RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said on Wednesday that he’s preparing to accept for the state extended unemployment benefits that President Donald Trump directed in an executive order, part of the continuing response to the COVID-19 economic downturn.
Cooper, a Democrat, told top Republican legislators of his plan the day after the GOP leaders asked him to act quickly to ensure North Carolina workers can get an additional maximum weekly benefit of at least $300.
Cooper said his administration has started the application to receive the payments, which are coming from federal disaster relief dollars. House Speaker Tim Moore and Senate leader Phil Berger said Tuesday they are prepared to authorize the state’s share of the costs when the General Assembly reconvenes in September.
Last weekend’s executive order came about as congressional Democrats and the Trump administration failed to reach a deal using traditional sources to replace $600-per-week federal pandemic payments that ended July 31.
Cooper made a point in his letter to blast state Republicans for lower state weekly benefits they approved years ago as part of an overhaul of the unemployment benefit system.
“Let me be clear. I refuse to let North Carolinians suffer because Congress and the president have been unable to get the job done and you have failed to help the unemployed,” Cooper wrote to Berger and Moore. A day earlier, Berger and Moore criticized Cooper because his office questioned spending disaster relief dollars on the benefits.
Cooper called on Congress and Trump to negotiate the reinstatement of the $600-per-week federal supplement. He also wants the GOP-controlled legislature to raise the weekly state benefit maximum from $350 per week to at least $500 and double the current 12-week state benefit period when it returns to Raleigh. The legislature failed to reach an agreement in the spring that would have raised the maximum state benefit by another $50 per week.
Berger spokesperson Pat Ryan suggested late Wednesday that Cooper’s demand for even higher benefits could cause a standoff in Raleigh that will lead to no extended benefits.
The governor “should focus on getting the federal supplement out the door instead of finding ways to avoid giving President Trump a win,” Ryan said in an emailed statement. Nothing in Wednesday’s letter directly described an all-or-nothing strategy by the governor, however.