I didn’t think it was possible, but Republican Congresswoman Candy Miller and Democrat Congressman Sandy Levin have found common ground on an issue to such as extent that they’re starting to talk alike. The object of their ire is the U.S. Senate and specifically the upper chamber’s decision to extend the payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits for just two months.
Let’s have a little fun and try to guess who said what.  (Answers are below.)
1 – “Hard-working middle-class Americans deserve to know they can count on a full one-year payroll tax holiday; unemployed Americans should be able to count on needed support when looking for a job, while sensible reforms are made to the overall system; and our doctors treating Medicare patients and patients receiving that care deserve a full 2-year guarantee …” 
2 — “During this two-month period, workers in some of the hardest-hit states – including Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and Missouri – are projected to lose access to the 20-week extended benefits program and with very little warning tens of thousands of long-term unemployed Americans will be cut off unemployment insurance.”
3 – “A two-month extension of unemployment insurance and the payroll tax cut is wholly inadequate as the American people digging out of the deepest recession in decades deserve much more certainty and compassion about their economic distress. Medicare patients also deserve to know after a lifetime of hard work that their doctors will be there when they need them.”
4 — “How irresponsible for the U.S. Senate to pass only a 2-month extension and then adjourn, essentially saying since they want to go home for Christmas the U.S. House must either take it or leave it. …  We obviously expect the Senate to come back to Washington to finish this important work.  By only doing the bare minimum, they have essentially created more uncertainty.” 
5 — “Our nation’s workers thrown out of jobs through no fault of their own deserve better.”
6 – “Two months only prolongs the pain and uncertainty.”
ANSWERS
1, 4, 6 – Miller
2, 3, 5 — Levin