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Joe Biden Says Weak Jobs Report 'Makes Clear' Need For More Stimulus

President Joe Biden on Friday called on lawmakers to approve his massive infrastructure and jobs package following a hugely disappointing jobs report showing the economy picked up far fewer jobs than economists expected during the month of April.

“We can’t let up. This jobs report makes that clear. We’ve got too much work to do,” Biden said in remarks at the White House. “We have to build back better.”

Biden spoke shortly after the U.S. Labor Department announced employers added only 266,000 jobs last month and the unemployment rate rose to 6.1%, even as states began relaxing coronavirus restrictions and vaccinations against COVID-19 increased. Economic forecasters expected as many as 1 million more jobs in April.

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Republicans and business owners have been complaining that federal unemployment benefits are preventing laid-off workers from taking new jobs. Congress added $300 per week to state benefits; Republican governors in Montana and South Carolina this week announced they’ll cancel the federal supplement ahead of its September expiration date in order to alleviate a “labor shortage.”

“Today’s disappointing jobs report is a result of the federal government incentivizing people to stay at home and seek enhanced unemployment benefits rather than finding a job, even as employers are actively looking for more workers,” Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) said in a statement.

Another GOP senator, Roger Marshall of Kansas, said he planned to introduce legislation repealing added federal unemployment benefits nationwide.

But the jobs report offered a mixed picture, showing the disappointing overall jobs-added number next to an influx of workers into the labor force, and big gains in the leisure and hospitality industry. That served to undercut the GOP’s argument about unemployment benefits discouraging hiring.

Biden’s proposed American Jobs Plan calls for spending more than $2 trillion to rebuild the nation’s roads, bridges, and airports, as well as hundreds of billions of dollars for long-term care for the elderly and disabled. Another Biden proposal, the American Families Plan, would spend nearly as much to provide Americans cheaper child care, free prekindergarten, and paid family and medical leave.

Millions of Americans have struggled with increased child care responsibilities during the pandemic. Though the number of Americans working or looking for work increased by more than 400,000 in April, labor force participation among women fell by 64,000.

But congressional Republicans have balked at the cost and breadth of Biden’s proposals, as well as his plan to finance them by raising taxes on corporations and wealthy Americans. Despite ongoing negotiations between the White House and top Republicans, the two sides are very far apart on how to pay for new infrastructure projects and even how to define what counts as infrastructure.

“One hundred percent of my focus is on stopping this new administration,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said earlier this week, objecting to Biden’s raft of proposed spending.

A group of GOP senators signaled their willingness to accept an infrastructure package totaling nearly $600 billion ― a fraction of the size called for by the Biden administration. The GOP proposal calls for spending on traditional infrastructure like roads, bridges, and airports, omitting the “human” infrastructure pushed by the White House.

Democrats may ultimately decide to pass a stimulus package on their own if they are unable to win enough GOP support. Congressional leaders initially hoped to send a bill to Biden’s desk by the end of summer or early fall, but April’s jobs report showing a sluggish labor market is likely to accelerate that timeline.

“Democrats in Congress hope to work in a bipartisan spirit to Build Back Better. However, the evidence is clear that the economy demands urgent action, and Congress will not be deterred or delayed from delivering transformational investments For The People,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said in a statement on Friday.

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This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.