For many members of Congress, the fight for paid leave is personal.

Rep. Joe Cunningham (D-S.C. 1st District) went right back to work after his son Boone was born. Rep. Colin Allred (D-Texas 32nd District) was up from 1 a.m. to 3 a.m. Thursday morning with his infant son, Jordan.

Both lawmakers joined Republican senators and representatives at the White House on Thursday to share their commitments to paid leave and child care reform.

In a series of panels, governors, lawmakers, and business leaders from across the country came together to talk about solutions for paid leave and child care.

Led by Advisor to the President, Ivanka Trump, the White House Summit on Child Care and Paid Leave is the first major meeting on the issue by the Trump Administration. It came at an opportune time.

Earlier this week, Congress passed the National Defense Authorization Act, a must-pass bill to fund the Department of Defense. In that legislation, lawmakers came to a compromise on paid leave for federal workers.

"After three years of relentless advocacy," Ivanka said, "Congress agreed to finally offer Paid Parental Leave for all federal employees."

"The United States Government is now leading by example."

Trump has made this work a cornerstone of her policy push from the West Wing. And she has support in the halls of Congress.

Sens. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and Mitt Romney (R-Utah) have introduced the New Parents Act. Sen. Joni Ernst is the leading co-sponsor of the CRADLE Act. Both plans would use Social Security funds to allow paid time off when adding a new family member. They have proposed varying ways of reimbursing the Social Security system.

And Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) is the author of the bipartisan Cassidy-Sinema Act on paid leave. That plan allows families to preemptively take an advance on future child tax credits.

All four Senators were in attendance along with Sen. Martha McSally (R-Ariz.) and Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W. Va.).

Notably, no Democratic Senators were in attendance though Arizona Republican Sen. Martha McSally mentioned that her fellow Arizonan Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, a Democrat, was invited and had a scheduling conflict.

And the panel with Representatives was bipartisan, where Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas), Rep. Ann Wagner (R-Mo.) and Rep. Jackie Walorski (R-Ind.) joined Cunningham and Allred. Crenshaw and Wagner are the House sponsors of the New Parents Act. Allred introduced the House version of the Cassidy-Sinema plan with New York Republican Elise Stefanik.

The 116th Congress is the youngest Congress in history and it shows in a push toward more robust parental leave policies.

Senator Rubio acknowledged that rapid evolution within the Republican party on the issue of providing paid leave.

"If you did this two years ago, there wouldn't be one Republican sitting up here. Today, there's six," Rubio remarked. "I think it's a great development for our country that it's become a bipartisan issue."

Democrats have long advocated for better paid-leave policies, with one of the loudest voices in the Senate, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, sponsoring the FAMILY Act, which would provide 12 weeks of paid leave for new parents and to people needing time off to care for family members.

Gillibrand was not in attendance at Thursday's summit and shared concerns about the White House's approach to paid leave.

"The United States needs paid family and medical leave, but unfortunately, the proposals backed by the White House fall short of this goal and would do little to meet the needs of American families," Sen. Gillibrand said in a statement to Cheddar.

"This administration has done nothing more than pay lip-service to paid family leave."

Gillibrand also highlighted the need for a bipartisan approach to paid leave and she believes her FAMILY Act is the right way forward.

"I'm hopeful that with bipartisan support in the House, we can move forward on implementing a real paid leave plan that helps all workers for all of life's events," explained Sen. Gillibrand.

"My legislation, the FAMILY Act, is the most comprehensive proposal to provide paid leave."

Whether it's the FAMILY Act, the New Parents Act or another piece of legislation, in a divided Congress, bipartisanship is key to getting a paid leave plan passed through the Democratic House and the Republican Senate.

But one signature lawmakers presumably won't have the worry about? The president's.

"In everything we do, we're putting the American families first," said President Trump to close out the White House summit. "We now have a historic opportunity to enact long-overdue reforms. It's time to pass paid family leave."

Share:
More In Politics
The Affordable Care Act's 'Family Glitch,' Explained
Krutika Amin, associate director at the Kaiser Family Foundation for the Program on the Affordable Care Act, joins Cheddar Politics to discuss the Biden administration's plan to fix the so-called 'family glitch' in the Affordable Care Act preventing millions of Americans from accessing government-subsidized health plan.
House Votes to Hold Scavino, Navarro in Contempt
Abdallah Fayyad, opinion writer at the Boston Globe, joins Cheddar Politics to discuss the House's vote to hold former Trump aides Dan Scavino and Peter Navarro in contempt of Congress and send the recommendation to the Department of Justice. Fayyad also weighs in on the pressure facing Attorney General Merrick Garland to be more aggressive in prosecuting the January 6 case.
Biden Administration Extends Student Loan Pause to August
Those paying back federal student loans are getting a few extra months of relief. President Biden just announced another extension of the pandemic relief program allowing millions of borrowers to freeze their student loan payments. The pause began in March 2020 and it has been extended six times. Tomas Campos, co-founder and CEO of Spinwheel, joins Cheddar News to discuss.
Doctors, Medical Experts Divided on Second COVID-19 Booster
There has been notable disagreement in the medical community about a fourth COVID-19 vaccine dose. The FDA last week authorized a second booster dose for older and immunocompromised individuals, as some agency officials did not support the idea. The FDA made the decision without meeting with its advisory committee, as it had ahead of its recommendations on the previous COVID-19 vaccine doses. The CDC followed in the footsteps of the FDA and authorized a fourth dose as well. Reports say the agency also did not discuss the move with its own advisory team of vaccine experts. Now, a growing number of doctors are speaking out against the decisions - leaving people confused about whether they should get another vaccine dose. Dr. Julie Morita, a member of the CDC's advisory committee to the director, and the executive vice president of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, joins Cheddar News' Closing Bell to discuss.
JetBlue Bids on Spirit, Jeopardizing Frontier Deal
JetBlue made an unsolicited offer to buy low-cost carrier Spirit Airlines, potentially jeopardizing the original offer from Frontier Airlines. Several analysts sounding the alarm on JetBlue's proposed $3.6 billion merger, saying the deal doesn't quite make sense. Jim Corridore, Senior Insights Manager at Similarweb joined Cheddar's Opening Bell to discuss.
Biden Admin Latest Federal Student Loan Extension Adds to Borrower Uncertainty
The Biden administration is once again extending the pause on federal student loans payments — this time, through the end of August. In a statement, President Biden cited a recent analysis from the Fed that if the payments were to resume, millions of student loan borrowers would face significant "economic hardship, delinquencies, and defaults that could threaten America's financial stability." Sarah Foster, an analyst at Bankrate, breaks down the impact of the extension on borrowers, the economy, and the future of student loan forgiveness. "I think this is just an instance of the federal student loan forbearance program kind of creating additional uncertainty for borrowers, especially in the sense that these past four extensions from the Biden administration have kind of come at the 11th hour here," she said.
Load More