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Benghazi, IRS, Leaks -- WHAT ABOUT JOBS??

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Robert Weiner
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The nation's media are transfixed with obsessive coverage of Hillary Clinton's role (there was none) in the talking points on the Benghazi deaths, IRS oversight of Tea Party groups' tax deductions (the same way they asked liberal groups, including the NAACP), and the Justice Department's demand for AP's phone records concerning leaks on Yemeni terrorists (after Congress demanded the investigation of the leaks). In addition, the press properly wants to know about Syria, sex abuse in the military, drones, and Guantanamo.
Meanwhile, WHAT ABOUT JOBS? That's the real problem that will define our future success as a country for the rest of this century, and it is a question Rep. John Conyers is asking. The silence has been deafening. At the President's news conferences, which we attended this week and last week, there was not a single question from the media about jobs.
Despite the Dow reaching all-time highs, the number of jobs available has seen no such luck. "Are we in the midst of a jobless recovery?" asked MSNBC's Chuck Todd last week on "Andrea Mitchell Reports." According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, unemployment is at 7.5%. Though that is the lowest it has been in the last four years, the U.S. post-World War II norm is about 5% unemployment and has often been at 4% or under.
Michigan's unemployment rate is a staggering 8.5%. Michigan tops the list for African Americans who are unemployed at 18.7%.

What are the major factors contributing to the slow recovery of jobs in the US? Outsourcing is at the top of the list. Shipping jobs overseas for cheaper labor hinders the opportunity for job growth. Moreover, based on recent tragic events in Bangladesh's and China's factories, keeping jobs onshore would save lives, since companies would be regulated under U.S. standards. Unfortunately, major companies would prefer to increase their profit margins rather than make jobs now shipped overseas available for Americans who need them. Yet, U.S. company profits are not at issue--they are at all-time records. It's our jobs--the factor which helps most American families--that are at low numbers.
There is a glimmer of hope, however. Last week the President began a series of what he calls "Middle Class Job and Opportunity Tours." According to White House spokesman Josh Earnest, the President will visit cities exhibiting job growth to "learn what has helped them become successful and use these models of growth to encourage Congress to act." He launched his first events in Austin, Texas and Baltimore, Maryland. Although it is a start, we need more than just stump speeches; we need immediate action.  
Rep. John Conyers (D-MI), the Dean of the Congressional Black Caucus, has reintroduced his "Humphrey-Hawkins 21st Century Full Employment and Training Act" and is creating a "Jobs Caucus". The Act is a "jobs-for-all" bill that would create millions of new fast-track jobs and allocate billions of dollars for job training." At present, the bill has 35 cosponsors, and more are expected. It is hoped that Conyers can generate the same noise and clamor he did in behalf of the single-payer health care bill. It goes without saying that he made the President's health bill a better one. He can do the same on jobs by making sure that they get included on the agenda--not just debt, deficits, austerity, and tax breaks for the rich.
Conyers is pressing the issue. At his weekly jobs strategy meeting, where he pulls in national, Michigan and Detroit organizations and leaders, he said that every time he sees the President--and Obama listens to him, since Conyers was the first congressman to endorse him--Conyers tells him, "Jobs should be the number one concern. Full employment is the single most important issue on the agenda. Jobs are the way the economy will improve, and government emphasizing employment is the way for families to come out of poverty and joblessness."  End the debt by jobs and productivity, not by cutting programs, says Conyers.
Conyers is also concerned with the social ramifications of high unemployment rates. He says, "When jobs go up, crime goes down. Alcohol and drug use also go down."  
Once again, later this summer, the debt ceiling rears its ugly head. Jobs do not seem to be at the top of the agenda of most in Congress--they are focused more on the deficit, tax cuts, and program cuts, a spiral which we and Europe have seen in the past and makes everything worse. We need JOBS, not austerity. Lest anyone think John Conyers, despite his incredible history, is not out there pitching, they should see his high energy, constant meetings, and leadership discussions pushing jobs onto the national agenda.
By Robert Weiner and Nakia Gladden, and published first in The Michigan Chronicle.

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