Marco Rubio and Ivanka Trump Keeping Coming up With the Dumbest Ways Possible to Do the Simple Thing of Providing Paid Family Leave
Marco Rubio has spent years trying to distinguish himself as the lonely Republican working to extend paid leave at the federal level, but for some reason is unwilling to have this eventual policy look like the state-level programs that are already working quite well. (Or maybe even funding a universal program with resources that the federal government currently diverts to the wealthiest people in the United States, if you can imagine such a thing.)
In 2015, Rubio proposed a fully voluntary program that would offer employers a 25 percent tax credit for offering four weeks of paid leave. Problem was, that kind of policy would largely replicate patterns we already see from existing market-based incentives.
“Right now, the U.S. doesn’t require it by law, and neither does this proposal. It’s just an incentive,” Terri Boyer, former executive director of the Center for Women and Work at Rutgers University, told me at the time. “In the U.S., there are a number of workers who get paid family leave, but they get it through their employers, and they’re usually higher paid professional workers or workers at larger companies. So when I hear something like a tax credit, I think it’s really just going to provide further financial backing to these companies that have the deeper pockets in the first place.”