MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
The Republican budget will wreak havoc on hard-working Americans. They have proven, once again, their unwavering commitment to taking trillions of dollars from the pockets of the middle class and giving ever more generous windfalls to millionaires and large corporations. They want to throw seniors off Medicare. Their slash-and-burn tactics will throw hundreds of thousands of people out of work. They will eliminate health care for children and those with disabilities. They will fire teachers, firefighters and police — some of the truest heroes of our society.
We must be clear — we will not and cannot stand for this recklessness. We must fight for the American people.
(Memo to Ranking House Budget Committee member Chris Van Hollen, April 6, 2011.)
Raül M. Grijalva
Co-Chair Progressive Caucus
Keith Ellison
Co-Chair Progressive Caucus
Waifs and Strays by Gustave Doré |
It's a great day (but a damn sad commentary, considering how long it took) when two Democratic congressmen, Raul Grijalva and Keith Ellison, co-chairs of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, finally make waves by belatedly getting around to doing what Democrats were supposed to be doing all along. They're publicly talking truth about the House and Senate Republicans who keep using the old Debt Ceiling ploy to justify their unrelenting take-aways from vital domestic programs. (No,they didn't mention the shameless "Democrats" who've been going along, pretending its all good.)
The Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC), a group made up of more than 80 Democratic House members and one Senator, Bernie Sanders (who started the CPC some 20 years ago when he was a House member), put together a proposal called The People's Budget, outlining it in the recent memo to Van Hollen:
The CPC budget:
• Eliminates the deficits and creates a surplus
• Puts America back to work with a “Make it in America” jobs program
• Protects the social safety net
• Ends the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
• Is FAIR (Fixing America’s Inequality Responsibly)
To summarize what our budget accomplishes:
• Primary budget balance by 2014.
• Budget surplus by 2021.
• Reduce public debt as a share of GDP to 64.4% by 2021, down 16.9 percentage points from a baseline fully adjusted for both the doc fix and the AMT patch.
• Reduce deficits by $5.7 trillion over 2012-21
• Both outlays and revenue equal 22.3% of GDP by 2021.
Breakdown of Policies
Individual income tax policies
1. Extend marriage relief, credits, and incentives for children, families, and education, but
let the upper-income tax cuts expire and let tax brackets revert to Clinton-era rates
2. Index the AMT for inflation for a decade (AMT patch paid for)
3. Rescind the upper-income tax cuts in the tax deal
4. Schakowsky millionaire tax rates proposal (adding 45%, 46%, and 47% top rates)
5. Progressive estate tax (Sanders estate tax, repeal of Kyl-Lincoln)
6. Tax capital gains and qualified dividends as ordinary income
Corporate tax reform
1. Tax U.S. corporate foreign income as it is earned
2. Eliminate corporate welfare for oil, gas, and coal companies
3. Enact a financial crisis responsibility fee
4. Financial speculation tax (derivatives, foreign exchange)
Health care
1. Enact a public option
2. Negotiate Rx payments with pharmaceutical companies
3. CMS program integrity and other Medicare and Medicaid savings in the president’s
budget.
4. Prevent a cut in Medicare physician payments for a decade (maintain doc fix)
Social Security
1. Raise the taxable maximum on the employee side to 90% of earnings and eliminate the
taxable maximum on the employer side
2. Increase benefits based on higher contributions on the employee side
Defense savings
1. End overseas contingency operations emergency supplementals starting in 2013,
providing $170 billion in FY2012 funding for withdrawal
2. Reduce baseline Defense spending by reducing strategic capabilities, conventional
forces, procurement, and R&D programs
Job Creation
1. Invest $1.45 trillion in job creation, early childhood, K-12 and special education, quality
child care, energy and broadband infrastructure, housing, and R&D
2. Infrastructure bank
3. Surface transportation reauthorization bill
4. Finance surface transportation reauthorization
On April 5 Grijalva and Ellison wrote an article in Politico once again spelling out clearly what the Republicans are trying to do with their new "budget", as defined by Tea Party lead man Paul Ryan. It barely got a notice.
Yesterday they tried again on Alternet, posting an article titled, Here's a Real Democratic Budget that Serves the Interests of the American People. Barely a ripple. (Okay, granted-- a title not designed to force you to drop everything and get to reading. But still. . .)
This is big. The People's Budget is almost everything we've ever wanted and fought so hard for with little success. Now at last there are folks in power who are willing to help us. We need to get behind this and shove it to its rightful place at the head of the line. It's getting some play in the liberal/progressive blogosphere but I don't see much in the MSM. (A shocking surprise.)
Contrast this budget to Paul Ryan's proposal, (nicely broken down on Karoli's Blog), which starts things off with 1) repealing the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and 2) continuing the corporate tax deduction, and then goes downhill from there. ( Kids will go hungry but the important thing is that the Death Tax is scheduled for a hasty demise.)
There are good Democrats out there and these people are proving it. They understand what we're up against and they're trying against all odds to get the message out. I think it's going to have to be up to the blogosphere to build the bridge in front of them. Looks like nobody else is going to do it.
Liberals and Progressives, Democrats and Independents, can we unite on this?.
(I'll get my tools. . .)
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(Cross-posted at Ramona's Voices here.)
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Comments
When was the last time you saw this in the U.S? Fasting against the Republican budget: http://bit.ly/eyQkvh
by Ramona on Tue, 04/12/2011 - 11:26pm
I'm reminded of the previous discussion on a Civil War thread about the Truth and Reconciliation Council, although in this case I'm thinking more about Reconciliation and a lot less about Truth: you don't want to alienate those you have a chance of getting on your side. If getting those Democrats on our side means pretending not to notice that they've been complicit (at best) in the actions we're wanting to fight, then I think a little pretending might not be so bad.
Nice post, btw. It's good to see some of the concrete ideas dagbloggers have been promoting, whether original or chosen from others.
by Verified Atheist on Wed, 04/13/2011 - 6:24am
by CVille Dem on Wed, 04/13/2011 - 7:21am
What I would like to see would be the federal government must always run a surplus. Now there will be times when it must run deficits...wars, famines, environmental disasters and so forth..., however, there needs to be rules Congress must follow to minimize the cost to the public. Such as, any time a deficit is run, taxes must be increased to restore the surplus within a responsible amount of time depending on the level of economic activity at the time...no cutting and gutting funding from other programs - taxes must be increased...no excuses. That way GOPer's will think twice before they go on a spending spree without a thought how their excesses will be paid. And wouldn't it be dandy if there was a dollar value threshold how much of a deficit could be run at any one time? Anything of greater value must be approved in an ad hoc general election since the public will be the ones who will bear the brunt of paying off the debt. That way Congress would still be able to manipulate the purse strings, but the public has control over how much credit they can draw.
However, if Congress doesn't want the public interfering in their business, then they should just raise the taxes on Corporate American and the 1% for whom the Bu$h tax cuts were given too. Unfortunately, there are those in the GOPer rank and file who firmly believe all taxes are evil and wouldn't support a reasonable tax strategy that included public input.
That said. this initiative is pretty much dead until those rank and file GOPer's feel the stinging whip of their beloved GOPer's upon thier backsides. It's the only way to public solidarity on the excesses of Congress.
by Beetlejuice on Wed, 04/13/2011 - 9:09am
Oh I love how the media fond over Ryan as being so genial, good looking, a nice guy, courageous. Funny though...serial rapists and murderers also present themselves that way as well.
by cmaukonen on Wed, 04/13/2011 - 10:24am
LOL. So true. I don't see the appeal in Ryan but then, why would I?
by Ramona on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 8:46am
Hmmm... Ryan as Ted Bundy...
by MrSmith1 on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 2:53pm
Thanks for this, Ramona.
Hmmm...a single Senator participating in this. Sanders almost doesn't count as he appears to be terminally confused about what he is supposed to be doing as an elected official. Perhaps he missed orientation.
And some suggest that Senators are out of touch with, or at any rate uninterested in trying to address, the needs of ordinary Americans not plugged into powerful interest groups.
I'm being uncleverly snarky and there are other endangered species senators whose efforts I appreciate such as Sherrod Brown and Patti Murray.
But a single senator on this? That's pathetic.
by AmericanDreamer on Wed, 04/13/2011 - 10:25pm
It struck me, too, AD. And something else: Where's Anthony Weiner on that list? Sounds like it would be right up his alley but he's not there. I wrote to him asking him about it, but of course I didn't get an answer.
by Ramona on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 8:45am
80 members huh?
You know this is impressive.
Waifs and strays. Wonderful drawing.
by Richard Day on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 5:14pm
in the MSM.
Well, Ryan's been out there with his plans for quite some time and he's Chairman of the House Budget Committee. The latter makes his ideas much more newsworthy on this issue no matter how crazy his plan. They just unveiled theirs, apparently 90 minutes before Obama's speech? Doing that, whatever they had to say, as a small minority 80-member caucus in a House of 435 members, was bound to be tossed aside for discussing what the president said in reply to the majority in the House and the plan of of the Chairman of the House Budget Committee. But I found this coverage anyways:
CNN gave them this op-ed.
Dana Milbank at WaPo wrote this article, with these criticisms, among others:
Note there's 795 comments on that article.
Rush Limbaugh ridiculed it here.
Here's Fox's Cavuto interviewing Rep. Eddie Johnson about it. There's a lot of secondary coverage of that interview on blogs, like this one, apparently iit caused a bit of a stir.
by artappraiser on Thu, 04/14/2011 - 8:54pm
Thanks for the links. A few comments:
The Milbank excerpt leaves me unimpressed on account of a high snark to substance ratio. Examples: he ridicules the 80% tax increase share. A number of those proposed "tax increases" would do away with corporate welfare provisions in the tax code which won't pass, not because they aren't good ideas or because they would not be popular with the general public but because politicians who vote to do away with them know they are going to be targeted in their next election by the special interests whose oxes they have gored. There are 79 House members who put their names on that document and if you did the research I bet you would find that virtually all of them are from very safe Democratic seats. There are many other Democrats in less safe seats who would agree on the merits but are, correctly, fearful of losing their seats by voting to do these things in a context in which that budget could not pass a GOP majority House and would not pass any Democratic majority House in memory, including the last one.
As another example of snark over substance, Milbank sneers at their having the Economic Policy Institute, a "like-minded think tank" do the scoring.
Well, let's look at that.
Milbank implies something underhanded or sneaky or vaguely dishonest about having EPI rather than CBO score their proposal. CBO is just a tad busy right about now, and lately. Understandably they will give priority attention to scoring measures that can pass. I would be interested to find out from CBO the reason why they didn't score this proposal. Criticize the group for not getting this proposal done earlier, if you will--perhaps that might have permitted a credibility-enhancing CBO score. I'm pretty sure they also wanted the proposal to reflect the most recent budget developments to the maximum extent possible knowing if they failed to be fully current they could well have a tougher time getting attention for that reason.
EPI published the technical paper on their website: http://epi.3cdn.net/fb71e9b292c387953d_8am6b398v.pdf This is what responsible advocacy organizations do, so that dispassionate others can know the assumptions and sources used. From my professional work I know that many advocacy organizations that call themselves "think tanks" release "studies" on public policy issues that do not include technical reports that allow independent others to analyze the merits of the "studies". EPI states up front, in regard to the technical report:
So they acknowledge inadequate in-house expertise to analyze independently the defense proposals but claim they have that expertise for the other proposals and do so, using sources which are, in the first 3 cases, gold standard government agencies and in the last case a highly respected DC-based tax policy advocacy group. About the Tax Policy Center I don't know--others can google them as could I.
Milbank bashes the proposal for not making projections beyond 10 years. Well, I wonder if he asked the Caucus for comment before deciding to write that, because there are numerous health care proposals addressing cost issues, which are mentioned prominently in the document, as well as proposals addressing the long-term SS shortfall. So it would seem fair to ask the Caucus for comment in response to that criticism. I'm sure one could criticize aspects of the document with justification but I doubt that a failure to address the health care cost mess which is such a huge part of the deficit problem, and to address the longer-term SS shortfall, are legit criticisms. Whether one agrees or not with what they propose to address those problems is a separate question, of course.
Dana Milbank has done good work but this is an unjustifiably dismissive, sloppy, hack job. I don't know--is the group better off for having gotten this kind of junk food MSM treatment than not?
That a proposal like this could not pass now says nothing about the soundness or merits of the proposals. Concerning their popularity with the public, they are technical enough to require something like focus group exercises where random citizens are provided with the best available information and options for making budget choices, and spend some significant amount of time so as to have some meaningful chance to understand the proposals. Some deficit-reduction groups that are not ideologically invested in either left or right wing agendas have done this at times in the past. If memory serves what the citizens' panels typically come up with is a hell of a lot closer to this proposal than to the budget that will end up getting passed this year.
That a proposal such as this could not pass now says, rather, a great deal about the dominance of our political process by special interests, such that numerous sound policies are nonstarters and all sorts of happy horseshit screwing the average Jane and Joe not only gets enacted but is sacrosanct.
by AmericanDreamer on Fri, 04/15/2011 - 12:16am
http://www.pressdisplay.com/pressdisplay/viewer.aspx
Link is to E.J. Dionne, Jr.'s column yesterday, titled "At last, from referee to player", also pertinent to at least 2 other threads going on now, Genghis' "Obama's Budget Speech: Live Stream and Peanut Gallery": http://dagblog.com/politics/obamas-budget-speech-live-stream-and-peanut-gallery-9815 and David Coates' "The Danger of Losing the Plot So Early in the Play": http://dagblog.com/reader-blogs/danger-losing-plot-so-early-play-9819
by AmericanDreamer on Fri, 04/15/2011 - 9:23am