and over !
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Crumbx
09:37 PM on 02/24/2010
Obama is just a more classy version of Bush. He has not done one GD thing other than TALK about ending "Don't Ask, Don't Tell". Other than that he hasn't done one thing a Republican wouldn't have done. Ok--stem cell research and abortion funding internationally (but not here--oh no.) Where is the liberalism? Its not there. Does anyone on Huffingtonpost even know what a liberal stands for anymore? Certainly not this tricked up Republican so-called jobs bill. I am a small businessman but since there is no greater a demand for my services this year than last year I won't be taking a tax credit for hiring a person who is just standing around my office, thank you. This is such a big joke--and the jokes on us. With the liberals and the Republicans agreeing that Obama is liberal, Obama is getting propers for being a liberal without supporting anything remotely progressive, and the Republicans get what they want because they're shifting the entire country to the right by defining Obama's weak proposals as "liberal". It is sickening to watch and I'm done with participating in any of it.
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Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
09:22 PM on 02/25/2010
Yeah, right. So THAT is why Obama sent the marines to Iran----NOT.
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jjsardo
Proud liberal in a red state.
09:30 PM on 02/24/2010
These right wing reactionaries, Republican Judd Gregg and Democrat Ben Nelson, need to be exposed for the extremists that they are. I hesitate to use the c-word to describe them for their positions on almost all issues lay far to the right of rational conservatism. (And I believe I just committed an oxymoron).

In any case, Nelson of Nebraska reminds us time and again that the liberal agenda is blocked not only by Republicans but by c-word Democrats as well.

The cruelty exhibited by these two men toward their suffering fellow Americans is beyond belief. As for the other c-word extremists who voted against this very modest bill they need to be taken to task by their constituents for their compassionless vote against millions on the edge of despair.

Nearly all of our states and millions of Americans are in desperate need massive Federal assistance. Senators who voted against this meager package displayed a ruthless contempt for their fellow countrymen.

Where do we get the money? Ask Benny B. He put Wall Street on the dole for trillions. Surely he can part with some fast cash for the rest of the country. And by the way Benny if you’re puzzled about where the rest of the country is, it’s the part that’s not on Wall Street.
09:00 PM on 02/24/2010
you call this a jobs bill?
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Anthrofreak
09:24 PM on 02/24/2010
what do you propose? Did you contact your Senator with your proposal?
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Tyrione
11:01 PM on 02/24/2010
It's probably too busy coming up with cute handles to pay homage to j-lo.
07:59 PM on 02/24/2010
While not enough to deal with all the issues regarding unemployment right now, this bill is a step forward in the right direction. Maybe small bills like this one is the way to go. They got support from 13 Republicans, including Senators Hatch,atm scare senator Burr, Cochran and Wicker from MS, Scott Brown and a vote I find somewhat surprising, LeMieux (FL) who was appointed by Crist. I would assume that LeMieux would not want to give the Rubio camp more material against Crist by associating his vote an Obama/Reid bill. Once again, the only democrat who voted against this bill was Ben Nelson, what's wrong with that guy?
07:46 PM on 02/24/2010
I'm honestly trying to figure out what would be the point of this, politically and strategically speaking. I mean, what's the biggest, most immediate concern right now? Filling potholes in Ohio or extending unemployment for folks who are day away from destitution, if they haven't already reached that critical point yet. I'm really not understanding why this is being prolonged, especially given that there was no vote to extend the deadline before unemployment benefits would expire for millions of people in a few days and yet this problem is going to be tackled "as early as next week"? I'm really NOT ranting here, I really would like to know what some of you think about the "strategy" of this approach because I am clueless at this point!
08:16 PM on 02/24/2010
I believe the Dems tried to extend unemployment benefits and the Repubs filibustered.

You should verify this for yourself and see who really stands up for the middle and lower class.
09:03 PM on 02/24/2010
just to clarify, please understand that these unemployment extensions do NOT apply to everyone ~ it depends on the unemployment rate in your state. in my state we just stopped receiving extensions ~ but that does NOT mean we've all been able to find jobs.
07:45 PM on 02/24/2010
I see it mentions tax breaks, bonds, and transportation money. Where is there anything about reindustrialization, creating new jobs, or new job training, or anything directly aimed at working people?

I get it--If I have a company and hire some folks I get a tax break. 15 of the 35 billion, as far as I can tell goes toward that--and bonds.

But if the banks are still not lending to small businesses--and they've reached a level not seen since the early nineties--and consumers are still tightening their belts because they've been unemployed so long they can't afford to buy anything, even if I want to hire, how do I? My small business is as strapped as the working consumers I depend on.

And let's face it--the Federal Gov. gave over 183 Billion Dollars just to one company--AIG--to bail them out. The total of the bailout is a trillion or more.

And the best they can do for this misnamed Jobs Bill is chump change.
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rr52
The fighter still remains...
08:13 PM on 02/24/2010
Most states have job retraining programs, create jobs for your area, etc. Remember the Repugs love their state's rights.
07:28 PM on 02/24/2010
Congress had better extend unemployment comp for the long term unemployed before Feb. 28 or it will mean 5 million unemployed drop off the unemployment rolls and into unmployment "limbo" on March 1!!

It will be a sure SPIKE in the coffin of congressional Democrats if they don't do something about it TODAY!!!!!!
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johnb123
All I ask..just be reasonable....do things my way
07:37 PM on 02/24/2010
This is an election year, they should pass another extension if they want any hope of being re-elected. I'm still voting EVERY incumbent out anyway.
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Eris23Skidoo
Dischordian Keynesian
09:19 PM on 02/25/2010
It is a good thing that you only have a say in your own state.
08:36 PM on 02/24/2010
u/e extension has been put off until next week.