The two parties representing monopoly uhh oligopoly capital stage a
charade over giving crumbs from the table of the bourgeois' bounteous
feast to the relative surplus population.

Big Brother

^^^^^^^^^


Dems ready for jobless benefits vote

http://www.detnews.com/article/20100720/POLITICS03/7200360/1020/Dems-ready-for-jobless-benefits-vote


Obama attacks GOP after 60th vote is secured to break Senate impasse
Andrew Taylor / Associated Press
Washington -- With a new face and a 60th vote for breaking a
Republican filibuster, Senate Democrats are preparing to restore
jobless checks for 2.5 million people whose benefits ran out during a
congressional standoff over deficit spending.

But first, President Barack Obama and his Democratic allies are
pressing for maximum political advantage, blaming Republicans for an
impasse that halted unemployment checks averaging $309 a week for
those whose eligibility had expired.

Obama launched a fresh salvo on Monday, demanding that the Senate act
on the legislation -- after a vote already had been scheduled for
today -- and blasting Republicans for the holdup.


 "The same people who didn't have any problem spending hundreds of
billions of dollars on tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans are now
saying we shouldn't offer relief to middle-class Americans," Obama
said.

Republicans say they do favor the benefits but are insisting that they
be paid for with spending cuts elsewhere in the government's $3.7
trillion budget. After initially feeling the heat when a lone GOP
senator, Jim Bunning of Kentucky, briefly blocked a benefits extension
back in February, the GOP has grown increasingly comfortable in
opposing the legislation.

"What the president isn't telling the American people is that many of
us in the Senate are fighting to make sure our children and
grandchildren aren't buried under a mountain of debt," said Sen. Orrin
Hatch, R-Utah. "If we are going to extend unemployment benefits, then
let's do it without adding to our record debt."

Today's Senate voting -- with Democratic newcomer Carte Goodwin of
West Virginia being sworn in just in time to cast the 60th vote to
break a GOP filibuster -- will cap a battle of more than four months
that's featured bad blood and a shift in sentiment among key
Republicans.

Though the economy is said to be slowly recovering, the jobless rate
remains painfully high at 9.5 percent.

The Senate is likely to pass the current measure late today. The House
is expected to clear it for Obama's signature as soon as Wednesday.

Two Republicans, Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins of Maine, are
expected to vote with the Democrats today, as they did at the end of
June. The measure stalled then because the death of Robert Byrd,
D-W.Va., and the participation in the filibuster of Nebraska Democrat
Ben Nelson left the party one short of the 60 votes needed.

With Goodwin, the Senate breakdown is 57 Democrats, 41 Republicans and
two independents who normally vote with the Democrats.



>From The Detroit News:
http://www.detnews.com/article/20100720/POLITICS03/7200360/1020/Dems-ready-for-jobless-benefits-vote#ixzz0uEfmU9ix
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