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What Florida woman's coffee shop debate with Rick Scott says about jobs

Cara Jennings, a former city commissioner in Lake Worth, Fla. angrily confronted the governor at Starbucks about his record on jobs and women's access to healthcare, in an encounter captured on video.

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Stephen Bender/YouTube
Cara Jennings, right talks to Gov. Rick Scott (R) of Fla., in a Gainesville Starbucks in an image from a video of the encounter on Tuesday.

When a Florida woman confronted Gov. Rick Scott on Tuesday in a coffee shop about his decision to decline an expansion of Medicaid, her angry words represented a rare opportunity to talk directly about the personal impact of decisions made in faraway state capitols.

鈥淵ou cut Medicaid so I couldn鈥檛 get Obamacare,鈥 Cara Jennings, ., shouted at the governor, a Republican, as he waited for his order at a Starbucks in Gainesville, in an encounter .

Ms. Jennings then referred to Scott with an expletive, adding, 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 care about working people. You should be ashamed to show your face around here.鈥

After Scott responded by telling her that he had created a million jobs, she gestured sarcastically around the room, asking, 鈥淲ho here has a great job? I was looking forward to finishing school. You really feel you have a job coming up?鈥

鈥淵ou should, there鈥檚 plenty of jobs,鈥 Scott responded softly.

The encounter also pointed to a disconnect between publicly stated jobs predictions and what Americans say they feel are greatly diminished economic or career prospects in recent years, reports 海角大神.

The old image of the 鈥渕iddle class鈥 as an aspirational state of being 鈥 upward mobility coupled with a measure of financial stability 鈥 hasn鈥檛 disappeared. But it鈥檚 under stress as much as at any time in the postwar era. Fewer Americans these days call themselves middle class, and many who do use that label see it as a badge of struggle as much as a badge of opportunity

While the US added 215,000 jobs in March, the number of people who want full-time work but can only find part-time jobs 鈥 which has stood at 6 million 鈥 went up 135,000 last month, according to statistics from the Department of Labor.

However, some economists have said that a slight increase in the unemployment rate 鈥 from 4.9 percent to 5 percent, along with 鈥 could be a more hopeful sign.

The increase could be 鈥渁n indication that workers are feeling optimistic and are beginning to come off the bench and take some practice swings,鈥 Elise Gould, a senior economist at the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute, .

For Jennings, a 39-year-old stay-at-home mother who works part-time, the chance to confront Scott also meant an opportunity to talk about his decision to cut funding for Planned Parenthood,

鈥淵ou stripped women of access to public healthcare,鈥 Jennings says in the video as it appears Scott and his staff exit the Starbucks without their coffee.

鈥淪hame on you, Rick Scott. We depend on those services, rich people like you don鈥檛 know what to do, when poor people like us need health services, you cut 鈥榚m.鈥

After once reversing his decision, the governor or let the state set up its own health insurance marketplace last year, aligning himself with Florida House lawmakers who to President Obama鈥檚 Affordable Care Act.

Scott, a former healthcare executive, was elected in 2010 on a wave of opposition to the healthcare law.聽

On Tuesday, Florida health officials settled a that alleged that the state had paid doctors so little for Medicaid services that many doctors refused to treat patients, including many children, who used the program.

Hundreds of thousands of children using Medicaid never received regular checkups while 80 percent of the children never saw a dentist, the suit alleged.

Jennings later told ABC that she was working on her laptop in the coffee shop when she spotted the governor and decided to confront him directly about the cuts to funding for Planned Parenthood. She dismissed a spokeswoman for the governor who tried to intervene, the video shows.

While the encounter stunned many in the store into silence, she says, afterwards the reaction was different. The user who took the video mutters, 鈥淪weet!鈥 as it ends.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 think about whether I should do it or not,鈥 she added. 鈥淚 thought, 鈥楬ere鈥檚 my chance to tell the governor how I feel about the horrible bill.鈥欌

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