Think Progress relayed Heller's remarks, which were made at a Republican Party function in Elko, Nevada, and reported in the local paper:
Heller said the current economic downturn and policies may bring back the hobos of the Great Depression, people who wandered the country taking odd jobs. He said a study found that people who are out of work longer than two years have only a 50 percent chance of getting back into the workforce.
"I believe there should be a federal safety net," Heller said, but he questioned the wisdom of extending unemployment benefits yet again to a total of 24 months, which Congress is doing. "Is the government now creating hobos?" he asked.
Heller doesn't seem bothered by the fact that he hails from a state with one of the nation's highest unemployment rates-now more than 13 percent-as well as its highest foreclosure rate. In his speech, he managed to blame everything on the Democrats. "Six percent of Americans believe the stimulus package created jobs. More Americans believe Elvis is still alive," he said. Never mind that the extended unemployment benefits Heller derided are in fact among the most effective components the stimulus package, according to the Congressional Budget Office, producing $1.90 in growth for every $1 spent.
What makes Heller's statement really stupid, of course, is that people could become hobos if Congress doesn't extend unemployment benefits, rather than if they do. Modest as they are, these weekly benefits are what's keeping thousands-and perhaps millions-of families out of poverty. The benefits that expire first are for people who have been out of work the longest, and are most likely to be living close to the edge already.
The same is true for the other social safety net programs that Republicans tend to despise. For example, without Social Security, according to the Alliance for Retired Americans, "55% of severely disabled workers and their families would live in poverty; 47% of elderly households would live in poverty; another 1.3 million children would fall into poverty; and 2.4 million grandparent-headed households caring for 4.5 million grandchildren would be deprived of [their] most important source of income." Yet Social Security, too, has long been under attack by conservatives-a position that's lately gained bipartisan ground, as reflected in Obama's bipartisan "debt commission," which is aimed at reducing entitlements.
The heydey of hobos was during the Great Depression, before the New Deal began to weave the social safety net. If Nelson and his fellow Republicans want to see Americans riding the rails, living in tent cities, and lining up at soup kitchens (even more than they already are), all they have to do is keep tearing that safety net apart.