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Republicans have resisted Obama's plan, saying they oppose the higher taxes that he and other Democrats would use to pay for it. The economy has sent mixed signals this week about the job market. But most signs point to only slight hiring. On Thursday, the government said more people sought unemployment benefits last week, evidence that layoffs remain elevated. Weekly applications rose to a seasonally adjusted 401,000. Applications would need to fall consistently below 375,000 to signal sustainable job growth. Still, the increase followed a sharp decline the previous week, and applications have trended lower in the past month. In addition, factories hired more workers in September, according to the Institute for Supply Management, a group of purchasing managers. But a more troubling note came from the ISM in a separate survey released Wednesday. It said service companies cut staff in September. Consumers have been holding back on spending, reducing business for service providers such as restaurants, hotels, retailers and financial service firms. On Tuesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke warned that the economic recovery "is close to faltering." Bernanke said that the economy is growing more slowly than the Fed had expected and that the biggest factor depressing consumer confidence is poor job growth.
[Associated
Press;
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