Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP virus policies betray businesses

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In the pantheon of deliberate­ly petulant policies from red-state leaders eager to show the base how recklessly they will resist pandemic safety measures, one stands out: A handful of Republican-led states now offer unemployme­nt benefits to workers who get fired for refusing to abide by their employers’ vaccine mandates. Other red states, including Missouri, may soon join them. It’s a pandering stunt that puts Republican politician­s at odds not only with public health experts, but with the business community they supposedly revere.

As we wrote in early November, Missouri Gov. Mike Parson’s considerat­ion of such a policy would effectivel­y reward those who selfishly risk spreading the coronaviru­s to co-workers and customers, while sticking their employers with the bill. That’s because it’s the employers who pay into the unemployme­nt pool that those workers would draw from.

Normally, only workers who lose their jobs through no fault of their own qualify for unemployme­nt. What Parson has pondered, and what at least five other states have done, according to a recent Washington Post roundup, is to change those rules so that workers fired for deliberate­ly violating their employers’ workplace rules regarding vaccinatio­n can collect unemployme­nt — which the employers ultimately pay for.

In case that scenario isn’t galling enough, consider the context: Most of these Republican states, including Missouri, earlier cut off enhanced unemployme­nt benefits to workers who had been displaced by the pandemic, as a lever to force them to get back to work.

So a worker who is hesitant to return to the job for fear of being infected by a deadly virus is undeservin­g of unemployme­nt benefits. But one who gets fired for refusing to take a simple, basic step to prevent transmissi­on of that virus gets to start cashing checks. Welcome to the upside-down world of Republican politics today.

The sick irony doesn’t stop there. The GOP has long fancied itself the pro-business party, endlessly pontificat­ing about the importance of letting private businesses run their own affairs, free from government-created costs. Yet the five red states that have done this so far — Arkansas, Florida, Iowa, Kansas and Tennessee — are effectivel­y punishing private businesses for making the choice to impose responsibl­e pandemic policies, by forcing them to pay unemployme­nt to workers fired for violating those policies.

“We don’t want to see undue costs brought into play as a result of this,” Missouri Chamber of Commerce President Dan Mehan told The Post, explaining why his organizati­on will be in the unusual position this year of doing battle with the state’s Republican leaders, should they attempt to join the list of states that reward pandemic recklessne­ss on business’ dime.

Mehan added: “Usually, this threat is not coming from the Republican side.” But in today’s GOP, business autonomy, like public health, must be sacrificed for the political imperative of pandering to the base.

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