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Waiters Would Rather Collect Unemployment Than Work Amid Deadly Pandemic
Ted Cruz calls out “waiters and waitresses” for not wanting to return to work thanks to the $600/week unemployment check
With the coronavirus stimulus package’s extra $600 weekly unemployment payments set to expire at the end of this month, lawmakers are locked in a largely bipartisan conflict over whether to extend the $600/week checks during the worst unemployment crisis in modern history, or to reduce the amount of additional aid as a way to get people to return to work.
As the Washington Post reports, “Republicans do not want to extend the full $600-per-week benefit, which they insist provides a disincentive for people to go back to work.” Ted Cruz (R-Texas) echoed the party sentiment on a July 26 Face the Nation appearance, in which he called out “waiters and waitresses” for not wanting to go back to work as long as the extra unemployment benefits stand. Per the CBS transcript:
Instead, Cruz opines that rather than “just shoveling trillions out the door,” lawmakers should focus on passing a recovery bill that focuses on deregulation and payroll tax suspension. That would give “a pay raise to everyone in America who’s working,” he continues. But not, you know, all the waiters and waitresses and busboys who are out of work.
Ted Cruz calls out “waiters and waitresses” for not wanting to return to work thanks to the $600/week unemployment check
With the coronavirus stimulus package’s extra $600 weekly unemployment payments set to expire at the end of this month, lawmakers are locked in a largely bipartisan conflict over whether to extend the $600/week checks during the worst unemployment crisis in modern history, or to reduce the amount of additional aid as a way to get people to return to work.
As the Washington Post reports, “Republicans do not want to extend the full $600-per-week benefit, which they insist provides a disincentive for people to go back to work.” Ted Cruz (R-Texas) echoed the party sentiment on a July 26 Face the Nation appearance, in which he called out “waiters and waitresses” for not wanting to go back to work as long as the extra unemployment benefits stand. Per the CBS transcript:
Now, Cruz correctly identifies why the average worker would prefer staying home with the coronavirus unemployment check over forfeiting it in order to return to potentially risky workplaces. But he fails to extrapolate the larger, damning diagnosis from that symptom: If employers can’t compete with unemployment benefits that equate to a living wage, then there’s obviously a massive problem with how much workers — especially those in food service, janitorial, retail, and other lower paid occupational fields — are paid in this country. And, of course, he’s ignoring the health risks of forcing people back to work during a pandemic that’s claimed almost 150K lives in the U.S. alone.[T]he problem is, for 68% of people receiving it right now, they are being paid more on unemployment than they made in their job. And I’ll tell you, I’ve spoken to small business owners all over the state of Texas who are trying to reopen and they’re calling their- their waiters and waitresses … they’re calling their busboys, and they won’t come back. And, of course, they won’t come back because the federal government is paying them, in some instances, twice as much money to stay home.
Instead, Cruz opines that rather than “just shoveling trillions out the door,” lawmakers should focus on passing a recovery bill that focuses on deregulation and payroll tax suspension. That would give “a pay raise to everyone in America who’s working,” he continues. But not, you know, all the waiters and waitresses and busboys who are out of work.