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Jobs Bill Defeated Despite Presidential Push

<p>President Obama speaks about job creation and the economy at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local No. 5 Training Center in Pittsburgh on Tuesday.</p>
Saul Loeb
/
AFP/Getty Images

President Obama speaks about job creation and the economy at the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local No. 5 Training Center in Pittsburgh on Tuesday.

Ever since President Obama proposed his $447 billion jobs bill in a joint address to Congress last month, he has been campaigning for it nonstop. He has whipped up crowds all across America who chant, "Pass this bill!"

It contains a variety of measures to fight unemployment — everything from tax breaks for businesses to extended benefits for the jobless. But despite the campaigning, Senate Republicans voted Tuesday to kill the measure. The final vote was 50-49.

Jonathan Cowan of the centrist Democratic group Third Way says that's no big deal — it was always a long shot.

"Whether or not the vote succeeds in the end isn't the crucial point for them politically," Cowan says. "The mere fact that there was a vote, they've shifted the conversation toward jobs, is what they needed."

It's true that Obama has succeeded in shifting the focus to job creation. But he failed to get this bill across the finish line. Even members of his own party jumped ship.

Whether or not the vote succeeds in the end isn't the crucial point for them politically. The mere fact that there was a vote, they've shifted the conversation toward jobs, is what they needed.

GOP: Bill A 'Second Stimulus'

On Tuesday morning, senior White House officials said this is just the first act in a long-term play. They brushed aside the dissent among Democrats and urged Americans instead to look at the Republicans, unanimously voting against job-creation measures.

Of course, Republicans don't believe this bill will create jobs.

"By proposing a second stimulus, Democrats are showing the American people that they have no new ideas for dealing with our jobs crisis," Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said on the Senate floor.

McConnell used the word "stimulus" roughly a dozen times in his 10-minute statement panning the bill known as the American Jobs Act.

"Everyone who votes for this second stimulus will have to answer a simple but important question: Why on earth would you support an approach that we already know will not work?" McConnell said.

In contrast, Obama has his own challenge, for people voting no.

"If you're voting no against this bill," he said, "look a Pittsburgh teacher in the eye and tell them just why they don't deserve to get a paycheck again — and, more importantly, be able to transmit all that knowledge to their kids."

At a union training facility in Pittsburgh on Tuesday, the president accused Republicans of opposing consensus ideas just because the Obama White House supports them.

"It's not about giving Democrats or Republicans a win," he said. "It's about giving the American people who are hurting out there a win. It's about giving small businesses and entrepreneurs and construction workers a win."

I think for the jobs act not to pass, it will only make people more anxious and more concerned about their own future and, therefore, may have a negative impact on confidence and spending.

Portioning Out The Job Creation Platter

The White House took a calculated risk by presenting this as one big job creation platter rather than smaller bite-size pieces that might pass more easily. It's a mix of tax cuts and new spending aimed at small businesses, veterans, the long-term unemployed, teachers, construction crews and more.

Lumping them all together helps Obama rail against a do-nothing Congress. But economist Linda Barrington, who runs Cornell's Institute for Compensation Studies, fears that the strategy could hurt the economy.

"I think we are at a point where confidence, if not reality, is teetering on the brink of 'Are we going to have a second wave of recession? Will this be a double dip?' " Barrington says.

Barrington says it's important to build consumer confidence right now, and Tuesday's vote could have the opposite effect.

"I think for the jobs act not to pass, it will only make people more anxious and more concerned about their own future and, therefore, may have a negative impact on confidence and spending," she says.

Whether this vote has an effect on the economy depends on what Congress does next. Democrats hope to break the proposals apart and consider them piece by piece. Those votes are expected next week at the earliest.

And it's not clear whether Congress will ultimately give Obama most, some or just a few of the items he's asking for.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Ari Shapiro has been one of the hosts of All Things Considered, NPR's award-winning afternoon newsmagazine, since 2015. During his first two years on the program, listenership to All Things Considered grew at an unprecedented rate, with more people tuning in during a typical quarter-hour than any other program on the radio.