[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 41 (Wednesday, March 12, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H2307]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
EXTEND FEDERAL UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Missouri (Mr. Cleaver) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CLEAVER. Mr. Speaker, sometimes you just have to say enough is
enough. I stand before you today in the hopes that we can come together
and understand that today is that day. Enough is enough.
Federal unemployment insurance must be extended--and extended
quickly. It is time. In fact, it is past time. There are now more than
2 million Americans struggling to get some kind of existence in place
each day after having this critical lifeline cut off this past
December. The number climbs each day.
I could talk to you about the human toll of this disgraceful play of
putrid and petty partisan politics, like the 57-year-old woman
preparing to live in her car, the 34-year-old mother wondering how she
will pay rent and feed the kids at the same time, and the 47-year-old
man who made himself a career in manufacturing but lost his job due to
layoffs a year ago and now describes himself as ``in a panic.''
These and millions of other Americans, including almost 35,000 in my
home State of Missouri alone, are hardworking people who have played by
the rules and found themselves out of work through no fault of their
own. And now new data shows that some 200,000 of those who have been
brushed aside are veterans. They have gone to Iraq. They have gone to
Afghanistan. These are men and women we should not throw aside.
Let's stop the harmful and fact-free rhetoric that paints these
fellow Americans--our neighbors, our friends, and our veterans--as
people trying to game the system, people trying to get something for
nothing, people who just ``don't want to work.'' Phooey. Rats. Sheesh.
Yecch. It is time for us to act.
The contrary is true. Recipients of unemployment insurance are a very
diverse group, with almost half having completed at least some college
and almost 5 million of them holding bachelor's degrees or higher. The
stereotypes don't work here; and when we stereotype, we move our
constituents to corroborate.
These are people for whom the stakes could not be higher. These are
people who have worked all or most of their lives and gotten hit--and
hit hard--in the recession that ominously hit in 2008. These are people
who want to work, spend their days trying to find work, and now are
slowly sinking into a financial abyss while we here in Washington play
games.
Sometimes you just have to say enough is enough. There are times when
we must just put politics aside and act on what is in the best
interests of the country.
It is my hope, Mr. Speaker, that this Congress will act--and act
quickly.
____________________