During their brief stay in Washington, U.S. House Democrats introduced legislation to create a fifth tier of jobless benefits for the long-term unemployed. Like a similar bill
in the Senate, it would extend the maximum number of weeks of federal
and state benefits available by 20 weeks in states with unemployment
rates over 10 percent. (Illinois would qualify.)
The
odds of passage are long. After all, no Republicans in the U.S. Senate
backed the latest unemployment insurance bill, which was less expansive
than this attempt. Undoubtedly, the Democratic leadership would have to
carve out spending on other worthy programs to ensure the extension is deficit-neutral. But so
long as the number of jobless workers far outweighs the number of job openings, it's a bill progressives ought rally behind.