How much more of this can go on before a 'civil war on unemployment'
breaks out in the 'beacon of hope'

Brian McAndrews
Is Goering's insight useful here?

--------------------------------------------
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
APRIL 4, 2003
2:06 PM
 CONTACT:  AFL-CIO
Kathy Roeder (202) 637-5018



Statement by AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney On Today’s Unemployment
Numbers And the Loss of 2.6 Million Jobs Over Last Two Years

WASHINGTON - April 4 - Today’s report that the economy lost another
108,000 jobs in March is more dismal evidence that current economic
policies are failing to create good jobs that pay well and support
families. On average, America has lost a stunning 105,000 private sector
jobs every month since the President George W. Bush’s inauguration.
Neither the war in Iraq nor the 9/11 attacks explain this disastrous
record: the loss of 2.6 million private sector jobs began before these
events and has been steady ever since. Meanwhile, even as workers
struggle to keep the jobs they have, the administration and Congress
have started to give employers more ways to load up workers with unpaid
hours by taking apart the laws that guarantee overtime pay, thus drying
up even more job opportunities.

The fact that the unemployment rate stayed at 5.8 percent in March does
not balance out discouraging truths about looking for work in America.
More than 1 million people simply gave up looking for work last month, a
jump of 200,000 over this time last year. The number of workers
unemployed for six months or longer, 1.7 million, is up nearly half a
million more than a year ago. And the manufacturing sector, one of the
hardest hit industries since President Bush took office, lost another
36,000 jobs.

The growing crisis for workers in the airline industry, which has lost
more than 150,000 jobs since January 2001, offers a sad example of how
the government has neglected working families. Congress and President
Bush deliberately refused to include assistance to laid-off airline
workers when it passed a corporate bailout bill at the end of 2001 and
the president continues to talk down how much assistance the government
will give, despite massive layoffs.

The unemployed in all industries are paying for the recession with their
jobs, health care and retirement savings. They need emergency jobless
benefits extended until jobs are available again and this time Congress
and President Bush cannot leave out the one million laid-off workers who
exhausted their benefits and still can’t find work.

Two years ago, Congress passed a massive tax cut that President Bush
claimed would create jobs and turn around the economy. Since then, we
have lost jobs and the economic situation has deteriorated. Yet the
president argues we need more of the same medicine – more unbalanced
and unfair tax cuts for the very rich – to create good American jobs.
President Bush is wrong. Congress can build a stronger, more secure
future for all Americans and for our children by building schools and
roads, investing in hospitals and job training. Unbalanced tax breaks
are destroying opportunities for the future and will only further wreck
families’ economic security.


###



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