It’s no surprise that Fox News and other conservative media outlets think that the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) is too generous to unemployed Americans. For decades, conservatives have argued that various programs -- whether they be food stamps, Social Security, universal basic income, disability assistance programs, or other forms of welfare -- disincentivize work. The rhetoric behind this argument, perhaps most famously employed by Ronald Reagan in his “welfare queen” speeches, plays on people’s resentment of those they might view as freeloaders.
So when people learned that an unemployment provision in the CARES Act would provide people receiving unemployment benefits an additional $600 per week on top of their existing benefits through the end of July, conservative media freaked out. They hammered home a talking point centered on the supposed unfairness of a system that, in some cases, would pay people who are out of work more than they were making when they still had jobs.
Brian Kilmeade argued that people put out of work by the pandemic might not want to return when it becomes available during the April 9 and April 14 editions of Fox & Friends. Sean Hannity made similar arguments.
Fox News’ coverage is to be expected, but it wasn’t the only outlet to use this spin: The generally reputable NPR put out a story promoting the same conservative narrative.
“Bitter Taste For Coffee Shop Owner, As New $600 Jobless Benefit Closed Her Business,” read the original headline to an April 21 story on NPR’s Morning Edition. The story focused on Sky Marietta, the owner of a coffee shop in Harlan, Kentucky.