Home » US News » Catholic Bishops Ask Congress To Renew Unemployment Insurance

Catholic Bishops Ask Congress To Renew Unemployment Insurance

 

Republican presidential candidates have leaped to the defense of the Roman Catholic Church in its birth-control battle against President Barack Obama’s administration. But while they may agree with the church on contraception and abortion, they’re way out of sync on unemployment insurance.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the official church policy organization, is urging Congress to reauthorize extended unemployment insurance for people out of work six months or longer. Congress must renew the federal benefits or a million people will stop receiving checks in March, according to the National Employment Law Project, a worker advocacy group.

“The most recent drop in unemployment and growth in jobs was welcome news,” wrote Bishop Stephen E. Blaire, chairman of the conference’s Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, in a letter last week to Congress. “However, this recent report highlighted that 23.8 million Americans are still unable to find full-time employment. The median length of joblessness is still 10 months, and economists estimate that there are over four job seekers for every opening. The economy is still leaving too many people without work.”

The church is much more sympathetic to the long-term jobless than are the Republicans running for president, who have said they’d dismantle or privatize the unemployment insurance system, which has provided up to 99 weeks of combined state and federal benefits. Despite their agreement on reproductive issues, unemployment insurance is one of several safety net programs that the Catholic Church supports and the Republican presidential contenders don’t.

“Never again should we pay somebody 99 weeks for doing nothing,” Newt Gingrich said over the weekend. “Think about the total waste of human capability when you teach people to sit at home for 99 weeks. It’s fundamentally wrong and a violation of the Declaration of Independence commitment that we have the right to pursue happiness.”

Gingrich said he’d require unemployment claimants to enroll in job training courses in order to receive benefits. Republicans in Congress want to deny benefits to workers who don’t have high school diplomas and allow states to require drug testing as a condition for receiving benefits.

In his letter, Bishop Blaire suggested the church opposes new conditions on unemployment insurance. [More]

SOURCE

Huffington Post

 
 
 
 

1 Comments

  1. Mary says:

    Take it easy, Bishops.
    Following the liberal, Democratic penchant for distributing hand-outs again?
    You are mixing moral principles, aren’t you?
    Please stop generating confusion.

 
 

Leave a Comment

 




 
 

 
 
 

Switch to our mobile site