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Biden Speaks After Deficit Talks Break Down

June 23, 2011

WASHINGTON — Vice President Joe Biden says bipartisan budget talks have made headway but that the next step is up to President Barack Obama and top congressional leaders. Biden issued a statement Thursday declaring the talks in a state of “abeyance” after Republican negotiators abandoned the talks in a dispute with Democrats over higher taxes. Biden said the goal of the talks was, in his word, “to report our findings back to our respective leaders.” He said those leaders need to determine the scope of an agreement that can tackle the problem and attract bipartisan support. Democrats and Obama have insisted on reducing long-term deficits by cutting spending and increasing tax revenue. Republicans have said tax hikes will not be part of the negotiations.

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Harry Reid Solicits For Democratic Super PAC: The Race For Unlimited Funds Is On

June 22, 2011

WASHINGTON — Democrats outraged by the legal rulings that allowed unlimited corporate contributions to pour into the 2010 elections have taken two paths. Some are still fighting against a situation they see as too corrupting to let stand. Others are taking the “if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em” approach. Senate Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) officially threw in his hat with the joiners on Wednesday, sending out an email for a Democratic Super PAC that is able to accept unlimited funds from donors, including corporations. The solicitation was first reported by the Center for Responsive Politics’ OpenSecrets blog . Reid carefully couched his pitch for Majority PAC to avoid the moral and possibly legal ramifications involved with a member of Congress directly soliciting unlimited contributions — widely considered one of the last official no-no’s remaining after the Supreme Court’s evisceration of most post-Watergate campaign finance reforms. A postscript in a box all the way at the bottom of his email says: “Senator Reid is only asking for a donation of up to $5,000 from individuals or federal PACs. He is not asking for funds from corporations, labor unions, or other federally prohibited sources.” But the only reason for Majority PAC’s existence is to solicit and accept unlimited contributions: A normal PAC could accept the kind of money Reid was ostensibly asking for. Indeed, as Reid explained in his email, the justification for Majority PAC is that “there is no greater threat to our majority than the deep pockets and nasty tactics of Karl Rove, the Koch Brothers, and their network of corporate-backed special interest groups.” Conservatives very effectively used Super PACs and even more controversial 501(c)(4) groups to savage Democratic candidates in the 2010 election cycle. Majority PAC is “a group solely devoted to leveling the playing field,” Reid explained. “Their operating principle is simple: With so much at stake in 2012, there’s no excuse for letting the GOP get an unfair advantage.” Reid’s email may be surprising, coming as close as he did to soliciting unlimited funds, but his support for the group was already widely assumed. Its leadership includes two of his top former aides, Susan McCue and Rebecca Lambe, much like a similar group, Priorities USA , is led by two former White House aides. “Majority PAC is made up of some of the smartest, toughest Democrats in the country,” Reid wrote. The ban on the solicitation of unlimited funds by members of Congress is one of the few provisions left standing from the 2002 bipartisan campaign finance bill known as McCain-Feingold, after the Arizona Republican and Wisconsin Democrat who championed it. Its rules for what is known as “soft money” prohibit federal officeholders and candidates from soliciting or directing any funds in connection with a federal election “unless the funds are subject to the limitations, prohibitions and reporting requirements” of the law. Ergo Reid’s postscript. Even that restriction is now under attack. Republican National Committee member and arch-nemesis of campaign finance laws James Bopp announced in May that he was forming the Republican Super PAC, with the explicit intention of having members of Congress solicit unlimited contributions for it. He claimed that as long as members aren’t involved in precisely how the money is spent once it’s been received, that would still count as an “independent” expenditure. The reformers at Democracy 21 and the Campaign Legal Center responded by sending out a letter to all members of Congress warning them that, in their view, such action remains illegal. Two Democratic Super PACs — including Majority PAC — responded by requesting an official advisory opinion from the Federal Election Commission. They said that they’d do whatever the Republicans were doing , as long as the FEC said it was OK. Opposing massive campaign spending has historically been a central tenet of the Democratic Party. In his 2010 State of the Union Address , President Barack Obama memorably excoriated the justices of the Supreme Court seated before him for reversing “a century of law that I believe will open the floodgates for special interests — including foreign corporations — to spend without limit in our elections. I don’t think American elections should be bankrolled by America’s most powerful interests, or worse, by foreign entities.” Reid’s caveat spared him the wrath of campaign reformers on Wednesday. But just last week, as The Huffington Post’s Amanda Terkel reported from the annual Netroots Nation conference , former Wisconsin Sen. Russ Feingold issued Democrats a dire warning. “Creating those kinds of super PACs for Democrats is wrong. It is not something we should do. I disagree,” Feingold said. “We’ll lose our soul when it comes to the issue of corporate domination. People will see us as weak. People will see us as corporate-lite. We’ll gut our message. I think it’s not just wrong, I think it’s a dumb strategy. It’s dumb because people will not believe us if we do this.” Reid Majority PAC Solicitation

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2012 Battleground Littered With Unemployed People

June 13, 2011

Longtime readers are probably aware that I despair over the fact that the only time the media bothers to cover the nation’s massive unemployment crisis is when they can report that it’s a potential problem for the reelection prospects of politicians. It’s a much bigger problem for the people who are unemployed, obviously! But there’s going to be no respite from this jobless phenomenon from here until November 2012, so I suppose I’ll have to lie back and try to be appreciative of articles such as this one by the Wall Street Journal ‘s Sara Murray, titled ” Job Picture Set to Test Obama in Key States .” The nation’s high joblessness, already a problem for President Barack Obama as he seeks re-election next year, is shaping up to be a particular burden in a handful of key swing states where the unemployment rate is above the national average. In four states that may prove key to the Obama re-election strategy — Florida, Nevada, North Carolina and Michigan — the jobless picture is bleak. In three of the four, the rate tops 10%. Congratulations to Florida, Nevada, North Carolina and Michigan! You are in the throes of a terrible downturn, but the good news is that you are part of the battleground. So, you have that going for you. Someone will be coming to tell you that they care, and might you consider voting for them? Of course, if the unemployment rate were, say, 6 percent in those states, they would still be part of the battleground, because these states are always considered battleground states. And, of course, there’s rampant unemployment in places that aren’t considered the “battleground.” So, yes, there’s a certain senselessness to this, but that’s campaign coverage for you! As Murray reports, President Barack Obama is scheduled to make appearances in Florida and North Carolina. Which is nice, I guess? Of course, for the moment, he has other business attend to : Last month, Mr. Obama’s campaign manager, Jim Messina, traveled to New York for back-to-back meetings with Wall Street donors, ending at the home of Marc Lasry, a prominent hedge fund manager, to court donors close to Mr. Obama’s onetime rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton. And Mr. Obama will return to New York this month to dine with bankers, hedge fund executives and private equity investors at the Upper East Side restaurant Daniel. “The first goal was to get recognition that the administration has led the economy from an unimaginably difficult place to where we are today,” said Blair W. Effron, an investment banker closely involved in Mr. Obama’s fund-raising efforts. “Now the second goal is to turn that into support.” Yes, unemployed people, the President is coming to your states but first he has to make sure the people of Wall Street get personal assurances for that time he … um … made them extremely profitable and ensured the passage of only some very light regulation? Oh, well, according to Nicholas Confessore , Obama once referred to these people who nearly destroyed the economy as “fat cats,” so apologies must be made, I guess. As Kevin Drum points out , “After all, even weak financial reforms are more annoying than no financial reforms, which is what Republicans are offering — along with soothing reassurances that Wall Street’s masters of the universe had nothing to do with the financial crisis, no matter what that mean Mr. Obama keeps saying.” Which makes you wonder what the point of courting Wall Street is at all. It looks to me like accepting any form of regulation in order to prevent another financial crisis is only the sort of thing that you’d do if you loved your country, or something. Of course, in the background hovers last week’s “Maybe everyone would accept Raj Date at the CFPB instead of Elizabeth Warren, because Raj used to work at a bank” trial balloon, which tells me that the Obama administration would rather be well-liked than feared. So maybe places like Michigan are “battlegrounds” because a lot of people lost their jobs, in some kind of battle, that’s now over. I guess this is a pretty bad time to be connecting all of these dots, but then, it’s a pretty bad time right now for a lot of people. Would you like to follow me on Twitter ? Because why not? Also, please send tips to tv@huffingtonpost.com — learn more about our media monitoring project here .

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Labor Union Threatens To Support Progressive Challenger To Key Democrat Over CEO Pay

June 10, 2011

WASHINGTON — The nation’s largest labor union on Friday threatened to challenge the powerful chairman of the Senate Banking Committee in the 2014 elections, if he allows a key set of new executive pay regulations be weakened. The surprising remark occurred during a panel discussion moderated by The Huffington Post at the Social Investment Forum Conference . The summit was attended by hundreds of socially conscious investors ranging from religious groups like the Unitarian Church to high-profile investment houses like Mesirow Financial. During the panel, a top technocrat on the Banking Committee, General Counsel Dean Shahinian warned that investors may have to accept a weaker-than-anticipated version of new disclosures on CEO pay mandated by last year’s Wall Street reform bill. Shahinian also acknowledged that his boss, committee chairman Sen. Tim Johnson (D-S.D.), would be willing to re-open last year’s landmark legislation and rewrite some aspects of the law if bipartisan political consensus about some measures could be established. AFL-CIO Special Policy Counsel Damon Silvers immediately interrupted Shahinian: “I think Senator Johnson needs to think about his political future,” he said. The audience of potential campaign contributors let out an audible gasp. Shahinian responded that Silvers’ comment was “inappropriate” for the panel, but the union lawyer did not apologize. Instead, he instructed Shahinian to consider “the recent personal history of Blanche Lincoln.” The AFL-CIO is widely credited with ruining any chance the former Democratic senator from Arkansas had of win reelection in 2008. Walmart, the world’s largest retailer is headquartered in Lincoln’s state, and the labor union had repeatedly objected to her positions on key workers’ rights issues. Unable to win over Lincoln, the AFL-CIO spent millions of dollars supporting progressive Democratic challenger Bill Halter in the 2008 primaries. Halter lost the primary, but the divided Democratic base caused Lincoln to suffer a landslide loss in the general election. At the Friday panel, Silvers vowed to provide the same treatment to Johnson — one of the most Wall Street-friendly Democrats in the Senate — if he does not make sure that Dodd-Frank remains intact. Johnson is not well-loved by consumer advocacy groups in Washington, who worry that his close ties to the banking industry would make it difficult for Democrats to back financial protections for households. About one-fifth of all Johnson’s campaign cash from 2003 to 2008 came from the financial, insurance and real estate industries, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. And Johnson’s state is home to the ” South Dakota loophole ,” which lets credit cards and other lenders evade state regulations. Eight of the 12 major pay-day lenders, according to a letter Johnson wrote to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, are also headquartered there. “I like Dean, but what he said was just stupid,” Silvers told HuffPost after the event. Before his position on Johnson’s committee, Shahinian worked under former Banking Committee Chair Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) during last year’s financial reform debate. Earlier in the panel, Silvers made a special point of acknowledging Shahinian’s work on the Dodd-Frank bill, noting that many Washington insiders frequently refer to the bill as “Dodd-Frank-Shahinian.” The heated exchange was prompted by a discussion of the ratio of executive pay to that of other workers. As a result of the law, companies will have to directly compare the compensation of top officers with the median salary of its employees. But executives are now pressuring the Securities and Exchange Commission to exclude various classes of workers from the required calculation, in an effort to make the ratio between CEO pay and rank-and-file laborer wages appear lower. Shahinian suggested that some categories of workers, including part-time workers, may not reflect a fair reading of the bill. Silvers rejected that view, noting that investors can’t select which of a company’s operations to buy into, but must invest in “the whole company.” He further stated that the AFL-CIO will not accept any move to re-legislate the issues signed into law by Dodd-Frank for any reason. Other financial reform advocates have previously expressed concern that Wall Street interests will pressure lawmakers to reopen the bill over relatively minor issues, and use that as a wedge to defang critical reforms. Shahinian later hedged his previous phrasing, saying that Johnson does not personally support altering Dodd-Frank. Silvers’ open threat to back a primary challenger against Johnson comes on the heels of a May speech by AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka , who cautioned that Democrats could not take the support of organized labor for granted in the 2012 elections. “We will spend the summer holding elected leaders in Congress as well as the states accountable on one measure: Are they improving or degrading life for working families?” Trumka said . “Our role is not to build the power of a political party or a candidate. It is to improve the lives of working families and strengthen our country.” While the AFL-CIO has vocally backed many of the Obama administration’s top legislative initiatives, including the health care reform bill and the Wall Street overhaul, the president has not fought aggressively for labor’s top priority, the Employee Free Choice Act. That bill would make it easier for workers to organize into labor unions. After repeatedly pledging support for EFCA during the 2008 campaign, Obama has not gone to the mat for the bill since entering office, critics say. Indeed, the legislation has not yet received a congressional vote under the president’s watch, despite having Democratic control of both chambers for his first two years in office. Organized labor’s influence within the Democratic Party has deteriorated significantly since the 1970s, but unions continue to provide an enormous amount of on-the-ground campaign support and get-out-the-vote help for the Party during elections, serving a role akin to that of conservative churches in the Republican Party. If labor chooses to sit out races or openly oppose votes on key candidates, the electoral prospects of those Democrats will be significantly diminished. The labor movement has been strengthened of late by high-profile public opposition to the policies of Republican Gov. Scott Walker in Wisconsin. Protests to defending state workers have sparked a series of efforts to recall Republican members of the state legislature who backed anti-union bills.

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Daniel Marans: Sounding the Alarms on Another Social Security Tax Cut

June 9, 2011

The White House is considering adopting a temporary Social Security tax cut on employers to stimulate the economy as part of the debt ceiling negotiations with the Republicans, according to a Bloomberg News article . If the Administration so much as puts another Social Security tax cut on the table, they will be throwing Social Security under the bus for uncertain — indeed, unlikely — economic gain. It seems like déjà vu. Wasn’t it just last year that progressives had to talk themselves blue in the face explaining the harm that a temporary payroll tax cut would do? In case you hadn’t heard, the Obama Administration already enacted a one-year 2 percent payroll tax cut on the employee side as part of the tax cut deal with Republicans in December 2010. The revenue that Social Security would have gotten from the missing 2 percent of taxable payroll is being replaced by a one-time transfer of $105.2 billion from the general fund. (Click here for more on how Social Security is funded.) At the time, the payroll tax cut was criticized by progressives for endangering Social Security’s finances and undermining the program’s political underpinnings. A critique made by Nancy J. Altman, a nationally renowned Social Security expert and co-chair of the Strengthen Social Security Campaign, still offers the best explanation for why a payroll tax cut is disastrous. Her arguments remain just as true of a payroll tax cut for employers. Here it is in a nutshell (though Nancy’s full critique is a must-read): Gradually defunds Social Security. The payroll tax cut will almost undoubtedly outlast its one-year expiration date. As the debate over the Bush tax cuts illustrates, taxes are easy to cut, but hard to restore, whatever the expectations are when enacted. Maintaining the reduced payroll tax rate would require the general fund to continue to transfer a growing amount of revenue to the Social Security Trust Fund amid mounting pressure to cut spending from the general budget. Social Security would have to compete with all other domestic spending programs for its share of a rapidly diminishing pie. The result would be both a real financial crisis for Social Security, and a crisis of public confidence in the program’s integrity. Undermines the program. The payroll tax is fundamental to the American public’s commitment to Social Security. It is less a tax than a dedicated down payment for an earned insurance benefit. The payroll tax represents a tangible feature of the promise that if workers pay into Social Security from their wages, they earn its benefits when they retire, become disabled, or experience the passing of a loved one. That is one reason why, at a time when anti-government skepticism is at an all-time-high, even Republicans and Tea Partiers strongly support Social Security and oppose benefit cuts. Diminishing the payroll tax risks undermining that robust commitment. Is a poor source of stimulus. The payroll tax cut is far more expensive, less progressive and less stimulating for the economy than other stimulus options like renewing the Obama Administration’s middle class Making Work Pay tax cut. (Click here for an analysis and chart comparing the two tax cuts.) The damage of one payroll tax cut has already been incalculable. Expanding it to include employers — in effect extending it — will be even worse. Deficit hawks falsely claim that Social Security contributes to the deficit. Putting it on the hook to the general budget, even temporarily, gives truth to their charge. A one-year payroll tax cut for employees was one thing — but two years running? At what point will the general fund turn off the spigot, turning Social Security’s modest shortfall into an immediate financial crisis? Precious political energy has, and will continue to be spent, preventing the current payroll tax cut from being extended. Republicans will no doubt depict it as a major tax increase, and exploit it for political gain as the 2012 election approaches. Doubling our efforts to include fighting the extension of an employer payroll tax cut, which will likely elicit the lobbying prowess of big business, is a bridge too far. It will suck major resources from the left, and aggravate the Democratic Party’s base in the run-up to the 2012 election. Perhaps most importantly, unlike the current payroll tax cut — which was inefficient stimulus, but stimulus nonetheless — an employer-side tax cut will do little, if anything for the economy. Employers are not the ones who are hurting; consumers and workers are. Corporations earned $1.68 trillion in profits at the end of 2010 — and were sitting on over $1 trillion in cash. Hiring has yet to pick up because consumer demand remains extraordinarily low. Giving businesses more money to work with is not going to change that. The position that the Obama Administration is in right now is not enviable. With a weak jobs report last month showing that the recovery is faltering, they know they need to do something. But Republicans are adamantly opposed to any policies to get the economy going other than high-end tax cuts. If, as Jared Bernstein speculated on Charlie Rose recently, the White House is eying an employer payroll tax cut, because it is the only thing Republicans will accept to raise the debt ceiling, then the President should stop wasting his time with the GOP. The Republicans clearly want to have their cake and eat it too — that is, destroy entitlements and reap the political gains to be had from a failing economy. They must be hoping to achieve parts of their extreme ideological goals under a Democratic President, and retake the White House in the following year to finish the job. Instead, the President should take his case to the American people. The public may not like raising the debt ceiling in theory, but they certainly do not favor throwing Social Security under the bus for a budget problem it did not cause.

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Cities, States Move To Mandate Paid Sick Leave For Workers

June 6, 2011

WASHINGTON — Millions of American workers face an ugly choice when they fall ill: Either tough it out and head into work, or stay home and not get paid for the day. But in cities and states around the country, that’s starting to change. Perhaps as early as this week, Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy (D) is expected to sign a bill into law that would make his state the first in the country to require large employers to provide their workers with paid sick days. State legislators approved the bill Saturday after 11 hours of debate in the House and a narrow one-vote victory in the Senate back in May. Later this week, the Philadelphia City Council will probably vote on a similar sick-day measure and the Seattle City Council will likely introduce one. On the state level, a group of Georgia legislators has brought forth a bill that would let workers use their sick time to care for family members who’ve fallen ill. For people who are sick of working while sick, the passage of the bill in Connecticut marked a major victory. “I think it’s a big deal for our state and part of a trend in this country,” said Jon Green, director of the Connecticut Working Families Party . “It’s partly a matter of public health, and partly a matter of common sense and common decency. We all agree that employees should not have to choose between their health and their income.” Although many people don’t realize it, employers aren’t required to give their workers paid sick days unless local law mandates it. Local chambers of commerce and restaurant trade groups have strongly opposed such laws, including the one in Connecticut, which they claimed would burden small businesses and kill jobs. The law in Connecticut will give service-industry employees who earn an hourly wage one paid sick hour for every 40 that they work. Even though it exempts businesses with less than 50 employees, House leader Larry Cafero (R-Norwalk) warned before the vote that passing the bill would be “the absolutely worst thing we could do” in a sluggish economy. But worker advocacy groups say the impact on businesses’ bottom lines will be either negligible or non-existent, while the boon to workers’ quality of life and morale is considerable. The Drum Major Institute for Public Policy studied the impact of a paid sick-leave law in San Francisco and found “no evidence” that local businesses were hurt by it. Advocates also say there are public health concerns to consider. According to Green, the workers who don’t have paid sick days tend to be concentrated in “industries where you would least want people to come in sick”: nursing homes, day care centers, and restaurants, among other areas. Many of the same workers also receive modest wages, making them more likely to work through their illness. In Connecticut, paid sick days became an unlikely campaign issue last year for Malloy, now in his first term. Malloy had loudly supported such a measure on the campaign trail, while one of his Democratic competitors, Ned Lamont, had aligned himself with small-business concerns . A spokesperson for Malloy, Colleen Flanagan, said the governor remained committed to the issue once he took office. “It’s just one of those things he really does believe is good public policy,” she said. “It makes little sense to have front-line workers coming in sick.” Among those who had testified in favor of the bill was Cheryl Folston, a former livery service driver from Newington, Conn., who ignored pains in her chest because she didn’t have paid sick days to use for a doctor visit. It turned out she had a tumor in her chest. “Working a job without paid sick days nearly cost me my life,” Folston testified. “Sick or not, I went into work. Even if I had a cold or a flu or a stomach bug, I would be driving sick patients to the hospital and special needs kids to school. I couldn’t afford to stay home.” Folston didn’t find out about the tumor until after she was laid off. She had surgery in December and is still recovering. Currently, only three cities — San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and Milwaukee — have sick-day laws on the books, according to Ellen Bravo, executive director of Family Values at Work , a consortium of state groups that has made paid sick days its primary issue. In Milwaukee, the law remains contentious more than two years after it was passed, with business interests pressing lawmakers to roll it back. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker recently signed a bill into law that will prevent local municipalities from enacting such laws, pre-empting the Milwaukee ordinance. Despite the heavy pushback from business groups, Bravo said she expects other municipalities to follow Connecticut’s lead. “Every time there’s been an effort to pass some modest protections for workers, we’ve heard the same arguments,” said Bravo. “But I think we’re going to see a wave of this … There are many people for whom basic fairness matters.”

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Ratings Agency Warns U.S. On Debt Limit

June 3, 2011

June 2, 2011 11:35:36 PM By Daniel Bases and Donna Smith NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Ratings agency Moody’s warned Thursday it would consider cutting the United States’ coveted top-notch credit rating if the White House and Congress do not make progress by mid-July in talks to raise the U.S. debt limit. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, seeking to convince Congress to increase his borrowing authority and prevent a government default, went to Capitol Hill to press his case in a 45-minute meeting with first-term lawmakers. “I am confident that two things are going to happen this summer,” Geithner told reporters after the meeting. “One is that we are going to avoid a default crisis and we are going to reach agreement on a long-term fiscal plan.” The meeting occurred just hours after Moody’s Investors warned that slow-moving deficit talks led by Vice President Joe Biden, hindered by entrenched positions on both sides, had increased the odds of a short-lived default by Washington. Moody’s warning increases pressure on President Barack Obama and House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in the U.S. Congress, to strike a deal soon or risk upsetting global financial markets. Geithner has predicted a financial catastrophe if Congress fails to increase the current $14.3 trillion borrowing cap by Aug. 2, when his department will exhaust the extraordinary cash management measures it has been using since reaching the debt limit on May 16. Geithner said he had a “good meeting” with the first-term lawmakers, but some of the skeptical Republicans, who oppose increasing the debt limit without implementing deep spending cuts, were less pleased. “It is frustrating when the secretary talks in circles and that is very unfortunate,” said Representative Stephen Lee Fincher. “We are all big boys and girls. We need a framework put forward and we are not seeing that out of this administration, only seeing talk, talk and talk.” Representative Kristi Noem, a favorite of the fiscally conservative Tea Party movement, said the freshmen Republicans made it clear to Geithner that they would not “give this administration a blank check to spend even more.” “Secretary Geithner doesn’t get it,” said Noem, one of the ”mama grizzlies” touted by ex-Alaska Governor Sarah Palin. But a Treasury official characterized the talks with lawmakers as friendly and constructive. POLITICAL GRANDSTANDING Saying the risk of “continuing stalemate” between the two sides had grown, Moody’s urged progress on deficit reduction soon before politics takes over in the run-up to the November 2012 presidential election. “We think this is an opportunity,” Steven Hess, sovereign credit analyst for Moody’s, told Reuters. “If this opportunity goes by without them realizing a serious long-term debt/deficit reduction program, then we think that until the presidential election, the chances of such an agreement are really much reduced.” Mary Miller, a top Treasury official, said the Moody’s statement underscored the need for Congress to move quickly to make sure the United States could meet all its debt obligations while working to reach a long-term fiscal deal. A U.S. default would roil global financial markets, but few investors are rattled just yet. Wall Street, in large part, expects the debt and deficit negotiations to go down to the wire, as did talks over tax cuts and the 2011 budget. “We’ve been through this political grandstanding before,” said Jim Kochan, chief fixed-income strategist at Wells Fargo Advantage Funds. “We always go right down to the day on debt ceiling targets being raised. No congressman and no president wants to be responsible for Social Security payments not going out. This is a minimal risk. We’ve seen this so many times.” Obama has tasked Biden to lead negotiations with Republican and Democratic lawmakers to find a deficit-reduction deal that would be palatable to Congress and pave the way for the debt limit to be raised. Their talks are due to resume on June 9. But Republicans refuse to consider tax increases as part of a deal, while Democrats are opposed to Republican proposals to scale back the popular government-run Medicare healthcare program for future retirees. Republicans seized on the announcement by Moody’s, which comes two months after Standard & Poor’s revised down its credit outlook on the U.S. rating, as proof of the need to make some sharp spending cuts. “This report makes clear that if we let this opportunity pass without real deficit reduction, America’s financial standing will be at risk,” said Boehner. “A credible agreement means the spending cuts must exceed the debt limit increase. Senator Charles Schumer, a top Democrat, said a compromise that prevents a “catastrophic default on our obligations and significantly reduces the debt is within reach.” (Additional reporting by Rachelle Younglai, Alister Bull and Thomas Ferraro; Writing by Deborah Charles; Editing by Ross Colvin, David Lawder and Eric Walsh) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Grim Prospects For Latest Effort To Restore Extended Jobless Benefits In N.C.

June 1, 2011

Sonia Street does not want to be evicted from her apartment in Charlotte, N.C., but she says that’s what will happen if Republicans in the North Carolina General Assembly and Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue can’t agree on a budget deal that restores 20 weeks of benefits for the long-term unemployed. “Provided this thing goes through next week, I should be okay,” Street, 43, told HuffPost. She said she found an eviction notice last month on the front door of her apartment. “If I have money in my hand by the 11th, I’ll be fine. If not, I don’t know what I’m going to do.” Street is one of 46,000 unemployed North Carolinians who have prematurely stopped receiving federal unemployment benefits because of the political standoff. Perdue vetoed a GOP proposal that she said would have resulted in massive state layoffs, though Republicans insisted layoffs could only happen if a formal budget for the next fiscal year is not in place by the end of July. On Tuesday, statehouse Republicans announced a bipartisan budget deal that includes retroactive payments for people who have missed checks since the federal Extended Benefits program expired in the state on April 16 . The state Senate will likely approve the budget on Thursday, and the House will approve it over the weekend, said a spokesman for Republican House Speaker Thom Tillis. Perdue doesn’t like it. “I am taking a close look at the Senate budget, but at first glance it raises enormous concerns,” she said in a statement. “With regard to education funding, the proposed budget appears to be a charade. While the Senate claims to protect teaching positions, they are actually forcing local school districts to make substantial layoffs of education personnel to the tune of more than a quarter billion dollars — meaning thousands of teachers and teaching assistants will be cut. It also appears to take a devastating toll on higher education.” Democratic House Minority Leader Joe Hackney told HuffPost that Perdue “probably will veto” the bill; a veto override by the legislature “is possible but not assured.” Street will be watching closely. She says she lost her job as an accountant for a commercial property management company in July 2009. She’s been taking classes since then in hopes of eventually earning a bachelor’s degree. Her job search has been lousy: “I haven’t one interview the whole time I’ve been laid off.” The benefits lapsed because the state has failed to modify its Extended Benefits eligibility law to conform to a new federal standard, which the U.S. Congress created in December to ensure states with high unemployment rates would not lose the final 20 weeks of benefits. That aid kicks in for people who use up 79 weeks of combined state and federal benefits without finding work. Twenty-five states have passed laws to keep the benefits. Chapel Hill resident Ali Braswell, who also said she is facing eviction, doesn’t get why it’s been such a struggle for North Carolina. “I at least thought I was gonna get the 99 weeks that everybody else did,” Braswell, 40, told HuffPost. She said she lost her job as a payroll coordinator in July of 2009 and that the only work she’s had since then was as a desk attendant in a University of North Carolina residence hall. From October to May, she worked 12 hours a week, earning $7.50 an hour. Braswell said she had a job interview on Wednesday that went well. “I have $213 to my name and my rent is due as of today,” Braswell said. “I have a cutoff notice from my electric. I’m really hoping this job will come through. I really don’t know what I’m going to do.”

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House Votes Against Raising Debt Ceiling

June 1, 2011

WASHINGTON — House Republicans dealt defeat to their own proposal for a $2.4 trillion increase in the nation’s debt limit Tuesday, a political gambit designed to reinforce a demand for spending cuts to accompany any increase in government borrowing. The vote was lopsided, with just 97 in favor of the measure and 318 against. House Democrats accused the GOP of political demagoguery, while the Obama administration maneuvered to avoid taking sides – or giving offense to majority Republicans. The debate was brief, occasionally impassioned and set a standard of sorts for public theater, particularly at a time when private negotiations continue among the administration and key lawmakers on the deficit cuts Republicans have demanded. The bill “will and must fail,” said Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., the House Ways and Means Committee chairman who noted he had helped write the very measure he was criticizing. “I consider defeating an unconditional increase to be a success, because it sends a clear and critical message that the Congress has finally recognized we must immediately begin to rein in America’s affection for deficit spending,” he said. But Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich., accused Republicans of a “ploy so egregious that (they) have had to spend the last week pleading with Wall Street not to take it seriously and risk our economic recovery.” He and other Democrats added that Republicans were attempting to draw attention away from their controversial plan to turn Medicare into a program in which seniors purchase private insurance coverage. The proceedings occurred roughly two months before the date Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has said the debt limit must be raised. If no action is taken by Aug. 2, he has warned, the government could default on its obligations and risk turmoil that might plunge the nation into another recession or even an economic depression. Republicans, who are scheduled to meet with Obama at the White House on Wednesday, signaled in advance that the debt limit vote did not portend a final refusal to grant an increase. The roll call vote was held late in the day, and there was little, if any discernible impact on Wall Street, where major exchanges showed gains for the day. At the same time, it satisfied what GOP officials said was a desire among the rank and file to vote against unpopular legislation the leadership has said eventually must pass in some form. Republicans said they were offering legislation Obama and more than 100 Democratic lawmakers had sought. But Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the second-ranking Democrat, accused the GOP of staging a “demagogic vote” at a time lawmakers should work together to avoid a financial default. All 97 votes in favor of the measure were cast by Democrats, totaling less than a majority and far under the two-thirds support needed for passage. For its part, the administration appeared eager to avoid criticizing Republicans. “It’s fine, it’s fine,” presidential press secretary Jay Carney said when asked about the Republican decision to tie spending cuts with more borrowing. “We believe they should not be linked because there is no alternative that’s acceptable to raising the debt ceiling. But we’re committed to reducing the deficit,” Carney said. The government has already reached the limit of its borrowing authority, $14.3 trillion, and the Treasury is using a series of extraordinary maneuvers to meet financial obligations. By no longer would making investments in two big pension funds for federal workers and beginning to withdraw current investments, for example, the Treasury created $214 billion in additional borrowing headroom. At the same time, the Obama administration and congressional leaders are at work trying to produce a deficit-reduction agreement in excess of $1 trillion to meet Republican demands for spending cuts. Political maneuvering on legislation to raise the debt limit has become common in recent years, as federal deficits have soared and presidents of both political parties have been forced to seek authority to borrow additional trillions of dollars. Because such legislation is unpopular with voters, presidents generally look to lawmakers from their own political party to provide the votes needed for passage. In the current case, though, Republicans control the House, and without at least some support from them, Obama’s request for a debt-limit increase would fail. However, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, announced months ago that he would demand spending cuts as a condition for passage. “It’s true that allowing America to default would be irresponsible,” he said on May 9 in a speech to the Economic Club of New York. “But it would be more irresponsible to raise the debt limit without simultaneously taking dramatic steps to reduce spending and to reform the budget process.” He added that any spending cuts should be larger than the increase in borrowing authority, a statement meant to lay down a marker for the deficit-reduction talks led by Vice President Joe Biden. Few details have emerged from those negotiations, although Biden said recently the negotiators had made progress. He expressed confidence they would be able to agree on specific cuts in excess of $1 trillion over the next decade, and then look to procedural mechanisms known as “triggers” to force further automatic deficit cuts adding up to another $3 trillion or so. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, a participant in the talks, said afterward, “I am confident that we can achieve over a trillion dollars in savings at this point, and hopefully more.” Earlier, Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., had said the discussions centered on deficit cuts totaling in the range of $150 billion to $200 billion over a decade, but that was from a relatively small category of programs. Among the areas eyed for spending cuts is the federal pension program, where the White House has signaled it is receptive to a Republican proposal for employees to make greater contributions. ___ Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor and Martin Crutsinger contributed to this report.

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Dave Johnson: Dems Should Vote for Clean Debt Limit Bill

May 31, 2011

The House is voting on a “clean” debt ceiling bill today — a bill to raise the debt ceiling without any “hostage-taking” conditions. This is the right thing to do for the country and every Democrat should vote for this. Voting for a clean bill will draw the contrast for the public between those who are doing the right thing, and those willing to hold the world’s economy hostage to a make-the-rich-richer plutocracy agenda. Democrats who do not vote for a clean bill should lose committee assignments, parking places, even bathroom keys. The Debt Ceiling The country’s “debt ceiling” has been reached. This means that the government’s authority to borrow money has reached its limit. The Treasury Department is engaging in gimmicks and schemes to keep the country going but time is running out. The Congress must extend this limit, or the government will default on its bonds. If our government defaults on its bonds, it would initiate a worldwide financial crisis that dwarfs the Wall Street meltdown of a few years ago. WHY We Have This Debt In 1981, the Reagan administration dramatically changed the course of the country. They defunded government by passing huge tax cuts for the rich and massively increasing military spending, and began cutting back on the things We, the People (government) do for each other. The country cut back on maintaining — never mind modernizing — our infrastructure, our schools, colleges and universities, scientific research and other things that make us competitive in world markets. We began cashing in our factories and moving the jobs out of the country. As a result of Reagan-era changes, our trade deficits soared, wages stagnated, pensions disappeared, and a few extremely wealthy started getting much, much richer. One major result of these changes, of course, was the huge budget deficits that accumulated into today’s massive debt. This was the plan from the start , to “starve the beast” by defunding government and forcing the debt to reach a level where there was no choice but to cut back on democratic government’s protections for the people, unleashing plutocracy. Hostage-Taking Enabled: The Tax Cut Extension This debate over the debt ceiling and hostage-taking follows the recent extension of the Bush tax cuts — another product of hostage-taking. At the end of the last Congress, unemployment benefits for the millions of unemployed were running out. Republicans — having filibustered much of the legislation of the prior two years — held the extension of benefits “hostage” saying they would not let it pass unless the deficit-creating Bush tax cuts were extended. Enough Democrats caved and passed an extension of the Bush tax cuts. This validated hostage-taking as a successful tactic while making the deficit much worse, setting the stage for today’s debt-ceiling fight. The Vote Is A Trick Today’s vote has been scheduled by the Republican leadership as a trap, trying to get some Democrats to vote with Republicans to support their hostage-taking agenda and create the appearance of bipartisan support for plutocracy. If the Republican position gets the support of enough Democratic members, Republicans can then demand deep cuts in Medicare and other programs that help people and hold corporate power in check, in exchange for their votes to allow the world’s economy to continue to operate. From TPM: First Debt Limit Vote Today As GOP Looks To Divide Dems , The vote is intended to expose fault lines within the Democratic caucus, with Republicans counting on sizable number of Democrats to side with them and bolster their case that Democrats need to agree to deep spending cuts as a condition to raising the debt limit. Vote For A Clean Debt-Ceiling Bill Voting for a clean bill stops government-by-hostage-in its tracks. Voting for a clean bill saves the world’s economy. Voting for a clean bill fights the plutocracy agenda. Voting for a clean bill saves Medicare, Social Security and the things We, the People do for each other. Voting for a clean bill is the right thing to do and doing the right thing is the right thing politically. Call your member of Congress NOW and demand a vote for a clean debt-ceiling bill. (Update: Jed Lewison at DailyKos explains reasons every Democrat should vote against today’s Republican sham-bill .) This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture . I am a Fellow with CAF. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

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David Coates: Punishment or Pushback: Financial Regulation in the Midst of Recession

May 27, 2011

Nearly one American in two is currently “financially fragile ” — unable, that is, to come up with $2000 dollars in 30 days to deal with an unexpected emergency. That fragility presumably does not stretch out to the fortunate few employed by Goldman Sachs, collectively the recipients of the reportedly $15.4 billion set aside by the Wall Street giant for the payment of bonuses at the end of 2010. Fifteen point four billion dollars averages out at $435,000 per Goldman Sachs employee: in a year in which, far away from Wall Street, one million homes were foreclosed and 15 million Americans went without employment, let alone bonuses. While mainstream America continues to struggle with the recessionary consequences of a meltdown caused by financial excess, large financial institutions have left that struggle far behind. They are back to profitability and back to their old ways. Senior bankers are making money again while the rest of us are not. There was a time, not so very long ago, when things were otherwise: when leading Wall Street players publicly conceded (and indeed apologized for) the causal role played by their institutions in the financial meltdown of 2008. There was a time when the energies of Congress were accordingly focused on the creation of stronger regulatory structures designed to block a repetition of that meltdown. There was even a time when some of the minor players in the debacle of 2008 found themselves in court, charged with fraud. But those apologies were brief. The new regulatory structures were born flawed; and the few prosecutions failed to deliver. To a truly remarkable degree, given the scale and longevity of the damage they have caused, the guilty have escaped unpunished from the financial crisis of 2008, as Washington has turned its attention elsewhere, in the process allowing bank lobbyists to water down even the modest reforms imposed at the height of the crisis. Washington, that is, except Carl Levin and his subcommittee. Their Wall Street and the Financial Crisis report deserves to be compulsory reading for every concerned citizen, for it reaffirms what we already knew — that regulation and even punishment, certainly not pushback, remains essential if the practices which generated such economic havoc and social misery in 2008 are not eventually to do the same again on an even grander scale. A little recap would not go amiss, given the amount of money, energy and argumentation now flowing into the weakening of new regulatory constraints on the behavior of leading U.S. financial institutions. 1. Lest we forget, remember this. The credit crisis of 2008 was caused by inadequately-regulated and over-confident U.S. financial institutions, within which there were serious lapses of accountability and ethics. This is the well-established conclusion of a welter of both academic and journalistic reports on the events and processes leading up to the collapse of Lehmann Brothers in September 2008, and the subsequent financial meltdown. The credit crisis was the product of recklessness, corruption, managerial failure, greed and arrogance – in what Michael Mayo called “an industry on steroids .” That is also the conclusion reached by the subpoena-empowered Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission in its January 2011 report. Among the Commission’s findings were these: that “widespread failures in financial regulation and supervision proved devastating to the stability of the nation’s financial markets;” that “dramatic failures of corporate governance and risk management at many systemically important financial institutions were a key cause of this crisis;” and that “a combination of excessive borrowing, risky investments, and lack of transparency put the financial system on a collision course with crisis.” ( report , pp. xviii-xix) 2. To prevent an even deeper crisis, leading financial institutions received huge amounts of taxpayer and Federal Reserve support, without which many of them would undoubtedly have folded. We now know, because of Bernie Sanders ‘ diligence, that in addition to TARP money Goldman Sachs received nearly $600 billion in loans and other financial aid from the Federal Reserve in the wake of the crisis, “Morgan Stanley…received nearly $2 trillion, Citigroup…$1.8 trillion, Bear Stearns…$1 trillion, and Merrill Lynch…some $1.5 trillion in short term loans from the Fed.” Even hedge fund giants like John Paulson apparently took their cut of the Fed’s emergency cash. But though rapidly saved in this fashion by this staggering volume of tax-payer dollars and Fed loans, the big six financial institutions now sitting astride Wall Street — Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo — failed miserably to pass on their good fortune with equal speed to either struggling small banks or to a Main Street suddenly bereft of available credit. 3. The fallout from the crisis created by bad financial practices continues unabated: primarily in the form of extensive job loss, unprecedented levels of home foreclosure, and now serious cuts in state-level public services. As Simon Johnson has recently noted , “employment remains more than 5 percent below its pre-crisis peak, millions of homeowners are still underwater on their mortgages, and the negative fiscal consequences — at national, state and local level — remain profound.” Indeed we may be facing such a prolonged recession as a result of the 2008 financial collapse as to effectively lose a whole decade, even perhaps a whole generation. Certainly there are disturbing signs in the wind of new and awesome problems ahead: not least persistent and unexpected unemployment among the estimated 85 percent of the 2 million new college graduates likely to return home in 2011 for want of adequate work ! 4. Bankers did initially concede responsibility and invite some degree of regulatory reform. Bank of America chief executive and president Brian Moynihan told the opening session of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission that “over the crisis, we as an industry caused a lot of damage;” and JP Morgan Chase’s Jamie Dimon admitted before the same body that “we did make mistakes and there were things we could have done better .” Appearing before a parliamentary committee in London a month later, the former chairman of HBOS made similar concessions, saying that he was “profoundly and unreservedly sorry.” John Mack of Morgan Stanley even called the crisis “a profound wake up call for [his] firm;” and all four bankers appearing before the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission declared their willingness to co-operate with tighter oversight while indicating their fear that such oversight might become excessive. It didn’t last of course. By the time of the next Davos conference, Jamie Dimon for one was already condemning ‘the incessant broad-based vilification of the banking industry” as both unfair and damaging. Fortunately for the rest of us, the French President did not agree, reminding the American banker that “the world has paid with tens of millions of unemployed, who were in no way to blame and who paid for everything.” Nicholas Sarkozy had a point. 5. The appropriateness of that admission of responsibility was confirmed by later bipartisan investigatory panels, particularly Carl Levin’s. The suspicion that even major players in the industry misbehaved prior to the crisis is now evident for all to see from the evidence presented in the Levin report. As the Senator put it, the investigation of his sub-committee found a “financial snake pit rife with greed, conflicts of interest, and wrong doing.” And not just the Democratic Senator. His Republican counterpart was equally blunt. “Blame for this mess lies everywhere,” the ultra-conservative Tom Coburn said when sitting alongside Levin, “from federal regulators who cast a blind eye, Wall Street bankers who let greed run wild, and members of Congress who failed to provide oversight….It shows without a doubt the lack of ethics in some of our financial institutions who embraced known conflicts of interest to accomplish wealth for themselves, not caring about the outcome for their customers.” Goldman Sachs (for their marketing practices), and Standard & Poor’s (for the inadequacy of their credit rating), were both heavily censored in the Levin report. The Subcommittee found no less than 12 Goldman Sachs’ practices that raised conflict of interests concerns: criticizing the company for designing, marketing and selling “CDOs in ways that created conflicts of interest with the firm’s clients and at times led to the bank’s profiting from the same products that caused substantial losses for its clients.” (report, page 8) The logical outcome of these five unassailable truths would, in an entirely sane world, presumably be the extensive re-regulation of the entire financial sector and the punishment of the guilty among the financial elite; and there is some slow momentum building for at least a degree of punishment. Many of the main players have already slipped through the judicial net. Individuals like Angelo Mozilo, who agreed in October 2010 to pay $67.5 million to settle insider trading and other charges brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Institutions like Citigroup, which paid $75 million in July 2010 to settle civil fraud charges filed by the SEC; or Goldman Sachs, who settled with the SEC that same month for $550 million. (Two top Citigroup executives settled separately with the SEC that July, paying $100,000 and $80,000 respectively.) But at last the net seems to be tightening slightly. The FDIC has reportedly filed suit to recover $900 million in damages from three former executives of Washington Mutual, and is said to be conducting at least 50 criminal investigations of former senior figures in banks that have failed. Carl Levin, for his part, has referred the evidence given to his subcommittee by Goldman Sachs executives (including by its CEO) to the Justice Department for possible criminal prosecution; Attorney Generals in Nevada and Arizona have filed suit against Bank of America for dubious lending procedures in the housing market; a coalition of 50 state attorney generals is gearing up to do the same; and New York’s Attorney General has called in documents on mortgage operations during the housing bubble from major financial institutions that include Bank of America and Morgan Stanley. However, don’t hold your breath. American justice grinds mighty slow when it is the mighty who are being called to justice. The initial anger – in Washington and beyond – against bank excess has now largely dissipated, and lobby spending by financial institutions has accordingly grown of late, as the battle over regulatory details has shifted away from Congress and back into the regulatory agencies themselves. There was significant pushback against reform even before the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act – pushback that left gaps in the new regulatory structures through which old forms of financial malpractice could and do continue to slip: pushback that ensured that there would be no impenetrable wall between commercial and investment banking, no watertight limit on the size of financial institutions, and an indeterminate amount of derivative trading still exempt from the new regulations. (The formulation of those was left to the CFTC, where partisan infighting recently eroded the potency of the new regulatory codes still further). Tighter regulation in the wake of the Act is accordingly proving more difficult than was originally hoped: partly due to the difficulty of getting Congressional clearance for Obama appointees, partly because of the sheer complexity of the practices being regulated, and partly because of resistance from large institutions and their lobbyists. The new Republican majority in the House of Representatives is an additional thorn in the side of this tighter regulation: with the Tea Party-inspired legislators persistently underfunding (or attempting to defund) regulatory agencies, introducing bills to slow down or eviscerate the Dodd-Frank Act, and waging a particularly focused war on the new Consumer Financial Agency and its erstwhile head, Elizabeth Warren. Even the Obama administration is now apparently planning to exempt certain foreign exchange derivatives from regulations mandated by the Dodd-Frank Act. Meanwhile, old practices are up and running again, as though they had made no contribution to our present malaise. The board of Citigroup awarded its CEO a base salary of $1.75 million for 2011. Bank of America paid its CEO $10.2 million in 2010, as JPMorgan Chase’s Jamie Dimon earned $23.6 million. Even the credit agencies, so defective in the run up to the crisis, are full of self-confidence again. Standard and Poor’s chose to warn in April of a potential downgrade to the credit rating of the United States, a downgrade directly linked to public borrowing made necessary by the recession that inadequate credit rating had helped trigger less than 3 years before! Standard & Poor’s, the very company on which in that same month the Levin-Coburn report had laid prime responsibility for triggering the financial meltdown (through their and Moody’s July 2007 mass downgrading of mortgage-backed securities hitherto rated AAA). It takes some nerve to be simultaneously so criticized and so critical, but Standard and Poor’s clearly have those kinds of nerves! Richard Eskow complained in 2010 that “a banker can’t get arrested in this town.” Well, perhaps it’s time that they could. In Iceland, in Germany and even in the UK, delinquent bankers occasionally end up in court, sometimes in jail, even expelled from the industry because of their malpractice. But not here, not this time, not yet (unlike in the earlier S&L crisis, when more than a thousand bankers were jailed). As a whole string of commentators (including Richard Eskow, Matt Taibbi, Les Leopold and Joshua Holland ) have recently argued, it is surely time to call our bankers to account. Time because of justice; time because of the sufferings of others; time because only by calling delinquent bankers to account can we ever hope to prevent them dragging us all down again into a crisis and a recession of which we would be innocent, and which would be entirely of their making. Initially posted, with full academic sourcing, at: www.davidcoates.net

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Robert Reich: Paul Ryan Still Doesn’t Get It

May 25, 2011

Republican House Budget chief Paul Ryan still doesn’t get it. He blames Tuesday’s upset victory of Democrat Kathy Hochul over Republican Jane Corwin to represent New York’s 26th congressional district on Democratic scare tactics. Hochul had focused like a laser on the Republican plan to turn Medicare into vouchers that would funnel the money to private health insurers. Republicans didn’t exactly take it lying down. The National Republican Congressional Committee poured over $400,000 into the race, and Karl Rove’s American Crossroads provided Corwin an additional $700,000 of support. But the money didn’t work. Even in this traditionally Republican district — represented in the past by such GOP notables as Jack Kemp and William Miller, both of whom would become vice presidential candidates — Hochul’s message hit home. Ryan calls it “demagoguery,” accusing Hochul and her fellow Democrats of trying to “scare seniors into thinking that their current benefits are being affected.” Scare tactics? Seniors have every right to be scared. His plan would eviscerate Medicare by privatizing it with vouchers that would fall further and further behind the rising cost of health insurance. And Ryan and the Republicans offer no means of slowing rising health-care costs. To the contrary, they want to repeal every cost-containment measure enacted in last year’s health-reform legislation. The inevitable result: More and more seniors would be priced out of the market for health care. The Ryan plan has put Republicans in a corner. Some, like Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown and, briefly, presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich, are rejecting the plan altogether. Most, though, are holding on and holding their breath. After all, House Republicans approved it — and voters don’t especially like flip-floppers. Senate Democrats will bring the Ryan plan for a vote Thursday in order to force Senate Republicans on the record. Watch closely. Some GOP stalwarts say the Party must clarify its message — a sure sign of panic. Former Republican congressman Rick Lazio says the GOP “must do [a] better job explaining entitlements.” It’s just possible the public knows exactly what entitlements are — and is getting a clear message about what Republicans are up to. All this should give the White House and Democratic budget negotiators more confidence — and more bargaining leverage – to put tax cuts on the rich squarely on the table. And, while they’re at it, turn Medicare into a “Medicare-for-all” system that forces doctors and hospitals to shift from costly tests, drugs, and procedures having little effect, to healthy outcomes. Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future , now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

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Elizabeth Warren Fans Flame Patrick McHenry On Facebook

May 25, 2011

WASHINGTON — Rep. Patrick McHenry’s pants may not be on fire, but his Facebook page is getting thoroughly flamed after he called Elizabeth Warren a liar Tuesday in a subcommittee hearing. Fans of Warren think the North Carolina Republican took some unacceptable liberties with the boss of the nascent Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), and they’re demanding that he get some McEtiquette and apologize. Hundreds — and probably thousands — have flocked to McHenry’s fan page to singe him . “I ‘like’ the fact that thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of Americans are appalled by your behavior,” wrote Jill Budzynski. “You are an insult to the title of chairman of any committee. It is out of order to abuse a loyal public servant who is trying her best to accommodate your flip-flopping of schedules. How reprehensible to accuse her of lying. Apologize now.” The dust-up Tuesday came near the end of a hearing on the CFPB when the Oversight Committee’s top Democrat, Maryland’s Elijah Cummings, noted that Warren had stayed beyond the time he had seen agreed to in internal committee communications. But McHenry denied there was any agreement, even though the hearing time had been changed as recently as that morning to accommodate the subcommittee. “You’re making this up,” McHenry told her, to her shock and gasps from the hearing audience. Warren and her staff had the same understanding as Cummings, and sources confirmed the previously agreed upon timing for The Huffington Post. Warren is an extremely popular figure among people who think Wall Street and the big banks need to be reined in, and they’re expressing their displeasure on Facebook — even if it galls them to have to become a “fan” of McHenry to do so. “I also clicked ‘like’ under duress. However, I am filled with hope for America after reading all these comments,” wrote Margarita T. Gonzalez-Newcomer. “One thing that is amazing to me is how politicians forget the innate FAIRNESS of the American people. Even when the parties try to [divide] us and pit us against each other, the American people snap out of that fog to stand up for fair play. Thanks to all who have commented on behalf of Ms. Warren.” “Your behavior toward Elizabeth Warren shows that you’re not only a greedy bastard with no regard for your constituents, you’re also arrogant and rude,” posted Beverly Tuttle Potvin. “Any apology from you would undoubtedly be an entirely insincere and empty gesture on your part so I won’t even bother with that demand.” And some North Carolina residents appear to have found the page, as well. “You are the liar Pat!” wrote Mike Sprinkle, whose own Facebook page lists his home as Hiddenite, N.C. Though that’s just outside McHenry’s district, Sprinkle added, “I can & will vote against you.” The congressman did have the occasional defender. “SorosBOTS are out in force today to protect that socialist Elizabeth Warren,” posted Kristen Peterson, referring to the billionaire Democratic Party donor George Soros. “I clicked like to let you know I appreciate you calling this woman out. Thank you and KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK!” McHenry’s spokesman said he was in a meeting Wednesday morning and could not immediately comment. But after Tuesday’s hearing he stuck to his position, and blamed Warren for stiffing Congress on the time. “Committee staff worked diligently to accommodate Ms. Warren’s schedule,” McHenry said. “I was shocked by Ms. Warren’s blatant sense of entitlement,” he added. “She was apparently under the assumption that she could dictate a one-hour time limit for her testimony to Congress and that we were there at her behest instead of the other way around. This is just further example of her disregard for congressional oversight.” McHenry press secretary Michael Babyak noted that McHenry wouldn’t try to shut down his page, pointing to a post he wrote in the past praising the dialogue it produced . “I’d also like to express my appreciation for my Facebook family — whether you agree or disagree with me — you are speaking out and engaging in the civil and honest debate that is the cornerstone of our country’s political process,” the congressman wrote. “Please continue to share your input and feedback — and give each other’s opinions the respect they rightly deserve. And always remember — this is a free speech zone.” Note: This reporter has just created his own Facebook fan page, and has not had the pleasure of being flamed in a similar fashion as McHenry. But anyone who would like to share, can do so here .

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Slush-Fund Surtax? IRS Could Penalize Secret Campaign Spending

May 25, 2011

WASHINGTON — Top Republican political strategist Karl Rove’s method of secretly funneling unlimited contributions from big donors was so hugely successful in the 2010 campaign that Democrats are now trying to copy it. But his model may yet end up backfiring spectacularly. In one scenario, groups like Rove’s Crossroads Grassroots Political Strategies could find themselves subject to massive fines, ranging as high as 35 to 70 percent of the money they received in secret donations. In another scenario, their deep-pocket donors could be hit by a 35 percent tax on their contributions. Rove may well have found a way around the nation’s federal election laws. But now the key question is whether the Internal Revenue Service is willing to be assertive. Because if it is, then just like with Al Capone, it could be the IRS that gets him. In Crossroads GPS’s solicitations for money, the group describes itself as a tax-exempt 501(c)(4) organization, and due to a controversial loophole in federal campaign finance rules, the names of donors to those organizations do not have to be disclosed publicly. But contrary to popular belief, Rove’s group has not formally attained 501(c)(4) status. The group’s application, requesting the IRS to classify it as a “social welfare” group, is still pending. And while the designation is typically not much more than a formality — organizations routinely call themselves (c)(4) groups before they’ve been formally approved — tax and campaign finance experts contacted by The Huffington Post said the IRS could well deny Crossroads GPS’s application. IRS guidelines for 501(c)(4) status state that social welfare groups “must operate primarily to further the common good and general welfare of the people of the community” — which “does not include direct or indirect participation or intervention in political campaigns on behalf of or in opposition to any candidate for public office.” Intervening in political campaigns isn’t prohibited, it just can’t be the primary activity. Were Crossroads GPS denied its 501(c)(4) status, the organization could be on the hook for tens of millions of dollars in fines. And operating in secrecy would suddenly come with an enormous new price tag. THE RISE OF 501(c)(4)s In the 2010 cycle, Rove wasn’t the only one to use a 501(c)(4) as a source of clandestine funds. A slew of other , mostly conservative, often interrelated groups did so as well, led by the Wall Street-backed American Action Network . Indeed, more of these groups seem to be popping up every day, with Rove’s organization often cited as a role model. “If people look at what Crossroads did over the course of the last couple of years, that’ll give them a good sense of our activity,” said Bill Burton, a former aide to President Barack Obama and one of the co-founders of Priorities USA, a newly-formed Democratic 501(c)(4), in an interview with The Huffington Post last week. Crossroads GPS spokesman Jonathan Collegio confidently insists that his group “is comfortably within the guidelines set out by the IRS” for social welfare groups. “GPS invested millions of dollars in social welfare issue advocacy advertising before the FEC’s 60 day reporting window last summer,” he said in an email. And, Collegio added, “we’ve been one of the most heavily active issue advocacy organizations in Washington over the last six months.” But when it comes to defining political activities, the IRS doesn’t engage in the same kind of legalistic hairsplitting that the Federal Election Commission does, and much of the spending Collegio puts on the non-political side of his group’s ledger, the IRS might well decide does not belong there. “Lots and lots of things that would not be considered ‘express advocacy’ by the FEC, the IRS would consider intervention in a political campaign,” said Donald Tobin, a tax and campaign finance law expert at the Moritz College of Law. TIPPING THE SCALE To qualify as a legitimate 501(c)(4) organization, in its first fiscal year Crossroads GPS would need to have spent more on what the IRS considers non-political expenditures than on political ones, said Marcus S. Owens, a Washington lawyer who used to head the IRS division that oversees tax-exempt organizations. “My guess is they haven’t,” he said. And there’s not enough time to take dramatic measures to restore the balance, either — the group’s first fiscal year ends on May 31. Consider the numbers: Crossroads GPS dropped a whopping $17 million on campaign spending that it considered obligated to report to the FEC — most of it on televised attack ads — in the run-up to the November 2010 elections. And while Collegio said the group raised a total of $43 million in 2010 — leaving plenty available for other purposes — there are few indications that it spent more than a fraction of that money on anything that, by IRS standards, is unrelated to campaigning. Asked for examples of big-ticket expenditures that weren’t election-related, Collegio came up short. Crossroads GPS made a $750,000 ad buy in March attacking public sector unions, and recently launched an anti-Obama wiki , he said. But all that only amounts to pocket change for the group. Collegio also cited as unrelated to elections the $1 million Crossroads GPS spent to run an ad in California during August 2010, that called on Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer “to stop the Medicare cuts.” Boxer was facing reelection three months later. “What Crossroads is going to argue is that these ads you’re talking about are lobbying — and lobbying is a social welfare purpose — because they say in the tagline: ‘Call Barbara Boxer,’” Tobin said. “But that is using federal election law jurisprudence, not tax jurisprudence.” The IRS, he said, takes a “fact and circumstances approach” to decide whether ads — or groups — are basically there to influence elections. And the group’s primary purpose really couldn’t be clearer. Its own blog recently linked to a Wall Street Journal story in which Rove and fellow Republican strategist Ed Gillespie — the co-founders of Crossroads GPS and its Super PAC twin American Crossroads — announced that they’re “raising $120 million in the effort to defeat President Barack Obama, win a GOP majority in the Senate and protect the party’s grip on the House in the 2012 election.” “There’s a good chance the IRS will deny the (c)(4) application,” said Lloyd Mayer, who teaches tax law at the University of Notre Dame. So what would the group do should it come to that? Collegio told The Huffington Post he was “not going to argue hypotheticals based on a tax expert’s opinion.” And he stuck to his guns, adding: “[t]he laws as they are set out by the FEC and IRS are clear, and Crossroads follows them closely.” MILLIONS IN PENALTIES But without its 501(c)(4) status, the group would find itself in real trouble. Experts say the most likely scenario is that the IRS would classify Crossroads GPS as a “527″ organization instead. Unlike 501(c)(4), Section 527 of the U.S. Code is specifically intended for organizations that are primarily engaged in political advocacy. It exempts them from taxes and allows unlimited donations from individuals and corporations. And, thanks to recent Supreme Court decisions, it no longer imposes any limits on what they can say in their ads. But Section 527 also explicitly requires political groups to publicly disclose from whom they got their money and how they spent it. Karl Sandstrom, a former FEC commissioner now at the Washington law firm of Perkins Coie, predicts that “the IRS would come in and say, ‘you’re not properly a (c)(4), all indications are that you’re operating as a political organization. And political organizations have a responsibility to file regular reports with the IRS, and you failed to do so.’” Suddenly in violation of those disclosure rules, the group would then be subject to a massive penalty, established in the statute as the maximum corporate tax rate (35 percent) times all the money that should have been disclosed but wasn’t. For Crossroads GPS, that turns out to be a lot. “You would aggregate all donations that were not disclosed, and you would take that amount at 35 percent,” said Tobin. If indeed the group took in $43 million in donations in 2010 alone, that would mean well over $15 million in penalties right there. “In addition, the organization is also taxed on non-disclosed expenditures, so my reading of the statute would subject all expenditures that were not disclosed to the FEC to the 35 percent tax,” Tobin said. So Crossroads GPS would also owe more than a third of however much it spent beyond the $17 million it has already reported. In a twist sure to be frustrating to disclosure advocates, however, the group still would not have to disclose its donors’ identities once it paid its fines. But that would be secrecy at a very high price, indeed. The tax experts consulted by The Huffington Post say that another possible path exists for Crossroads GPS should it be denied its 501(c)(4) status: It could conceivably declare itself a regular, tax-paying corporation. But the group would arguably take a huge hit there, as well. In that case, the company would potentially have to pay corporate income tax on all the money in took in as donations. And all those campaigns ads wouldn’t be deductible, as they don’t qualify as ordinary and necessary business expenses. WAITING ON THE IRS Why, then, is Collegio still so confident? And why, given these huge potential pitfalls, are political (c)(4)s the hottest thing in D.C.? Because the IRS may be afraid of a fight. “That’s the issue here,” said Mayer, the Notre Dame law professor. “Because usually when there are penalties — especially of this magnitude, especially when you’re dealing with an organization this politically sensitive — the IRS blinks.” An IRS spokesman declined to comment for this story. Mayer described what he considers a likely scenario: The IRS denies Rove’s group its (c)(4) status, but ends up letting him off with just a slap on the wrist. “The IRS can waive those penalties if they find that the failure was due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect,” Mayer said. “And, of course, reasonable cause is all in the eye of the beholder.” “That would be the easy way out,” he added. Another possibility is that the IRS could just decide to let the issue drag out indefinitely, Mayer said. As it is, the earliest opportunity for decisive action may not be for almost another year. Experts say that at this point, the IRS would be wise to hold off on any action until Crossroads GPS files it annual tax form, a Form 990. By law, that form has to include a lot of detailed information about donations and expenditures. But Crossroads GPS will have four and a half months after the end of its fiscal year to file its taxes. That won’t be until Oct. 15. And tax rules make it pretty easy to get extensions for as long as six months, or until mid-April 2012 — still before the November elections, but not soon enough to stop the proliferation of copycats 501(c)(4)s. The IRS is notoriously skittish about making political decisions, Mayer said. “They will go after these (c)(4)s, but they may not have the stomach or the resources to fight a battle royale all the way to the Supreme Court.” That’s particularly the case if Rove’s group fights back hard — as it would be expected to do — and accuses the IRS of trying to limit free speech, he said. But this time around, the IRS could also face a lot of heat if it blinks — not just if it doesn’t. This past fall, IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman was besieged with letters demanding that he enforce the (c)(4) rules. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) requested an investigation into the use of tax-exempt groups for political advocacy, generally speaking. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) sent a letter requesting an investigation of the tax status of Crossroads GPS and other groups like it. And campaign finance reform groups Democracy 21 and the Campaign Legal Center called for an investigation of Crossroads GPS, in particular. “If the IRS investigation establishes that the facts and circumstances show that Crossroads GPS is primarily engaged in participating or intervening in political campaigns,” the letter from the reform groups said, “appropriate penalties should be imposed on the organization, including penalties that take into account the need to deter similar widespread violations from occurring in future elections.” THE COST OF GIVING There have also been some signs lately that the IRS is getting a bit bolder in this area. Last December, when it released its annual workplan, the IRS’ Exempt Organizations Division noted its intention to broaden its historical historical concentration on 501(c)(3) organizations — groups that are not only tax-exempt, but can accept tax-deductible contributions. “Beginning in FY 2011, we are increasing our focus on section 501(c)(4), (5) and (6) organizations,” the workplan said. And during the last two weeks, media reports have disclosed that the IRS is examining what could be the first five of many cases in which taxpayers who donated large amounts of money to 501(c)(4)s failed to report them on their gift tax returns. Gift taxes are not an issue for most people; gifts greater than $13,000 — or $26,000 per couple — don’t need to be reported at all. And there is a $5 million lifetime exemption for gifts made after 2010. But for the really big donors, especially those who give away several million dollars a year, the gift tax could result in a hefty assessment on some or all of their contributions. The gift tax rate is 35 percent this year. And unless Congress acts, it will jump to 55 percent in 2013, even as the lifetime exemption falls to $1 million. The IRS insisted in a statement to reporters that the examinations were “not part of a broader effort looking at donations to 501(c)(4)s” but rather were initiated by career employees looking at non-filing of gift and estate tax returns. But this could nevertheless be the tip of a very big iceberg. The examinations in the news were based on 2008 donations to (c)(4)s — back when such groups were still severely limited in what sorts of campaign ads they could run. The 2010 elections brought a huge infusion of campaign money, a good chunk of which is thought to have come from a handful of deep-pocket donors, such as the Koch brothers on the right, and George Soros on the left. For the IRS, cross-referencing those huge donations with gift tax filings would be the work of seconds. (Groups that don’t disclose their donors publicly still have to report them to the IRS in a confidential section of their Form 990s.) What it all comes down to is that, just as 501(c)(4)s weren’t designed to enable non-disclosure of massive political spending, the gift tax may turn out to be an accidental — but hugely effective — enforcement mechanism. By contrast, the gift tax issue wouldn’t be an issue at all if donors hadn’t tried to circumvent disclosure with (c)(4)s, as donations to 527 groups are, by statute, exempt from the gift tax. “That’s sort of one of the underlying themes here, that there is a potential cost to your anonymity,” said Ofer Lion, a Los Angeles tax lawyer who represents tax-exempt organizations. “Your anonymity is currently worth 35 percent of your contribution,” he said. “And 55 percent in 2013.” ************************* Dan Froomkin is senior Washington correspondent for The Huffington Post. You can send him an email , bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed , follow him on Twitter , friend him on Facebook , and/or become a fan and get email alerts when he writes.

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Members of Congress Get Abnormally High Returns From Their Stocks

May 24, 2011

Members of the House of Representatives considerably outperform the stock market in their personal investments, according to a new academic study. Four university researchers examined 16,000 common stock transactions made by approximately 300 House representatives from 1985 to 2001, and found what they call “significant positive abnormal returns,” with portfolios based on congressional trades beating the market by about 6 percent annually. What’s their secret? The report speculates, but does not conclude, it could have something to do with the ability members of Congress have to trade on non-public information or to vote their own pocketbooks — or both. A study of senators by the same team of researchers five years ago found members of the higher chamber even better at beating the market — outperforming it by about 10 percent, an amount the academics said was “both economically large and statistically significant.” “Being one of 435, as opposed to one of 100, is likely to result in a significant dilution of power relative to members of the Senate,” the researchers wrote. The researchers, Alan J. Ziobrowski of Georgia State University, James W. Boyd of Lindenwood University, Ping Cheng of Florida Atlantic University and Brigitte J. Ziobrowski of Augusta State University, noted that the circumstances are ripe for abuse. “In the course of performing their normal duties, members of Congress have access to non-public information that could have a substantial impact on certain businesses, industries or the economy as a whole. If used as the basis for common stock transactions, such information could yield significant personal trading profits,” they wrote. At the same time, House rules don’t require them to divest themselves of common stocks when they assume office, don’t prevent them from trading freely while in office — and don’t require them to recuse themselves from votes that could affect their own interests. The House ethics manual clearly states that “all Members, officers, and employees are prohibited from improperly using their official positions for personal gain” and members must disclose their holdings annually. But the House’s official position is that demanding that members either divest themselves of potential conflicts or recuse themselves when there is a conflict is “impractical or unreasonable” because it “could result in the disenfranchisement of a Member‘s entire constituency on particular issues.” Ever since 2006, a small coterie of Democrats has been trying to officially prohibit members of Congress and their staffs from using non-public information to enrich their personal portfolios. The Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act was most recently re-introduced in March by Reps. Louise Slaughter (N.Y.) and Tim Walz (Minn.) . It has not been heard from since. The study found some significant difference based on party membership and seniority, with the Democratic sample beating the market by nearly 9% annually, versus only about 2% annually for the Republican sample. And representatives with the least seniority considerably outperformed those with more seniority. Why would that be? The researchers suspect need had something to do with it. “The financial condition of a freshman Congressman is far more precarious” than a senior member’s, they wrote. “House Members with the least seniority may have fewer opportunities to trade on privileged information, but they may be the most highly motivated to do so when the opportunities arise.” The report does not make any firm conclusions on causality, although the researchers explain that their kind of “event analysis” has become a common “method for analyzing whether actors have profited from confidential information in their possession.” * * * * * Dan Froomkin is senior Washington correspondent for The Huffington Post. You can send him an email , bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed , follow him on Twitter , friend him on Facebook , and/or become a fan and get email alerts when he writes.

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The Center for Public Integrity: Excluded groups want in on health information technology funding

May 24, 2011

By Kimberly Leonard Providers frozen out of a $27 billion federal fund for conversion of medical records to electronic form are now fighting back in an effort to qualify for the money and possibly increase the size of the pot. The results of these multi-front battles are uncertain — but they are representative of a larger war. All over Washington, special interests are scrambling to improve their position by attempting to renegotiate portions of President Barack Obama’s health care reform — in new regulations, interpretations and proposed legislation. The new money for health information technology, or health IT, is the result of the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, which was part of Obama’s massive economic stimulus legislation in 2009. The idea was to allot stimulus funds to Medicare and Medicaid, which would then distribute the money to providers who demonstrated they were using electronic records to improve patient care. But like a lot of spending decisions in Washington, this one ended up choosing winners and losers. In the weeks leading up to the stimulus bill’s passage it became clear that the $50 billion Obama had promised during his campaign wouldn’t fly. In the end, some health care providers were shocked to discover they would not be eligible to participate in the program because Congress had narrowed the criteria and limited HITECH’s pricetag to $27 billion. But they’re not giving up. Among those lobbying anew with lawmakers and rule-writers are groups representing behavioral health providers, rural health centers and home-care practitioners. Causes of exclusion The conversion of medical records to digital form has been a long-sought goal of health care reformers, and the idea of funding federal investment to make it happen has been around for a while. Representatives of various health sectors were lobbying Congress and helping to craft legislation in 2007, said Tina Olson Grande, senior vice president for policy at the Healthcare Leadership Council. In the fall of 2008, Rep. Pete Stark, D-Calif., chairman of the House Ways and Means health subcommittee, sponsored a bill in which incentives were specifically promised to physicians and hospitals. That measure never got out of committee, but it provided a template for the HITECH bill that emerged as part of the $787 billion stimulus package, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, which Obama signed on Feb. 17, 2009. Like most legislation, the economic stimulus was altered by fast-moving negotiations. Exactly how the HITECH winners and losers were decided remains a bit murky. Though it had been widely reported months ahead of time that the health IT effort would receive $50 billion, the Congressional Budget Office ultimately scored the initiative at about $20 billion. Physicians, chiropractors, dentists, optometrists, podiatrists, psychiatrists and most hospitals were made eligible to receive the incentive payments. But nurses, physician’s assistants, behavioral health providers, home-care practitioners, emergency medical services, long-term care providers, post-acute providers, federally qualified health centers, rural health centers, rehabilitation hospitals and cancer centers were excluded from participation in parts or all of the program. “Those providers who were included had an inside track,” said Al Guida , a lobbyist for the behavioral health community. “By the time it came out and you realized you were left out, there was little time to lobby the process to get yourself back in.” Guida said behavioral health providers also “tactically … shot ourselves in the foot” by focusing their lobbying efforts on addressing protections regarding the security and privacy of personal health information, only to discover that even though those demands were met no behavioral health providers would qualify for the cash rewards. The groups that were excluded, said Dylan Roby , assistant professor of health policy at UCLA’s School of Public Health, have historically been less successful in getting Congress to support their agendas than those who were included. House Energy and Commerce and Ways and Means committee staffers met with non-eligible providers after the bill was drafted and explained that they wanted to maximize effects with limited funds, rather than try to spread the money over a greater number of providers and possibly have less impact, said Rich Brennan, executive director of the Home Care Technology Association of America. The final bill did specify that the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) was to file a report to Congress in June 2010 regarding the progress made by providers who were left out, but that effort hasn’t yet amounted to much. An interim report issued in July 2010 says only that the department awarded $561,632 to the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago to conduct the study. That document said a final report would be issued in December 2010, but no final report has yet appeared; HHS officials told iWatch News the document would be delivered by the end of 2011. Influencing Efforts Backers of expanding eligibility and funding for health IT improvements say allowing all providers access to funds would improve health for patients and cut back on costs in the long run. One medicine or disorder can often impact another, they say, and patients cannot be provided coordinated care unless the technology spans across all health fields. Ever since the stimulus passed, excluded health care providers have drafted legislation, spent thousands on lobbying, posted their arguments on public-comment boards, sent letters and met with members of Congress and HHS officials to push the government to include more groups in the program. The effort is but the latest example of health interests seeking to revisit portions of Obama’s health care reform plan. An April iWatch News piece focused on efforts by medical device makers to exclude themselves from a 2.3 percent excise tax slated to pay for expanded health coverage. Another iWatch News piece the same month detailed insurance brokers’ attempts to seek a rule recalculating how much insurers could spend on administrative costs. The effort to expand health IT funding has been led by the behavioral health community, representing providers such as clinical psychologists, clinical social workers, psychiatric hospitals, substance abuse treatment centers and mental health treatment centers. These providers have been lobbying together since May 2010, and in March formed the Behavioral Health IT Coalition. The group is pushing the Behavioral Health Information Technology Act , a measure introduced in March by Democratic Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse from Rhode Island that is designed to expand funding for health IT. Republican Sen. Susan Collins from Maine and several Democratic senators signed on to cosponsor the legislation in May. If the bill does not pass on its own, Guida says, the behavioral health coalition will try to attach it as an amendment to another piece of health care legislation at the end of the year. The group’s lobbying firm, Guide Consulting Services, received $90,000 for lobbying in Congress during the first quarter of this year on health IT and other health reform-related bills. A separate bill would assist federally qualified health centers, which receive government grants to provide health care to underserved communities, and rural health clinics. The Fix HIT Act, introduced in March by Michigan Democrat Debbie Stabenow on the Senate side and Illinois Republican Adam Kinzinger on the House side, would amend HITECH to qualify health centers for incentive payments paid through Medicaid. The Congressional Budget Office has not scored the bills, nor has the Obama administration issued a statement of administration policy about them. The Senate bills have been referred to the Committee on Finance and the House bill has been referred to the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health. Other providers excluded to date from the health IT funding are taking a more moderate approach. The American Academy of Physician Assistants has expressed its concerns to HHS, and sent a letter to targeted members of Congress recommending that HITECH be amended to extend Medicaid incentives to physician assistants if at least 30 percent of their patients are on Medicaid. “The current HITECH limitation on Medicaid [electronic health records] limits the development of EHR systems for Medicaid beneficiaries who are served by PAs,” they wrote. “PAs are often the sole health care professional in medically underserved communities.” Rescue squads and other emergency medical services providers are also not qualified to receive reimbursement under the law because they fall primarily under the jurisdiction of the Department of Transportation, not HHS. Because the role of emergency services is often misunderstood, “we get left out of virtually everything Congress does,” said Gary Wingrove, a volunteer leader of the National Rural Health Association who has EMS experience. The group has focused its efforts on raising awareness of its role to make sure future health care policies can apply to them. Other groups are concluding they would rather not take part in the program — because it not only provides incentive payments now, but also holds out the prospect of penalties several years from now for not implementing technology that adheres to government standards. The Home Care Technology Association of America has made the office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) at HHS aware of its feelings on the funding issue by submitting a public comment via the department’s website. “Our industry envisions a future where the integration of EHRs, remote monitoring and community based services will be the backbone of the national health care delivery system,” they wrote. “Therefore, information sharing amongst physicians and hospitals with home care and hospice providers will be critical to advancing care coordination efforts and reducing re-hospitalizations.” However, Rich Brennan, the group’s spokesman, said the association was mostly focusing current efforts on a separate measure, the Fostering Independence Through Technology (FITT) Act , which would encourage Medicare reimbursements for audio and video home monitoring. Looking Ahead Dr. Farzad Mostashari , who was appointed as the new national coordinator for health information technology in April, told iWatch News he does not think ONC can meets its goal of improving care through health IT unless all providers are able to help track patient records throughout their lifetime and across different medical conditions. But he also said that the prospect of passing pending legislation to expand the stimulus to other providers would be an “uphill battle.” Other experts agree, especially in light of the government’s current fiscal challenges. Even the existing funding could be threatened. A pot of billions of dollars such as that set aside for HITECH, particularly as it has sat unspent for two years, is potentially an attractive target for budget cutters at a time of escalating debt. The HITECH language specifically required that the money be appropriated ahead of time, allowing for a timeline that would give health practitioners the opportunity to begin implementing the required technology, demonstrate results and then apply for government reimbursements. Even now, two bills are pending in Congress to rescind HITECH funds for the purpose of beginning to pay down the country’s $14 trillion debt. In January, Republican House member Jim Jordan of Ohio introduced the Spending Reduction Act, which proposes — among other cuts — eliminating $45 billion in unspent stimulus dollars, including the funds for HITECH. In February, Republican Thaddeus McCotter of Michigan introduced the Preserving Patients’ Choices Act, which specifically proposes repealing health care-related stimulus appropriations. The two bills have been referred to committee. The fact that little cash has been awarded could also encourage a rescinding of funds, experts say. Starting in January, 13 states have now launched the program in which incentive payments through Medicaid are disbursed. Though the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services says it is pleased with the participation so far, only eight states have actually made Medicaid payouts — totaling just $83 million. Payments through Medicare began just this month, as had been scheduled in HITECH. Stephen Zuckerman , health economist for the Health Policy Center at the Urban Institute, doubts either bill will make it past the Democratic-controlled Senate or gain the president’s signature. But he also doubts HITECH will gain any additional funds for excluded providers. That leaves one other possibility: that more providers find a way to qualify, but without the pot of funds increasing. That scenario presents its own challenges. “If the goal is to give every provider who qualified in the original bill some fixed or minimum amount of funding, then adding new categories of providers without adding new dollars would not make sense,” said Zuckerman. “Unless new money is made available, and this seems unlikely, the only way to add new providers would be to reduce the funding available to each provider in the original group.” The fate of excluded providers remains unclear, but so far all other attempts to include additional providers in the stimulus program have failed. Some of the groups appear to be making small strides in at least getting their voices heard by having ONC assess their progress in adopting digital records. In March, the national coordinator’s office hired a new policy analyst — Liz Palena-Hall — to help providers who haven’t qualified for funds move forward in acquiring electronic health records. In its strategic plan published this March, the national coordinator’s office said it would look into “the creation of an incentive program to support the adoption of certified EHR technology within the behavioral health community.” Some providers will no doubt also find a way to bypass the laws, making individuals or clinics apply for the funds as each qualifies. For instance, though rural health clinics do not qualify, their physicians do. With or without the impetus of government funds, experts agreed that the country’s health care system is eventually heading toward widespread use of electronic records. “Some will be brought along because they are associated with another provider or it may just lower their costs,” said Neal Neuberger , executive director at the Institute for e-Health Policy. “Some of these technologies are beginning to take off because it makes good business sense.”

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Art Levine: High Noon: Tuesday Protests Take on "Fully Loaded" Chairman, GOP-Style Dems Over DC Cuts to Poor

May 24, 2011

The scandal-plagued chairman of the DC Council, Kwame Brown, best known for asking city taxpayers to pay for a “fully loaded” Lincoln Navigator worth $2,000 a month, is joining with other GOP-style Democrats to slash city services for the poor. At the same time, they’re opposing the mayor’s proposal to raise $35 million in added taxes from Washington’s richest residents — and, amazingly, the council is moving to give away $19 million in revenue through repealing some taxes for the rich altogether. With the vote scheduled Wednesday, The Washington Examiner reports that a backroom deal was apparently struck Monday evening with Brown when Marion Barry, the former crack-smoking mayor and still a councilman, agreed to reverse his support for tax increases on the rich in exchange for property tax abatements for some churches in his district. The pending budget deal could still cut over $100 million from critical services for the poor, disabled and homeless from the social services budget, roughly two-thirds of all proposed cuts. The safety-net is already so tattered that homeless mothers with infants in tow have been given bus fare to ride the buses all night rather than shelter. As a result , Save Our Safety Net , a group leading a loose coalition of progressive safety-net advocacy organizations, called for protests Tuesday at noon at DC’s City Hall, the Wilson Building. And in the day before the event, they unleashed a series of last-minute videos targeting Kwame Brown, most on the City Council and an otherwise liberal council member, Mary Cheh, for opposing raising taxes on the rich and risking the well-being of the city’s neediest. What wasn’t mentioned publicly is that these same city council members also pay themselves and their staff the most lavish salaries and expenses in the country when measured on a per-seat or per-taxpayer basis: $1.5 million per council seat. The biggest target remains Kwame Brown and his lavish lifestyle contrasted with the poor children, disabled and homeless who could be denied services. The latest video ends with an SUV heading for a crash and the tag line: “Don’t let Kwame run over our most important public services.” Brown has offered what critics see as vague promises to restore $25 million in proposed cuts, but as the S.O.S. group pointed out, following protests last week : After our Wednesday action, we had 7 confirmed Council votes in support of the Mayor’s income tax proposal, enough to pass it. But yesterday we got word that Marion Barry (Ward 8) and Tommy Wells (Ward 6) have decided they no longer support the Mayor’s proposed income tax! We have also heard that Kwame Brown is proposing $25 million in restorations. That is certainly a step in the right direction, but it is not nearly enough. Safety net services are still underfunded by $32 million. By getting rid of the income tax proposal, Chairman Brown, Barry, Wells and other Councilmembers would take away $19 million in resources that could be used to restore funding to critical services. Even though at least 85% of the city residents in a recent poll back raising taxes to preserve social services, most city council members reject that stance and instead are supporting other accounting schemes and alternative revenue measures, including some that the council has rejected in earlier years — such as ending DC’s unique tax break for those who buy out-of-state municipal bonds helping other cities. What’s especially striking is the way these formerly liberal Democrats, echoing a national right-leaning trend in the party, adopt right-wing talking points and even cite the Chamber of Commerce as “evidence” for their views. As recounted in emails about a tense meeting with constituents held by council member and law professor Mary Cheh, who represents the richest and whitest area in the city, Ward 3, liberal voters there aired their complaints that she was abandoning the principles of the Democratic Party and her campaign promises. For instance, as Jessie Sigel, a Ward 3 resident, wrote angrily to Cheh after the meeting: The tax issue aside, I was, quite frankly, shocked to hear someone who professes to be a Democrat, suggest, as her “philosophy,” that anyone one on TANF [Temporary Assistance for Needy Families ] for more than five years doesn’t want to work; that their children don’t have proper role models, followed by righteous professions about the “dignity of work.” The language you used is akin to the old Reagan demonizing of the poor as “welfare loafers” and of the poor “coming to collect their welfare checks in Cadillacs.” If one is going to take a hard line that people should get a job, they need to ascertain that there are jobs — jobs that enable people to pay the rent and feed their children — to be had. When I asked you about jobs programs, child care programs and job training, you didn’t seem to know to what degree they exist in the district. (and, obviously, revenue would be needed to support these sorts of programs)… But embracing a “philosophy” — or as I would call it, a stereotyping of people, without making an inquiry into the group’s situation and options is reprehensible. It is something I would expect of right wing Republicans who have a particular agenda in mind and who are determined not to let logic or others’ needs get in the way. Cheh, like some other leading Democrats who are moving to slash services, used to be considered a progressive, innovative member of the City Concil. Kesh Ladduwahetty, an activist with DC for Democracy , also recounted: Cheh is adamantly against the tax increase, and there’s nothing more substantive in her reasoning than “sending the wrong signal” and small [businesses]. When pressed about small biz, she doesn’t have any data (she’s just repeating Kwame’s rhetoric). Mary Beth Tinker [another DC4D member] called her on the fact that she kept citing the Chamber of Commerce, although nothing specific. Mary Beth also heard her say something to the effect that in order to get some things that she wants done, she has to do some other things (sounds like a blatant statement about trading favors with Kwame). Bottom line: she’s not budging for this vote (not that we can see), but she got the message loud & clear that her progressive base is shocked and disappointed in her. On Tuesday, groups like Save Our Safety Net hope that some in the city’s progressive base will turn out and start calling members of the City Council to support fully funding city services. To that end, some of her young progressive supporters even created a mocking rap video calling on Cheh to respond to the wishes of her constituents on taxes and the safety net:

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Gary Liberson, PhD: Social Engineering Medicare

May 23, 2011

This week Newt Gingrich, as is his way, is at the epi-center of the brouhaha over his comments about Paul Ryan’s (R-WI) plan to replace Medicare with a voucher system. Let me say right now, I like vouchers. I like the idea of allowing a broad array of solutions for a problem and letting the marketplace determine the best solution. I now have to caveat this statement: I only like vouchers if they are not designed at the outset to place the burden of Medicare on the elderly (i.e., a voucher needs to have a fair market value). The whole Newt-Voucher thing started me thinking about how confused I am about government and political identity. I don’t know about you, but I want to go back to those good old days when government expanded and the USA was King of the Mountain. Bill Clinton was Alan Greenspan’s favorite Republican when it came to fiscal conservancy. My favorite Democratic president is Richard Nixon. You know the Richard Nixon who created the Department of Education and the Environmental Protection Agency, as well as opening up China. Sure he had some frailties, but I don’t talk about Clinton’s foibles; why belabor Nixon’s? All this said, I know when Nixon was alive, I did not recognize his contributions. I particularly like the following June 4, 1971 special message to Congress from Nixon: We believe that part of the answer lies in pricing energy on the basis of its full costs to society. One reason we use energy so lavishly today is that the price of energy does not include all of the social costs of producing it. The costs incurred in protecting the environment and the health and safety of workers, for example, are part of the real costs of producing energy — but they are not now all included in the price of the product. Makes you want to cry when you think Nixon was really a closet liberal. Republicans (Newt aside, well, Newt prior to his numerous mea culpas) like vouchers but do not like insurance exchanges. They think insurance exchanges are socialism. A recent news item in The Denver Post noted: House Democrats on Wednesday had to rescue a Republican-backed bill to set up health insurance exchanges in Colorado, legislation blasted by Tea Party activists as furthering “Obamacare” and “socialism” but roundly supported by businesses. The Republican Party has not always been the Party of NO. Eisenhower’s party wasn’t no. Nixon was certainly not no. Reagan wasn’t no (he actually raised taxes). Bush 42 was noblesse oblige. But now the definitions of socialism and capitalism have been warped to such a degree that our vocabulary is unable to provide clarity for a politician’s opinions. Seems like today’s Glenn Beck Republican is about anti-socialism, pro-capitalism and an Ayn Rand philosophy of Me FIRST and You NEVER. Here’s the strange part about it, none of this has anything to do with what the majority of Americans believe — even the majority of voting Independents and Republicans. What would happen today if some ranchers or farmers joined together to form a coop to gain better market force? The nerve of those pinkos: Coops are definitely socialism. Yet, what is the difference between an insurance exchange and a coop? Nothing. Forty years ago, I worked on school vouchers for the Office Economic Opportunity (OEO), a predecessor to the Department of Education. School vouchers made strange bedfellows. The religious right banded together with disenfranchised minorities; both seeking a better choice, in their eyes, for their children’s education. Charter schools are now the result of people seeking empowerment and by all metrics a good solution. Vouchers for Medicare may have the same peculiar base of support. AARP, unions and employers may end up banding together to reap the same billions of dollar windfall that insurance companies see in vouchers. Yet, their motives may be very different. Those billions of funding dollars can be the basis for the creation of insurance exchanges, employer self-insurance and new insurance companies. More companies are self-insuring and using insurance management firms to provide accounting and claims administration. These firms provide claims management as a fee-for-service (i.e., a fixed cost per claim versus a percentage of the claims). Medicare vouchers offer the possibility of transforming the insurance landscape. So which is the Republican proposal and which the Democrats? Medicare vouchers can ignite market forces through insurance exchanges that Tea Party members label as socialism. Vouchers can also be priced so retirees face an increasing financial burden. It’s confusing. Newt was right; social engineering is hard to explain.

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McDonald’s Stockholders Reject Obesity Proposal, Defends Ronald

May 19, 2011

OAK BROOK, Illinois (Debra Sherman) – McDonald’s Corp spurned calls to assess the impact of its food on childhood obesity, and said its trademark clown Ronald McDonald would be hawking Happy Meals to kids for years to come. “This is about choice and we believe in the democratic process,” Chief Executive Jim Skinner told a packed room at its shareholders’ meeting, to an enthusiastic wave of applause. “This is about the personal and individual right to choose.” Shareholders of the world’s largest fast-food chain resoundingly rejected a proposal that would have required it to issue a report outlining its role in the childhood obesity epidemic, saying customers were free to make their own dietary choices. “Ronald McDonald is an ambassador to McDonald’s and he is an ambassador for good. Ronald McDonald is going nowhere,” Skinner said firmly, prompting more cheers from shareholders. Among the dissenters at the meeting was Dr. Donald Zeigler, director of Prevention and Health Lifestyles at the American Medical Association, who asked when the burger chain will stop marketing to children using Ronald McDonald. Zeigler, who is also visiting assistant professor at Rush University Medical Center, was one of 550 healthcare professionals who had signed an open letter to McDonald’s pleading that it “stop making the next generation sick.” On Tuesday, a watchdog group placed ads in newspapers across the country calling for McDonald’s to stop marketing to children through the clown, toy giveaways and other tactics. Some 17 percent of children and adolescents are obese, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Being overweight during childhood raises the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol, hypertension and a host of other diseases. McDonald’s has been a lightning rod for criticism for years over its marketing tactics and sales of Happy Meals for children that include toys as inducements. McDonald’s allows parents to swap milk or juice for soda in its Happy Meals. It also offers sliced apples with caramel sauce and chicken nuggets as alternatives to french fries and hamburgers. The restaurant chain has added healthier options to its menu, including salads and oatmeal, but critics argue there is still too much fat, salt and sugar in its meals. Even the oatmeal, one critic noted, contains about as much sugar as a Snickers candy bar. Skinner defended McDonald’s strategy, which has resulted in hefty sales and earnings for shareholders. McDonald’s shares have gained nearly 12 percent in the last four months and rallied to a record high of $82.63 on Thursday. But as experts point out, obese children often grow into obese adults, overburdening the entire healthcare system. Ironically, Miles White, chairman and chief executive of diversified healthcare company Abbott Laboratories, has been a director of the McDonald’s board since 2009. Abbott makes a broad range of drugs, including cholesterol-lowering statins, and medical devices, such as heart stents used on patients with clogged arteries. (Reporting by Debra Sherman, Lisa Baertlein and Jessica Wohl; Editing by Richard Chang) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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McDonald’s CEO Defends Spokesclown, ‘Right To Choose’ Fast Food

May 19, 2011

— McDonald’s Corp. CEO Jim Skinner came out swinging Thursday when asked about Ronald McDonald and whether the burger chain hooks children with junk food. Skinner, speaking at the company’s annual shareholder meeting at McDonald’s headquarters outside Chicago, said that newspapers ads Wednesday calling for Ronald’s retirement had prompted an outpouring of support to his office, with parents and customers asking Skinner “to defend their right to choose.” A group called Corporate Accountability International paid for the ads, which said Ronald is encouraging unhealthy eating habits and contributing to childhood obesity and related diseases such as diabetes. At the meeting, shareholders defeated a proposal the group had helped craft asking McDonald’s to issue a report on its responses to childhood obesity. The proposal received 6 percent support, according to preliminary results released by the company. Nick Guroff, a spokesman for Corporate Accountability International, called it “an extreme success for a first introduction” and said the results will force McDonald’s executives “to take these concerns – as much as they diminished them at their shareholder meeting and otherwise – very seriously.” When Deborah Lapidus, an organizer with the activist group, said McDonald’s is interfering with political efforts to curb marketing unhealthy food to children, Skinner replied that “this is about choice.” “We believe in the democratic process and our government officials believe in the democratic process,” he said to applause from the audience of McDonald’s shareholders. “This is about choice, this is about personal, individual right to choose in the society we live in. That’s where we play, that’s where you play, and we have every right to do so.” Skinner also got applause when he called Ronald, the burger chain’s smiling spokesclown, “an ambassador for good” and noted that he is the face of Ronald McDonald House Charities. “He does not advertise unhealthy food to children,” Skinner said. “We provide many choices that fit with the balanced, active lifestyle. It is up to them to choose and their parents to choose, and it is their responsibility to do so.” When another shareholder said he was disappointed that Ronald wasn’t at the meeting, Skinner replied: “Ronald hasn’t been here because he’s out in the field busy doing work and fighting through the protestors.” McDonald’s has fared well throughout the recession, and Skinner started his presentation by saying that the company has turned in eight straight years of growth in stores open at least 13 months, an important measure for a restaurant chain. He also said that store remodelings and an expanded menu, including smoothies and oatmeal, will broaden the restaurant’s appeal. “It’s oatmeal, people,” he added, an apparent jab at a shareholder who said the oatmeal contains as much sugar as a Snickers bar. Shareholders re-elected all five directors on the ballot, including Skinner, with each getting at least 97 percent of the vote, the company said. Shareholders also passed a proposal, with 77 percent approval, asking the company to require that all directors be re-elected annually. The Florida State Board of Administration, which submitted the proposal, said the change would help keep directors accountable. McDonald’s had opposed the change, saying its strong financial performance should be evidence of a proper board structure.

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Tom Coburn Was Debt Ceiling Deal Linchpin

May 19, 2011

WASHINGTON — Maybe it was all a pipe dream – the idea that a “Gang of Six” from across the Senate’s ideological spectrum could solve the nation’s deficit despite enormous obstacles placed in their way by President Barack Obama and leaders of both parties. The remaining five are opting to plug ahead, but they may just be marking time after the departure of conservative Oklahoma Sen. Tom Coburn, the crucial cog if the gang was ever going to be able to sell a deal. Coburn, one of the few Republicans with enough tough-on-spending “street cred” to wage a fight with anti-tax purists, provided vital political cover for Republicans even thinking about raising revenues as part of a bipartisan grand bargain that would include cuts in benefit programs that Democrats hold sacred, like Medicare and Social Security. So when he dropped out of the Gang of Six group on Tuesday – he says he’s taking a “sabbatical” and may rejoin it later – it was a major, perhaps fatal blow to hopes for a comprehensive approach tackling the deficit problem before the 2012 elections. “He makes it more difficult to gain the kind of broad support you would hope for on the Republican side because Tom Coburn’s highly regarded in our conference,” said Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio. Coburn exited after Democrats rejected his demand for about $130 billion more in Medicare cuts beyond the $400 billion already on the table. That prompted Coburn to pronounce the emerging package a bad mix of spending cuts to tax increases. The politics were lousy as well. It became apparent to Coburn that Democrats could get behind an emerging agreement a whole lot easier than Republicans could. The anti-tax sentiment in the GOP is simply too strong, while lots of Senate Democrats are eager to demonstrate they’re tough on spending. The Gang of Six, now down to five, was trying to craft a deficit-slashing plan along the lines of the 10-year, $4 trillion package that Obama’s deficit commission put together last year. Basically, the plan called for a dollar in higher taxes in exchange for every $3 in cuts to government spending and benefit programs. The nation’s $14.3 trillion debt would continue to grow, but at a much slower pace. The commission plan got good reviews from deficit hawks but a chilly reception from the White House and leaders in both parties. But the idea driving the Gang of Six was that an agreement within the group – whose members include a leading liberal in Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and one of the most prominent conservatives in Coburn – would provide the catalyst to swing dozens of more senators behind their work. “The Gang of Six … was designed to force the idle – not gridlocked – Senate, and then the House and the president, to enact a long-term deficit-reduction package,” Coburn wrote in a Washington Post op-ed on Thursday. One of the reasons the group was noteworthy was that its GOP members – Coburn, Saxby Chambliss of Georgia and Mike Crapo of Idaho – were willing to agree to revenue increases of about $1 trillion over the coming decade as the price for getting Democrats to accept cuts to Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. If senators at the liberal and conservative edges of their respective parties could agree, the thinking went, a wide swath in the middle would follow. “Coburn and Durbin are the two key players in the group,” said former Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., who retired from the Senate last year. “From a philosophical standpoint they represent polar opposites, and if they agreed on something … then you we have a real core for bipartisan action. So yes, (Coburn’s) critical.” The gang’s remaining five senators – the other two Democrats are Mark Warner of Virginia and Kent Conrad of North Dakota – pledged to soldier on without Coburn. But what was already an uphill climb seems to have gotten a lot more steep. The glass-half-full take on Coburn’s departure is that it could make it easier for the remaining five to get an agreement. Selling it without Coburn is another matter. For starters, both Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., have long opposed the Gang of Six approach. McConnell ruled out tax increases; Reid and Obama made it clear they have no appetite for tackling shortfalls in Social Security before the 2012 election. That opposition, coupled with the enormous difficulty in confronting the dangerous politics of taxes, Medicare and Social Security, may have doomed the group from the start. Instead, the leadership apparatus of both parties as well as Obama have embraced a working group led by Vice President Joe Biden to come up with spending cuts to attach to must-do legislation to allow a government that’s now borrowing 40 cents of every dollar it spends to continue to do so. “The Republican leadership has reservations, as does the Democratic leadership, about stepping onto these very highly charged political issues as we basically begin a presidential campaign,” said Gregg, who also was a member of Obama’s deficit panel. “The White House does too. They have not been too constructive in the exercise.” Meanwhile, the Group of Six Minus One meets again on Monday. Chambliss, R-Ga., said the group’s goal remains “to get a long-term deficit reduction plan that would work and that could be sold to 60 members of the Senate, period.” Chambliss, however, is in for more political heat now that Coburn’s out of the gang. He got a taste on Wednesday. “Together, their bipartisan plan will raise Americans taxes massively over the next few years and do nothing to solve the very real crisis of Social Security and Medicare,” conservative activist Erick Erickson wrote in a blog post. “Every once in a while the stupid party and evil party get together and do something both stupid and evil. They call it bipartisanship. It looks pretty much like what Saxby Chambliss is orchestrating.” ___ EDITOR’S NOTE – Andrew Taylor has covered Congress since 1990.

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CHART: Oil Subsidies Repeal Blocked By Industry-Bankrolled Senators

May 19, 2011

WASHINGTON — An attempt to repeal some of the billion-dollar tax breaks enjoyed by the five biggest oil companies failed in the Senate Tuesday evening, as expected, when all but two Republicans and three Democrats voted to block its consideration. The final vote was 52 in favor, 48 against — eight votes shy of the filibuster-proof majority needed to bring the bill to the floor. All things considered, it was a fairly meek attack on the massive oil and gas subsidies that taxpayers are footing — even as consumers suffer from high gas prices and industry profits swell to near-record proportions . Tuesday’s Senate proposal was only to cut $2 billion worth of subsidies a year from the biggest five companies, and the proceeds would have gone to deficit reduction. By contrast, President Barack Obama called on Congress in January to eliminate some $4 billion a year in tax breaks to the entire industry, and put the proceeds into alternative energy investment. And the industry’s own lobbying juggernaut, the American Petroleum Institute, estimated that the total cost of all the tax and accounting changes proposed by Obama in his FY 2012 budget could have actually cost the oil and gas industry $90 billion over the next decade. Few if any of the president’s budget proposals have even made it onto the congressional agenda. In spite of a major Democratic push , the watered-down oil subsidies repeal couldn’t overcome the industry’s hold on Congress . Campaign donations from the industry are only part of the reason the bill was defeated. There’s also an army of lobbyists: The oil and gas companies have spent more than $1 billion on lobbying-related activities since 1998. But looking simply at the amount of money the industry has given senators over the years — either through political action committees or contributions by people associated with oil and gas companies — is still telling. The central dynamic of the vote was the nearly lockstep Republican opposition. While the industry has long favored Republicans with its campaign contributions, in the early ’90s it was by less than a 2 to 1 margin. Starting in the 1996 election cycle, the margin shot up to more than 3 to 1. This chart below, based on data from the Center for Responsive Politics , shows how much the industry has donated to each senator over the course of their careers. The Center for American Progress Action Fund totaled it all up and found that the 48 senators who voted with the industry received over $21 million in career oil contributions, while the other 52 senators received only $5.4 million. So each senator who opposed the subsidy repeal received on average five times as much oil money as those who voted for repeal. Oil & Gas Contributions Since 1989 For Senators Who Voted On S. 940 Powered by Tableau GRAPHIC BY JAKE BIALER OF THE HUFFINGTON POST

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Tom Coburn ‘Takes A Break’ From Debt Gang

May 17, 2011

WASHINGTON — Influential Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) “decided to take a break” from the bipartisan “Gang of Six” budget negotiating team Tuesday, citing an impasse in the effort to agree on substantial spending cuts. “He is disappointed the group has not been able to bridge the gap between what needs to happen and what senators will support,” said Coburn spokesman John Hart. “He has decided to take a break from the talks.” Some Democrats have been predicting the gang’s demise ever since one of its leaders, Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) — one of the six members — announced he’d start moving ahead with his own proposal . Conrad said Tuesday he’d announce plans to proceed soon . Coburn’s departure could all-but deep-six the Six, since Conrad’s budget plan could overtake it. And Vice President Biden also has been leading bipartisan talks aimed at conquering the deficit impasse, talks that Senate Republican leaders think are more likely to lead to Democratic concessions, said a Democratic aide close to the talks. A GOP aide confirmed the leadership pressure on the group, but noted that Coburn has a long history of resisting such advances, from backing a coup against then-House Speaker Newt Gingrich to challenging Republican leadership on earmarks. The aide said that Coburn had been extremely close to agreeing to a deal before a recent two-week recess, but returned with five new demands that hadn’t been discussed before. On Monday, the aide said, Coburn asked for an immediate $130 billion in cuts to Medicare, on top of the $400 billion that had already been agreed to. Democrats refused and Coburn left the talks as a result, said the aide. A Republican aide close to the talks said that Coburn’s additional Medicare demand stemmed from the program’s trustee’s report, which was issued Monday morning and showed it running out of money by 2024, five years sooner than had previously been forecast. But he said that characterizing the demands as new missed the point of the talks, which explicitly put everything on the table. The erstwhile Gang of Six will meet as five tomorrow, the Democratic aide said. But Coburn could still get back in, Hart suggested. “He still hopes the Senate will, on a bipartisan basis, pass a long-term deficit reduction package this year,” Hart said. “He looks forward to working with anyone who is interested in putting forward a plan that is specific, balanced and comprehensive.” Coburn may have other issues on his mind, though. Two aides close to the talks said that Democrats suspect the Oklahoman’s decision is related to pressure he has come under as a result of his involvement in the sex scandal that prompted Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) to resign . The watchdog group that filed the original ethics complaint against Ensign also thinks Coburn should be probed . The GOP aide rejected as ridiculous such speculation, suggesting that if he were truly concerned about the issue the best way to distract attention from it would be to achieve consensus with the Gang of Six, which is much beloved by the mainstream media. Sens. MIke Crapo (R-Idaho) and Saxby Chambliss (R-Georgia) were supposed to make one last-ditch effort to get Coburn to stay in the gang, but apparently failed. This story was updated to include additional details.

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Art Levine: GOP-Style Democrats Slash DC Budget: Homeless Moms Already Given Bus Tokens, Not Shelter

May 17, 2011

Except for white Republicans in Congress opposed to home rule, few people outside of Washington, D.C. — and even some white liberals who live in the District — bother to pay much attention to Washington’s local political battles. But that changed briefly last month, when Mayor Vincent Gray and six members of the city council were arrested in high-profile protests against a Republican-driven federal budget deal that prevents the city from spending its own funds on abortions for low-income women. Congress has traditionally had authority over the Democratic-run District’s budget, but rarely directly interferes in spending. “Why are we the sacrificial lamb?” Gray had asked. Progressive media outlets praised Mayor Gray for seeming to stand up to Republicans and their distorted budget priorities. Yet Mayor Gray and much of the rest of the city council are moving on their own to make the city’s disabled, youngest and neediest citizens the sacrificial lambs of the proposed new city budget, with two-thirds of the cuts targeting the poor. And those programs make up less than a quarter of all city spending . It’s yet another troubling sign of the rightward shift of state and national Democratic Party leaders. It’s a trend that can be seen everywhere from Democratic legislators in Massachusetts voting to strip public employee unions of the right to bargain collectively to national Democrats meekly accepting until it’s too late GOP messaging on deficit cuts and tax breaks for the rich. Here in Washington, city services are already so strained before the proposed cuts that even families with young children seeking emergency shelter are routinely turned away, and have often been given instead bus tokens to ride the buses all night with their toddlers and infants. As Eric Sheptock, a literally homeless homeless activist working with a donated laptop, described a recent hearing on the crisis: One mother cried as she explained how that she, with her 3 children — ages 5, 3 and less than a year-old — in tow, was told by an employee of the Virginia Williams Family Intake Center that there were no shelter spaces for them and that she was given bus tokens so she could ride the city bus all night with her children in order to stay warm. Other mothers testified that they also were given bus tokens so that they could use the bus as a de facto shelter. (DC Law states that, if there is no shelter space available for a homeless family with small children, then they must be put into a motel room) The Mayor’s proposed budget would essentially close down all shelters for everyone except when the weather falls below freezing. The mayor’s justification? ” In some quarters, we have created a culture of dependency that does not encourage residents to take control of their lives,” he declared in a speech nonetheless proclaiming a vision of a compassionate “One City” uniting all. Unlike the original welfare reform plans passed by President Clinton, though, these new meat-ax approaches to social services don’t provide any transitional assistance. As activist Kesh Ladduwahetty with the all-volunteer DC for Democrac y, a DFA affiliate, asks, “How does turning people out into the streets and eliminating child care programs help residents to take control of their lives, educate themselves, and become self-reliant?” Some councilmembers may seek to restore a portion of the $20 million to be cut in homeless services, but are doing relatively little to fight for $110 million in other vital services on the chopping blok, including mental health and other programs for the nearly one-third of District children who are poor. Prospects for protecting these programs are even worse than in the fights over social programs at the national level, because local safety-net advocacy groups are mostly under-funded, poorly organized and have no media savvy, making it even easier for the mainstream media to largely ignore the devastation these cuts would cause. Journalists here focus, at best, on councilmembers bickering over taxes . The Washington Post , for instance, doesn’t even have a reporter anymore covering the social services beat. The Mayor has asked for a slight rise in taxes for those earning over $200,000, but even that’s being resisted by a deadlocked City Council claiming it would discourage businesses and upscale residents. All told, his revenue-raising proposals could add about $127 million , but other ways to boost revenues as much as $104 million more, including increasing taxes for the very richest and closing tax exemptions for buying out-of-state bonds, are considered by council insiders to be off the table. This same city council spends more on itself — both per resident and per councilmember — than any other city in the entire country, according to the Pew Foundation . As the Washington City Paper reported: “The District came in first in costs in relation to both the number of city residents and the number of council seats. The council has a total budget of $19,434,000, including employee benefits–that averages out to $1,494,923 per seat, and $32.41 per resident.” But they don’t seem to mind kicking a few thousand people from shelters or cutting emergency assistance for the low-income disabled in order to preserve virtually all of their own perks — and keep costs down for the city’s richest citizens. Indeed, at a city council meeting on Monday, council members even opposed raising fees for wealthy Washingtonians who own three cars or to increase downtown parking fees. As the influential Greater Greater Washington blog pointed out: “At times, the discussion became quite heated, particularly when some members were defending the rights of people who own 3 cars and make over $200,000, yet wouldn’t consider driving downtown for dinner if it cost them $4 to park.” Analyst David Alpert added, “In a budget that makes very deep cuts, there was more passion for keeping parking cheap and for keeping taxes on the wealthy low than anything for keeping people off the street and from going hungry.” Yet as one progressive, Mary Beth Tinker, an SEIU pediatric nurse and a DC for Democracy member, pointed out in her testimony (full document here ) last week about the impact of raising taxes modestly on those earning over $100,000: For the price of a cup of coffee, you can save childrens’ lives. That is the increased cost in taxes per week, $1.80, that a DC resident making $125,000 would pay if their tax rate went from 8.5% to 9%. For the price of a latte, you can retain essential services to DC’s children. That is the cost in taxes per day, $3.60, that a DC resident making $350,000 would pay if their tax rate went from 8.5% to 9.5%. You can judge a society by how it treats children… The status of children in DC is a human rights shame by any indicator: infant mortality rates, graduation rates, soaring poverty rates. Amazingly, there are now proposals that would make things even worse: cuts of over $600,000 in programs to high-risk youth, cuts to summer school and grandparents struggling to raise their grandchildren, cuts in substance abuse programs for mothers. And, to put salt on the wound, there is even a proposal to cut $2.5 million in mental health services for traumatized children. But we do have alternatives. We can raise funds for children by reversing the tax break given to upper income earners in 1999. All for the price of a cup of coffee. On Wednesday, an alliance of progressive advocacy groups, including Save Our Safety Net and D.C. for Democracy, are planning a “Safety Net Reality Tour” to protest the cuts — and they’re going straight to the heart of the D.C. government, the Wilson building on Pennsylvania Avenue. The alert asks, ” Engage Councilmembers to remind them that we need additional revenue in order to restore funding to the programs that keep DC residents safe, housed, and healthy.” Yet that perspective gets little attention in the media or among Democratic politicians. Plus, business groups have also opposed plans that would close some loopholes allowing companies to pay lower taxes. And theater groups have opposed a modest 6% sales tax on tickets. Presumably, the extra cost of tickets would somehow deter upscale patrons from attending searing dramas about social injustice. Naturally, the $2.3 million in revenue it could generate would be wasted on sheltering homeless mothers who don’t have the good taste to appreciate Strindberg revivals. The clout of the theater crowd seems well on its way to overwhelming any lobbying by liberal advocacy groups, and council staffers say the proposal to tax theater tickets is all but dead. All these pressures make restoring vital services to the needy even less likely, especially because advocates have to overcome the myth that businesses and residents are over-taxed compared to other jurisdictions. In fact, surrounding affluent suburbanites pay higher total taxes than D.C. residents earning over $150,000 do, and the city’s tax burden is the 25th lowest of major cities. Right-wing leaning reports have also ranked the District as among the least competitive places because of high taxes. But as Natwar Gandhi, the chief financial officer of the city, has observed, ” In the District, almost two-thirds of businesses pay only the minimum of $100 a year. When actual business taxes paid are ranked, the District falls in the middle of the pack.” Amazingly enough, the city population is so liberal and Democratic that a new poll by the DC Fiscal Policy Institute found that 90 percent of taxpayers earning over $100,000 favor raising taxes on the wealthy to help pay for social services. That’s a level of affluent professionals’ supporting raised taxes you’d be hard pressed to find outside of an Upper West Side cocktail party hosted by The New York Review of Books in honor of Naomi Klein, author of The Shock Doctrine . Even so, D.C.’s African-American Mayor has proposed a draconian budget attacking the $330 million deficit that apparently borrows its underlying theme from Rep. Paul Ryan’s GOP budget plan: balance the budget on the backs of the poor. “The similarity of our Democratic politicians with Republicans is that they put a greater emphasis on budget cuts,with the poor bearing the biggest brunt of it — and the safety net is seen as something without value. It’s just seen as a cost with no value,” says Ladduwahetty, a leading organizer with DC for Democracy. This GOP-leaning tilt has been exacerbated by the vacuum of strong leadership coming from the White House and the Democratic Party in recent years defending the importance of government and safety-net programs; instead the ground has been ceded to Republicans on the issue of the deficit and tax cuts for the rich. A startling two-thirds of all the $187 million in D.C. cuts are aimed at programs serving the most vulnerable residents of the city: the homeless, poor kids needing mental health services, working adults who need subsidized child care, the disabled and the very poorest families needing emergency cash assistance. Even before these cuts that could throw nearly 2,400 homeless families and single adults into the street , basic services have already been so shriveled that the city’s primary intake center , the Virginia Williams Family Resource Center, is turning away families seeking emergency shelter — and just calling their relatives on their behalf or giving them bus tokens to ride the buses all night as a way to catch some sleep with their babies in tow. One of those young women is Denise Gibson, a 26-year-old woman who was holding her month-old newborn in her arms when she testified in March at a hearing before Councilman Jim Graham, chair of the human services committee. After surviving as a ward of the state in foster care and other arrangements until 21, she’s been homeless since 2006. “I’ve been a nomad,” she said about her search for housing. Sometimes, she’s able to stays inside her mother’s one-bedroom apartment, but that only allows her to sleep on the floor with her baby boy and she soon has to leave. Most of the time, she explained, “Some nights I stay in my storage place, some nights I stay at the Greyhound like I’m waiting for a bus. Since December, 2010 when I went to Virginia Williams, they told us we can’t stay anywhere [in shelters] unless it’s hypothermia; there’s no room at the shelter. They didn’t bother to find us [temporary] hotels, they just give us bus tokens and send us off.” Earlier, officials at the intake center turned her away when she was pregnant, claiming that they couldn’t help her until she was a single mother. After she gave birth,”They can’t help me now that my son is here.” In his first of month of life, he virtually never slept in a regular crib or bed. Under supportive questioning by Graham, more disturbing details emerged of life for the poor in a city where, as in the White House and Congress located a few blocks away, austerity instead of compassion and job creation is accepted as a political fact of life. But Graham, at least, wasn’t accepting that philosophy and asked, “Where have you been living?” Gibson responded, “I sometimes stay in my mother’s apartment building.” “Do you go to your mother’s apartment?” “No, there’s no security there [ in the building] and and it’s easy for us to stay there. I go to the stairwell, and I have my bags.” The day before the hearing, she stayed all night at the Greyhound station, even after begging a “Miss Croft” at the Virginia Williams center for help in finding an overnight spot for her and her baby. A stunned Graham recapped: “You went to Virginia Williams with a baby, and you’ve been sleeping in a stairwell and a bus station and you spoke to Miss Croft, and there’s nothing to do?” He furiously called in front of him the acting director of the Department of Human Services, the same agency that Mayor Gray once led, and berated her for the agency’s inaction. In typical bureaucratese, the interim director, Deborah Carroll ,explained, “During hypothermia season, any participant who meets the definition of homeless should get shelter. We’ll have to investigate each case.” Of course she left unspoken the reality that if the weather is below freezing the DHS officals feel free to ignore requests for shelter from families, let alone individuals Eventually, after pressure from Graham, a space was found in the city’s one family shelter — but it will be almost certainly closed down except in sub-freezing weather if the Mayor’s budget proposal becomes law. Her dramatic case has, so far,been ignored by all major broadcast and print media outlets in the city, except for the dedicated blogging of Eric Sheptock, the “homeless homeless” advocate working with a donated laptop and cell phone, building thousands of “friends” and “followers” on Facebook and Twitter . But his online advocacy doesn’t start until after he walks or takes a bus each morning to get a breakfast handout four miles away. Sheptock has a stark, up-close perspective on the DC government’s new War on the Poor (as opposed to LBJ’s War on Poverty): “To make a long story short, they want to push the poor out of the city,” he says. “They don’t want a place where the poor and homeless can come.” He adds, “They won’t want to wait to end the culture of dependence: they just want poor people to get out of town. They’re defunding affordable housing , they’re decreasing housing production, they’re shutting down shelters, breaking down encampments. You don’t prevent homelessness, you don’t cure it, you don’t want to shelter them.” As a list-ditch effort in the face of political indifference, he’s starting to try to organize the homeless themselves. He also wonders, “I don’t know why Mayor Gray is so callous.” Yet to today’s new pro-corporate state and national Democrats, reflecting the winner-take-all political trends that have accelerated during the Obama era, “These people are seen as sort of dispensable, and don’t deserve the social safety net. It’s part of an increasingly conservative trend in the Democratic Party,” says Kesh Ladduwahetty. Janelle Treibitz, the chief Campaign Organizer for Save Our Safety Net DC adds, “We’d like council members to take a stronger stance opposing cuts.” A few councilmembers, especially Jim Graham, have been very outspoken, but most of the efforts to restore some cuts are being done behind closed doors with little effort to rally the public behind them. Advocacy groups, including DC for Democracy and Save our Safety Net, have a total of a few thousand supporters, and while they’ve generated hundreds of emails, they haven’t been able so far to deluge the government with phone calls, reframe the debate or garner extensive media coverage. That could start to change next week, when S.O.S. is organizing with its allies next Wednesday, May 18th what it’s calling a “All-Hands-On-Deck-Action Day” inside the DC government main building, the Wilson building. But the harsh realities of the new Democratic politics remains, even in this most liberal of cities. At a hearing on the budget this week, led by by the scandal-plagued Chairman of the City Council, Kwame Brown, best known for demanding a “fully loaded” $1900- a- month leased SUV from city officials, activists challenged his opposition to raising taxes, the deadlocked council’s complacency, and the council leadership that has ignored public opinion favoring preserving social programs. “Some members of this Council have stated their opposition to any income tax increase. They owe the public an explanation as to why they would sooner ask a homeless person to live on the street rather than ask our wealthiest residents to pay taxes in line with their suburban counterparts,” Kesh Ladduwahetty argued. Even an otherwise liberal council member, Mary Cheh, a respected law professor who represents the 70%-plus white Ward 3 that’s the city’s richest, opposes raising taxes even to save social services. While declining to be interviewed for this article, she posts on her website for constituents her GOP Lite opposition to raising taxes, mixed with vague promises to find revenues elsewhere. “It is vital for our continued growth and prosperity that we shed our reputation as a high tax jurisdiction, and we have struggled very hard to do that over the past few years. Increasing the rate on incomes over $200,000 will send precisely the wrong message,” she says. “But, rather than support the income tax rate increase, I am looking at other ways to generate revenue or save money that will allow us to avoid the hike in income tax rates and restore some of the human services cuts.” Jeremy Koulish, who chairs DC for Democracy’s budget committee, directly challenged Council Chairman Kwame Brown and his allies on their allegiance to what used to be Democratic Party values. Noting the poll that showed 85% and above approval for raising taxes, he declared, “Certain politicians and a chunk of the city’s establishment are not listening. Who are you listening to? Grover Norquist? The Chamber of Commerce? The Wall Street Journal editorial page? They’re all powerful forces, but that goes against the concerns of the people who live here. What we’re hearing from you is the kind of rhetoric we hear from Republicans.” And, like the fate of the national budget fight, the ability of local progressive groups to effectively organize will not only determine the outcome of this one local budget, but become a symbol of what’s needed to get even Democratic cities and states to serve people in need, not just corporations. ********************************** This article is updated from a piece that originally appeared on the Truthout.org website.

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Art Brodsky: Air of Inevitability Escaping From AT&T’s Takeover of T-Mobile

May 17, 2011

There was a notable hissing sound emanating from Capitol Hill at the end of last week. It was the air being let out of AT&T’s trial balloon, “The Inevitable.” Thanks to some aggressive questioning from the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee, particularly Chairman Herb Kohl (D-WI) and Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Al Franken ( both D-MN), it quickly became clear that there are lots of problems to the $39 billion takeover of T-Mobile that AT&T either hadn’t counted on, didn’t want to deal with or thought would simply be overlooked. AT&T has said repeatedly it expects the deal to be approved, and hasn’t yet mentioned any conditions. Granted, it is early in the process, but telling everyone what is expected is part of creating that air of inevitability to intimidate legislators and agency staff that will have to make the call. Adding to the environment, financial and industry analysts have said since the deal was announced on March 20 that it would be approved, albeit with some conditions. That meme, based on the performance of the Antitrust Division in big, high-profile media/telecom cases, has infiltrated much of the thinking and writing about the deal. As the hearing demonstrated, and as some reporters are starting to pick up, AT&T’s deal is not a foregone conclusion, and, in fact, the company still has a lot of explaining to do in order to justify wiping out the fourth-largest national wireless carrier. It took several minutes of questioning of AT&T Chairman Randall Stephenson for Kohl to get the simple admission that yes, T-Mobile is a competitor for AT&T. “You are competitors, right?” Kohl asked. Stephenson said T-Mobile is “part of the eco-system” of the wireless industry. Kohl, disbelieving the reply, said it was “incontrovertible” that the companies were competitors. Is T-Mobile a competitor for AT&T? T-Mobile USA President Phillipp Humm did a similar dance, all but ignoring the TV commercial Public Knowledge President Gigi Sohn played for the subcommittee at the start of the hearing, which depicted AT&T’s network as the weight around its customers, slowing them down relative to T-Mobile’s 4G network. It was hard not to have some sympathy for Humm, who had to argue his company was abandoning the U.S. and was so constrained it couldn’t possibly compete any more. Admitting abject failure for so vital and perky a company as T-Mobile in such a public forum had to be excruciating. But that’s what the home office demanded, so Humm did it. The hearing was notable not only for the tough questions tossed at Stephenson and Humm, but for the lack of tough questions posed by those who would normally be forthright in defense of the merger. While it’s true, as some commentators said, that no senator came right out and said the merger should be blocked, the questioning did reveal a lot. The onslaught of hostile questions on pricing, consumer rights accompanied by the observations of the creation of a wireless duopoly surely showed that the senators, primarily on the Democratic side, have enough serious doubts about the deal that approval by the Justice Dept. should not be a foregone conclusion. Even more interesting was the commentary from the Republicans, including from Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), AT&T’s home-state senator on the committee. (AT&T has its headquarters in Dallas.) Cornyn issued no clarion calls for the merger to be approved forthwith. He gave no denunciations of government regulators trying to quash the free market and the fate of his great constituent company. He instead settled for some platitudes on broadband access, criticizing the broadband part of the stimulus program and feeding Stephenson some softball questions on innovation and the role of the private sector. Even then, Stephenson’s claim that there are 600 devices in the wireless market (you should pardon the expression) rang hollow, considering it kept a five-year exclusive deal on the iPhone, which is worth much more than, at least 595 of those other devices. AT&T is pumping millions of dollars into getting this acquisition through, and clearly didn’t get its money’s worth from the Senate panel. If the Senators send a letter to the Justice Department that in any way would give political cover to the Antitrust Division blocking the merger, then the deal could be in real trouble. The meme is starting to change , as reporters are starting to realize that AT&T’s conquest may be a reach too far. It may have better luck in the House, where the rhetoric can be less constrained than in the Senate. The House Judiciary Committee’s Internet Subcommittee has a hearing tentatively scheduled for May 26. The full Committee Chairman Lamar Smith is from Texas, although he is from the San Antonio area that AT&T scorned, moving its HQ from there to relocate up north. There is no shortage of highly charged members on the subcommittee, who could more than make up for the tepid response AT&T got in the Senate. The only conditions which could stifle the House hearing are the obvious facts of this case, which as Sohn, Sprint CEO Dan Hesse, and Cellular South CEO Victor “Hu” Meena testified, are anticompetitive and anti-consumer on any number of levels.

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Newt Gingrich Businesses Owed Unpaid State Taxes

May 14, 2011

ATLANTA — Companies run by Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich have faced overdue tax bills in four states worth more than $6,000, according to records reviewed by The Associated Press. The tax liens, which generally allow governments to seize assets or property to settle tax bills, ranged in size from a $195 property tax bill in the Atlanta suburbs to $1,969 in unpaid Missouri taxes. Most of the liens were paid shortly after tax authorities filed them. One exception was in Pennsylvania, where Gingrich Holdings Inc. last week paid off a $1,599 lien for unpaid corporate income taxes just days before Gingrich formally announced he would run against Democratic incumbent Barack Obama. Gingrich spokesman Rick Tyler said Gingrich and his firms were unaware of most of the tax liens until being contacted this week by the AP. “When an issue has arisen, we’re anxious to resolve the issue and get the taxes paid,” Tyler said. “We want to be in compliance with all the states.” Georgia State University professor Jack Williams, who teaches multistate taxation, said he most commonly sees liens filed against businesses in financial distress. Other contributing factors could be poor record-keeping or aggressive tax collectors. “The lien stage is about as deep into the process you get before the taxing authority seizes your assets and sells that,” Williams said. Until deciding to run for president, Gingrich was the CEO of Gingrich Holdings Inc., the parent company of firms that manage his book and TV contracts, produce documentary films, offer consulting services and oppose Obama’s health care overhaul. Tyler said Gingrich’s businesses are financially healthy. Last week, Gingrich Holdings paid off a lien worth $1,599 for corporate income taxes that court records show dates back to 2002. Pennsylvania Department of Revenue spokeswoman Elizabeth Brassell said privacy laws forbid her from discussing the case further. Tyler said the problem appears to have started in 2002 when state officials rejected a tax return on a technicality. While the company believed it had satisfied the bill, it paid off the lien earlier this month after learning of the remaining balance, Tyler said. In 2009, a Gingrich Holdings subsidiary paid $2,654 in Missouri tax liens for unpaid withholdings taxes and sales or use tax. Court documents show Gingrich’s company still faces a $688 lien for more withholding taxes, although Tyler said Gingrich’s company previously paid the bill and blamed state officials for failing to note the payment. He said Gingrich’s company expects to receive paperwork from Missouri officials acknowledging the payment in several days. Missouri Department of Revenue spokesman Ted Farnen said privacy laws ban him from discussing the case. One of Gingrich’s now-defunct businesses, Gingrich Enterprises Inc., faced a flurry of tax liens in Indiana. It satisfied some and believes the rest are paperwork problems. In 2002, records show Gingrich Enterprises resolved Indiana tax liens totaling $1,349. Tyler said he did not know Friday what caused those tax bills. Gingrich had delivered speeches in the state before and after the liens were issued and may have received speaking fees. The company filed paperwork in Georgia showing it was dissolving in November 2002. The next month, Indiana officials filed the first of 43 more liens against the company. Tyler said Gingrich officials alerted Indiana this week that the company went out of business in late 2002 and never owed state taxes after that. He said Gingrich expects to receive a letter from Indiana officials acknowledging that decision shortly. Indiana Department of Revenue spokeswoman Stephanie McFarland said she could not discuss the case, citing confidentiality laws. Business records show the mailing address for the firm was a post office box and the home of Gingrich’s ex-wife, Marianne Gingrich. She said she previously alerted Indiana officials that the company closed and supplied them with ways to contact her ex-husband. She now throws away some of the bills. “If Indiana really wanted money from him, they could find him,” she said. ___ Associated Press news researcher Judith Ausuebel in New York and reporter Charles Wilson in Indianapolis contributed to this report. Ray Henry can be reached at . http://twitter.com/rhenryAP

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Dave Johnson: Actually, "The Rich" Don’t "Create Jobs," We Do.

May 13, 2011

You hear it again and again, variation after variation on a core message: if you tax rich people it kills jobs. You hear about “job-killing tax hikes,” or that “taxing the rich hurts jobs,” “taxes kill jobs,” “taxes take money out of the economy, “if you tax the rich they won’t be able to provide jobs.” … on and on it goes. So do we really depend on “the rich” to “create” jobs? Or do jobs get created when they fill a need? Here is a recent typical example, Obama Touts Job-Killing Tax Plan , written by a “senior fellow at the Cato Institute and chairman of the Institute for Global Economic Growth,” Some people, in their pursuit of profit, benefit their fellow humans by creating new or better goods and services, and then by employing others. We call such people entrepreneurs and productive workers. Others are parasites who suck the blood and energy away from the productive. Such people are most often found in government. Perhaps the most vivid description of what happens to a society where the parasites become so numerous and powerful that they destroy their productive hosts is Ayn Rand’s classic novel “Atlas Shrugged.” … Producers and Parasites The idea that there are producers and parasites as expressed in the example above has become a core philosophy of conservatives. They claim that wealthy people “produce” and are rich because they “produce.” The rest of us are “parasites” who suck blood and energy from the productive rich, by taxing them. In this belief system, We, the People are basically just “the help” who are otherwise in the way, and taxing the producers to pay for our “entitlements.” We “take money” from the producers through taxes, which are “redistributed” to the parasites. They repeat the slogan, “Taxes are theft,” and take the “money we earned” by “force” (i.e. government.) Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner echoes this core philosophy of “producers” and “parasites,” saying yesterday , I believe raising taxes on the very people that we expect to reinvest in our economy and to hire people is the wrong idea,” he said. “For those people to give that money to the government…means it wont get reinvested in our economy at a time when we’re trying to create jobs.” “The very people” who “hire people” shouldn’t have to pay taxes because that money is then taken out of the productive economy and just given to the parasites — “the help” — meaning you and me… So is it true? Do “they” create jobs? Do we “depend on” the wealthy to “create jobs?” Demand Creates Jobs I used to own a business and have been in senior positions at other businesses, and I know many others who have started and operated businesses of all sizes. I can tell you from direct experience that I tried very hard to employ the right number of people . What I mean by this is that when there were lots of customers I would add people to meet the demand. And when demand slacked off I had to let people go. If I had extra money I wouldn’t just hire people to sit around and read the paper. And if I had more customers than I could handle that — the revenue generated by meeting the additional demand from the extra customers — is what would pay for employing more people to meet the demand. It is a pretty simple equation: you employ the right number of people to meet the demand your business has. If you ask around you will find that every business tries to employ the right number of people to meet the demand . Any business owner or manager will tell you that they hire based on need , not on how much they have in the bank. (Read more here, in last year’s Businesses Do Not Create Jobs .) Taxes make absolutely no difference in the hiring equation. In fact, paying taxes means you are already making money, which means you have already hired the right number of people. Taxes are based on subtracting your costs from your revenue, and if you have profits after you cover your costs, then you might be taxed. You don’t even calculate your taxes until well after the hiring decision has been made. You don;t lay people off to “cover” your taxes. And even if you did lay people off to “cover’ taxes it would lower your costs and you would have more profit, which means you would have more taxes… except that laying someone off when you had demand would cause you to have less revenue, … and you see how ridiculous it is to associate taxes with hiring at all! People coming in the door and buying things is what creates jobs. The Rich Do Not Create Jobs Lots of regular people having money to spend is what creates jobs and businesses. That is the basic idea of demand-side economics and it works. In a consumer-driven economy designed to serve people , regular people with money in their pockets is what keeps everything going. And the equal opportunity of democracy with its reinvestment in infrastructure and education and the other fruits of democracy is fundamental to keeping a demand-side economy functioning. When all the money goes to a few at the top everything breaks down. Taxing the people at the top and reinvesting the money into the democratic society is fundamental to keeping things going. Democracy Creates Jobs This idea that a few wealthy people — the “producers” — hand everything down to the rest of us — “the parasites” — is fundamentally at odds with the concept of democracy. In a democracy we all have an equal voice and an equal stake in how our society and our economy does. We do not “depend” on the good graces of a favored few for our livelihoods. We all are supposed to have an equal opportunity, and equal rights. And there are things we are all entitled to — “entitlements” — that we get just because we were born here . But we all share in the responsibility to cover the costs of democracy — with the rich having a greater responsibility than the rest of us because they receive the most benefit from it. This is why we have “progressive taxes” where the rates are supposed to go up as the income does. Taxes Are The Lifeblood Of Democracy And The Prosperity That Democracy Produces In a democracy the rich are supposed to pay more to cover things like building and maintaining the roads and schools because these are the things that enable their wealth. They actually do use the roads and schools more because the roads enable their businesses to prosper and the schools provide educated employees. But it isn’t just that the rich use roads more, it is that everyone has a right to use roads and a right to transportation because we are a democracy and everyone has the same rights. And as a citizen in a democracy you have an obligation to pay your share for that. A democracy is supposed have a progressive tax structure that is in proportion to the means to pay . We do this because those who get more from the system do so because the democratic system offers them that ability . Their wealth is because of our system and therefore they owe back to the system in proportion. (Plus, history has taught the lesson that great wealth opposes democracy, so democracy must oppose the accumulation of great, disproportional wealth. In other words, part of the contract of living in a democracy is your obligation to protect the democracy and high taxes at the top is one of those protections.) The conservative “producer and parasite” anti-tax philosophy is fundamentally at odds with the concepts of democracy (which they proudly acknowledge – see more here , and here ) and should be understood and criticized as such. Taxes do not “take money out of the economy” they enable the economy. The rich do not “create jobs, We, the People create jobs . This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture . I am a Fellow with CAF. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

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37,000 Jobless Lose Benefits In North Carolina Standoff

May 13, 2011

WASHINGTON — A standoff between Republicans in the North Carolina General Assembly and Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue has halted unemployment insurance for 37,000 jobless in the state. Both sides keep saying they want to restore the benefits, but no apparent progress has been made since Perdue vetoed a Republican bill because it attached the preservation of benefits to double-digit budget cuts. The legislature is set to adjourn early in June. Charlotte’s John Allison, 37, told HuffPost the stalemate reminds him of a game of chicken, except “the person controlling the car’s not even in it.” “It’s a remote control game of chicken and I’m tied in the seat,” he said. Allison said he lost his job as a landscaping consultant in July 2009 and has been surviving thanks to $281 a week in unemployment insurance. The checks stopped after April 16, when the federal Extended Benefits program expired in the state. Lawmakers had failed to change an eligibility trigger that activates extended benefits only if the jobless rate has risen in the past two years. The rate in North Carolina hasn’t risen, but it hasn’t fallen precipitously, either; it currently stands at 9.7 percent. In December, when Congress reauthorized federal benefits through 2011, lawmakers invited states to modify their EB triggers so they could remain eligible for the benefits, but several states have unexpectedly failed to do so. The EB program provides the final 20 weeks of benefits for long-term jobless who’ve exhausted 79 weeks of combined state and federal assistance. Allison said he’d previously expected his benefits to continue until August. All of a sudden, he says, he has no way to make his rent: “If [EB] doesn’t go through by the end of the month, I’ll probably have to move back home,” he said. State Senate leader Phil Berger (R) has said Republicans are waiting for Perdue to propose a compromise. Perdue, for her part, has said she’s waiting for the legislature to send over a clean bill. Allison said he doesn’t like the all-or-nothing strategy on display. “To me that’s not what democracy is,” he said. For his part, Allison said he’s had some success in his job search since he started compromising and applying for retail jobs that pay $8 an hour. “I’ve just now started getting really positive responses back … now that I’m applying for a lot less high paying jobs,” he said. Yet he hopes the benefits are restored in case he doesn’t find work before the next month’s rent is due. He’s been emailing lawmakers and said one responded to say there would be a renewed effort to pass legislation next week. “I am hoping that will be a legitimate effort and not just a ‘Well, we tried’ kind of thing,” Allison said.

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Government: Bad Economy Has Shortened Life Of Social Security, Medicare

May 13, 2011

WASHINGTON — The bad economy has shortened the life of the trust funds that support Social Security and Medicare, the nation’s two biggest benefit programs, the government reported Friday. The annual checkup said the Medicare hospital insurance fund will now be exhausted in 2024, five years earlier than last year’s estimate. The Social Security trust fund is expected to be exhausted in 2036, one year earlier than before. The trustees who oversee the two programs said the worsening financial picture emphasizes the need for Congress to make changes soon. The longer lawmakers wait, the more likely they will be forced to impose steep tax increases, deep benefit cuts, or both, to save the programs. By acting sooner, the trustees said, Congress can impose gradual changes that don’t hurt current beneficiaries and give future retirees time to prepare. “Larger, more difficult adjustments will be necessary if we delay reform,” said Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, chairman of the trustee panel. “And making reforms soon that are phased in over time would help reduce uncertainty about future retirement benefits.” The trustees said that they moved the expected date for the Medicare hospital trust fund to be exhausted from 2029 to 2024 because of a weaker economy, which means fewer people working and paying payroll taxes into the fund, and continued increases in health care costs. Last year’s report had extended the life of the Medicare fund by 12 years to reflect the savings that were included in the massive overhaul of health care that President Barack Obama pushed Congress to pass in 2010. Without the changes in health care law, the administration said, the Medicare trust fund would be exhausted in 2016. The savings in the health care legislation are still included in the trustees’ projections but have been updated to reflect data on the economy and health care costs over the past year. Many experts believe that the outlook for Medicare is actually worse because the trustees’ projections assume deep cuts in payments to doctors that Congress has routinely waived, and because other cost savings from Obama’s health care law will be difficult to realize. The Social Security trust fund was projected to be exhausted one year earlier than the previous projection of 2037. The trustees said in 2036 the government will be taking in enough in Social Security payroll taxes to pay only about three-fourths of existing benefits. The new report projected that the millions of Social Security recipients would receive a small – 0.7 percent – cost of living increase in their benefit checks in 2012. In 2010 and 2011, there were no cost of living increases in the checks because inflation was low. A 0.7 percent increase would not be seen by many beneficiaries because the extra money would be eaten up by higher insurance premium payments for Medicare. The actual benefit increase will be determined based on the performance of the government’s Consumer Price Index. That figure will be released in October. Democrats and Republicans agree that Medicare must be addressed soon, but the consensus ends there, even as a bipartisan group of lawmakers headed by Vice President Joe Biden is holding talks on ways to tackle the nation’s mounting debt. Most Republicans and some Democrats in Congress have said they won’t vote to increase the government’s ability to borrow without significant spending cuts. The government is expected to reach its borrowing limit of $14.3 trillion soon. Geithner said Friday that Congress should “move as quickly as possible” to raise the borrowing limit. He has told lawmakers that he can take steps to delay until Aug. 2 what would be an unprecedented default on the debt. Changes to Medicare, the government health insurance program for older Americans, could be part of an agreement to increase the debt ceiling. But Social Security appears to be off the table. Many Democrats, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., have been adamant that they will not support cuts in Social Security benefits, even if they target only future retirees. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell acknowledged on Thursday that changes to Social Security won’t be part of any agreement. Democrats and Republicans are sparring over how to fix Medicare. House Republicans have passed a plan that would replace Medicare with a voucher-like payment system for future retirees, but GOP leaders in Congress have acknowledged that the plan is unlikely to pass the Democratic-led Senate. Nearly 55 million retirees, disabled people and children who have lost parents receive Social Security benefits, which average $1,077 monthly. More than 46 million people are covered by Medicare. Six trustees oversee Social Security and Medicare, including Geithner, Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and Social Security Commissioner Michael Astrue. ___ Associated Press reporters Martin Crutsinger and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar contributed to this report.

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Video: Al Hunt on U.S. Debt-Ceiling Debate, Eric Holder

May 13, 2011

May 13 (Bloomberg) — Al Hunt, executive editor at Bloomberg News, discusses negotiations between Republican and Democratic leaders over extending the U.S. government’s borrowing authority. Hunt, speaking with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness With Margaret Brennan,” also previews his interview with U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, which airs this weekend on “Political Capital With Al Hunt.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Dave Johnson: Sarah Palin and Boeing CEO Tell Government Who the Boss Is

May 13, 2011

What can a democracy like ours do when giant companies say, “Rules? We don’t need no stinkin’ rules! We don’t got to pay you no taxes!” and “We will just move out of your puny country if you try to tell us what to do.” Government is beginning to enforce labor laws again , with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) filing a complaint against Boeing for retaliating against employees for legitimate union activities. In response Boeing’s CEO questions government’s “authority” to tell big businesses like Boeing what to do, saying companies like his can just move “overseas.” Sarah Palin echoes the complaint, saying businesses can just move to “more business-friendly countries.” These are direct challenges to the democracy we fought to build. Boeing Threatens “Overseas Flight” Boeing chairman, president and CEO Jim McNerney has an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal in which he challenges the “authority” of our democracy to regulate giant multinational corporations. “The NLRB is wrong and has far overreached its authority. Its action is a fundamental assault on the capitalist principles that have sustained America’s competitiveness since it became the world’s largest economy nearly 140 years ago. We’ve made a rational, legal business decision about the allocation of our capital and the placement of new work within the U.S.” McNerney essentialy confirms that it was union activity that led Boeing to decide to open a plant in anti-union North Carolina, “Among the considerations we sought were a long-term “no-strike clause” that would ensure production stability for our customers, and a wage and benefit growth trajectory that would help in our cost battle against Airbus and other state-sponsored competitors. … Union leaders couldn’t meet expectations on our key issues, and we couldn’t accept their demands that we remain neutral in all union-organizing campaigns…” Like the movie stereotype, poking his finger in your chest, “You got a problem with that?” McNerney goes on to call the NLRB enforcement “brazen regulatory activism” that “could accelerate the overseas flight of good, middle-class American jobs.” There it is, the threat, basically, “We will just move out of your puny country if you try to tell us what to do, and we will take your jobs with us.” Boots On Necks Sarah Palin, in her Facebook post, Removing the Boot from the Throat of American Businesses , blasts President Obama’s “appointees at the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) who have their boots on The Boeing Company’s neck.” Palin explains that business is the boss now, not We-the-People democracy, writing, Does the President realize the real concern here is not that businesses will choose to locate in one state over another? It’s that businesses will choose to locate in other countries because thanks to the Obama administration’s job killing policies and over-reaching regulatory boards the business climate in the United States is growing toxic. Basically, she says government ought to just get out of the way of the plutocrats, because big, multinational businesses have so much power over democracy that, … eventually every state will suffer when businesses declare “enough is enough” with these tactics and decide to relocate in more business-friendly countries. Once again, the threat: Mess with us and we will leave and take your jobs with us. Whose Boot Is On Whose Neck? To be clear, Palin does not mean this as a call to strengthen democracy and get these companies and their threats under control. She is not complaining that these companies do not want to follow our rules and pay decent wages, offer benefits, protect worker safety and protect the environment. She is saying the United States should change and become more “business-friendly” — like the non-democracies that suppress labor rights, pay low wages, and lock you up if you complain. “Free Trade” has allowed businesses to cross borders to “business friendly” non-democracies to escape the protections democracy offers us. It pits exploited workers in these “business-friendly” countries against our own democracy-protected workers, forcing a race to the bottom in wages, working standards and living standards. And it lets them avoid taxation, defunding our democracy’s ability to enforce regulations and laws If we don’t do what these giant, powerful companies tell us to do, and abandon the protections of democracy that we fought so hard to achieve, they will just pack up and leave and take our jobs with them. Just whose boot is on whose neck? The question is why do we let them do this, and what can we do about it? The following is adapted from April’s post on the NLRB actions, Does Government Know Who The Boss Is? Who Is Boss? Do We, the People have the ability to enforce our laws? Do we have the power to tax corporations and the wealthy? Do we have the power to keep the protections and opportunities our democracy had provided? Democracy provides us with safety protections and fair wages. We fought so hard to build and maintain this democratic society so that We, the People could share the benefits. We passed laws allowing union organizing, as a balance to the immense power of corporations and wealth. We passed laws prohibiting companies from telling workers, “Work for what we give you or don’t eat.” And for a time this built our prosperity. But we let the protections slip , and allowed companies to cross borders to escape the protections democracy offers — to non-democratic countries like China where workers have few rights, where pay is low, environmental protections practically non-existent. Companies locating manufacturing in places like have huge cost advantages over companies located in democracies that respect and protect the rights of citizens. The Threat Against Us Won’t companies just move out of the state/country if we try to enforce labor laws or tax them? Won’t China just stop selling to us or dump our bonds if we apply a tariff to protect democracy, or try to enforce trade laws? Won’t the rich just pack up and move or stop working if we don’t just give them everything they want? Won’t they move even more factories out of the city/state/country if We, the People try to demand our rights? We Still Have The Power Here’s the thing. We, the People still have some power left in our hands. For one thing we still offer a huge, prosperous market to sell into. We still have the power to make demands on those who would like to sell things to us. We can apply a “democracy tariff” to goods made by exploited workers so these goods do not have a price advantage over goods made here. And we can choose to enforce tax laws, and wage laws, and tariffs, and labor laws, and trade laws to protect and strengthen what remains of our democracy. But we can only do this if we decide to stand up for ourselves and do something about what is happening. We have to put our foot down, and demand that our politicians listen to We, the People and do what we say . It is time to get organized, to talk to neighbors and relatives, to show up at town hall meetings and protests. We can demand that news media begin to cover more than just the corporate/conservative viewpoint. We can go out and register others to vote, and get them to the polls, and demand that votes be counted accurately. We can take back our democracy and put We, the People back in charge. This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture . 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GOP Releases Scary Medicare Ad After Republicans Decry ‘MediScare’ Tactics

May 12, 2011

WASHINGTON — The 87-member Republican freshman congressional class of 2010 may be among the most consequential crops of new legislators ever, but they don’t seem to have much sway with the party campaign apparatus. Just a day after 42 of them called on the president and Democrats to abandon “MediScare” tactics in the debate over reforming Medicare, the National Republican Congressional Committee announced its release of an alarming ad that hits San Francisco Bay-area Democratic Rep. Jerry McNerney over Medicare. “Who do you trust with personal health care decisions? Your own doctor,” the spot says. “But if Jerry McNerney gets his way, that could change.” The ad is referring to the President Obama’s Independent Payments Advisory Board, which ties cuts to Medicare costs to inflation. It is supposed to help cut costs in Medicare by lowering what is paid for ineffective treatments, already a growing practice among private insurers. The idea is to save $15.5 billion and help extend the life of Medicare. But the ad also warns: “Now, Obama’s budget plan lets Medicare go bankrupt: that’d mean big cuts to benefits. Tell McNerney to stop bankrupting Medicare.” The NRCC insists the spot is not scary. “The scariest thing about this ad is that it is all true: Democrats have a plan to empower bureaucrats to interfere with doctors and endanger seniors’ access to their healthcare,” said NRCC spokesman Paul Lindsay. Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.), the lead author of the GOP freshmen’s letter asking Democrats to refrain from “MediScare” campaigning, did not respond to requests for comment. One signatory of the letter, Rep. Bob Dold (R-Ill.), declined to support the ad, noting he hadn’t seen it, and distanced himself from any sort of frightening campaign tactics. “Please understand me: nobody’s consulting me on the ads,” he told The Huffington Post. Dold stood by the intent of the request for politicians to forgo demagogic attacks on Medicare reform plans. “I’m not trying to scare anybody,” he said. “We know we have to make changes. I want to make sure we have a fact-based discussion with the American public. I’m not looking to throw anybody under the the bus. … Let’s get together with some of the plans, let’s make sure we sit at the table, let’s not try to frighten people.” WATCH :

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Patrick Sharma: Farm Subsidies: A Useful Sacrifice in the Budget Debate

May 12, 2011

Amid continuing debates over how to reduce the federal deficit, recent proposals to cut farm subsidies present an important opportunity to bridge partisan divides. By reforming our antiquated farm support system, Congress can exercise some much-needed fiscal discipline and give the country an agricultural policy for the 21st century. Doing so, however, will require putting the national good over the interests of a powerful few, as well as confronting some enduring myths about American farming. Farm subsidies have long been recognized as ineffective. Since being introduced to help small farmers cope with the Great Depression, the federal farm support program has devolved into a hodgepodge of price supports, direct payments, insurance programs, tax loopholes and low-interest loans that overwhelmingly benefit wealthy farmers and large agricultural businesses. According to data compiled by the Environmental Working Group and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in recent years the largest 10 percent of American farms have received almost 75 percent of total agricultural subsidies, while a whopping two-thirds of farmers have obtained no government support at all. In addition to rewarding millionaires and agribusinesses rather than small farmers, farm subsidies have encouraged environmentally destructive agricultural practices. By promoting production in areas that would otherwise remain fallow, farm supports have led to habitat destruction and land degradation, as well as increased pesticide and fertilizer use. Subsidies have also had a devastating impact abroad: when shipped to developing nations, cheap American foodstuffs tend to glut local markets and put indigenous producers out of business. Indeed, U.S. agricultural subsidies have been a key factor in derailing the recent Doha round of international trade negotiations. In other words, farm subsidies are bad foreign and domestic policy. But because the program is relatively cheap (estimated to cost around $16 billion in 2011, according to the Congressional Budget Office) and its impacts felt indirectly, subsidies have been allowed to remain on the books. Five-year re-authorizations of the farm support program have historically been dominated by rural congressmen and the agribusiness lobby, and as a result we have a system that lacks oversight and focus. Although Congress made some important reforms in 1996, farm subsidies continue to be a drain on the nation’s coffers, diverting taxpayer dollars away from much-needed investments in education, infrastructure and other productive endeavors. Fortunately, the current preoccupation with the federal deficit has put farm subsidies on the chopping block. Eager to find savings wherever they can, members of both parties have proposed reexamining the way the nation supports agriculture. Republican Congressman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin has called for cutting direct payments to farmers by $30 billion over ten years, while Democratic Senators Dick Durbin of Illinois and Debbie Stabenow of Michigan have indicated their willingness to reform the nation’s farm support system. Importantly, these representatives all hail from agricultural states. Going forward, it is vital that Congress look to reform the farm support program in the most thoughtful way possible. At present, discussions over altering farm subsidies are focused almost entirely on curtailing direct payments to farmers, in which the government automatically pays farm owners a fixed amount of money per year regardless of whether or not their land is being cultivated. Yet direct payments represent just a fraction of total farm supports, and other subsidies, such as price supports, do more to distort the market. If Congress is truly interested in achieving budget savings and developing a modern agricultural policy, it should put all farm subsidies (including supports for ethanol) on the table. This would mean not only curtailing payments to wealthy farmers and agribusinesses but examining whether the government should be in the business of American farming in the first place. For while agriculture accounted for a significant percentage of the U.S. economy in the 1930s, today farming constitutes less than one percent of GDP, and the notion that government support helps struggling family farmers is little more than a myth. Of course, reforming the farm support program will not solve the nation’s fiscal problems. Even eliminating all agricultural subsidies would barely dent the deficit, where meaningful action will be confined to reforming taxes and entitlement spending. But the current budgetary environment does present a chance to rethink our agricultural policies and, in the process, discard a relic of the past.

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Democratic Senator Calls Big Oil Execs Selfish, Unfeeling — And Unbeatable

May 12, 2011

WASHINGTON — The unapologetic — indeed combative — testimony on Thursday by top oil executives summoned to defend multi-billion tax subsidies for their industry infuriated some Senate Democrats, one of whom accused the executives of being “profoundly out of touch” with average Americans. The heads of the Big Five oil companies, currently enjoying a windfall from high oil prices , soundly rejected a Democratic request that they renounce $2 billion in tax breaks, declaring instead that they were entitled to every penny. Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson called the attempt to roll back the subsidies “misinformed and discriminatory” and he issued a threat to the assembled members of the Senate Finance Committee: “You give me a different tax burden,” he said, “I’m going to take my capital then, since the U.S. isn’t attractive, I’ve got to go somewhere else.” It was all too much for Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.). “I get the feeling that it’s almost like you’re — like the five of you are like Saudi Arabia. That you’re caught up in your profits, you’re highly defensive, you yield on nothing,” he said. “I think you’re out of touch. Deeply, profoundly out of touch. And deeply and profoundly committed to sharing nothing.” Congress is facing enormous pressure to make deep cuts in essential government programs, in order to reduce the budget deficit. Americans are struggling to make ends meet — a struggle made dramatically worse by high gas prices. Meanwhile, the Big Five oil companies — Exxon Mobil, BP, Shell, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips — made about $34 billion in profits in the first three months of 2011, up 42 percent from a year ago. “The nature of your life, the nature of your international travel, the nature of the size of your profits — I don’t think you have any idea what the size of your profits does to the American people’s willingness to accept what you have to say,” Rockefeller said. Rockefeller, a five-term senator whose great grandfather built the giant Standard Oil monopoly , also called attention to the oil industry’s unparalleled clout on Capitol Hill . WATCH : “I think the main reason that you’re out of touch, particularly with respect to Americans, and the sacrifices that we’re having to look at here in terms of try to balance — trying to come close to balancing the budget — is that you never lose,” Rockefeller said to the executives. “You’ve never lost. You always prevail. You always prevail in the halls of Congress, and you do that for a whole variety of reasons, because of your lobbyists, because of your friends, because of all the places where you do business. And I don’t really know any other business that never loses,” he said. “I’ve just never seen any industry so successful, so constantly successful. I think you all have a great sense of assurance as you are sitting there. … I don’t think you feel threatened by anything that’s going on here, and I don’t know necessarily that you have any reason to feel threatened, because of the way votes line up in this present Congress. “I haven’t heard anybody say what they would be willing to do to share in our budget problem and in the total concept of what keeps America together, and that is essentially fairness. That everybody has to lose at some time. That everybody has to give something up for us to be a real country.” Democrats, starting with President Obama, have seized on oil subsidies as a potent political issue. This week, three senators unveiled legislation that would strip the Big Five of about $21 billion in tax breaks over the next decade. “Businesses should make a profit — that’s what drives our economy — but do these very profitable companies actually need taxpayer subsidies?” asked Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.), as he kicked off Thursday’s hearing . “Energy incentives should help us build the energy future we want to see — not pad oil company profits.” Rockefeller’s pessimism about the repeal’s chances may be well-founded. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said he intends to schedule a vote on the measure next week, but no Republicans have shown any indication that they’ll vote for it — and two “oil patch” Democrats declared their opposition on Wednesday as well. “My guess is that there aren’t 60 votes to pass it,” Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.) told the executives. But, he said, “when the vote occurs next week and we don’t get 60 votes for Senator Menendez’s proposal, that shouldn’t be the end of the conversation.” Partisan battle lines were clearly drawn from the start of Thursday’s hearing, when Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), the ranking member of the committee, accused Democrats of wanting to increase gas prices, then illustrated his view of the hearing by unveiling a photograph of a dog standing on a pony. Banter ensued, followed by Hatch’s declaration: “I know who the hores’s ass is.” Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) was particularly pointed in his interrogation of ConocoPhillips CEO Jim Mulva, whose company on Wednesday described the Democratic subsidy rollback as ” un-American .” Schumer demanded an apology. He didn’t get one. Describing the trade-offs the budget committee will be making, he asked Mulva, “Do you think that your subsidy is more important that the financial aid that we give to students to go to college?” Mulva did not give a direct answer. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) brought a video clip from a November 2005 hearing, where he asked oil executives whether or not they agreed with then-President George W. Bush ‘s assertion that “with $55 [a barrel] oil we don’t need incentives to oil and gas companies to explore. There are plenty of incentives.” Back then, the executives had all agreed. “Gentlemen, you all have done, as major oil companies, a dramatic about-face this morning,” Wyden said. “In 2005 — you were there, Mr. Mulva — all of you said you did not need tax incentives to drill for oil. And today you come to say you’ve got to have them when oil is at $100 a barrel. I just think that position defies common sense.” John Watson, CEO of Chevron, told the panel: “I am an advocate for developing all forms of energy and using energy more wisely,” he said. “But it is wrong to increase taxes on oil and gas companies to subsidize other forms of energy.” Furthermore, he said: “Singling out five companies because of their size is even more troubling. Such measures are anticompetitive and discriminatory. … Don’t punish our industry for doing its job well.” Watson also warned that his company could shift its investment strategy. “To the extent that taxes are higher in the United States, we’ll look elsewhere,” he said. “The real question is not can we afford more taxes,” said Tillerson. “The real question is what do these tax changes mean to that next incremental investment decision that we’re going to make.” WATCH : * * * * * * Dan Froomkin is senior Washington correspondent for the Huffington Post. You can send him an e-mail , bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed , follow him on Twitter , friend him on Facebook , and/or become a fan and get e-mail alerts when he writes.

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Finance Professionals See Business Opportunity In Strapped Michigan Cities

May 12, 2011

NEW YORK — As Michigan cities grapple with budget deficits and spending cuts, their troubles amount to an attractive opportunity for financial industry players, who are eyeing individual localities for state-sanctioned takeovers. Thanks to a new Michigan law , the governor can appoint an emergency manager to have total control over a municipality or school system deemed to be in dire financial straits. Such officials currently run three Michigan cities and the Detroit school district. Many more, from private and public industries, are waiting in the wings, boning up on municipal governance in case one of them is called upon to turn a city around. Hundreds have already been trained. In Detroit , the largest city in the state, the upcoming budgeting process carries an implicit threat: If local politicians can’t convince the state they have what it takes to repair the city’s finances, the state could appoint an outside official to do the job for them. The city has already hit several of the triggers to initiate the process that could install an emergency manager, say local politicians, who are scrambling to keep the city government out of receivership. But would-be emergency managers say they can succeed where elected officials have failed. They stand to draw six-figure salaries from the local governments under their management, but some talk about this work as if it were a civic duty. “We feel very strongly that not only is there a business opportunity here, but we want to be part of a solution for the greater good,” said Michael Imber, a principal in Grant Thornton LLP’s corporate advisory and restructuring services practice in New York. “We’re absolutely ready to help.” Imber is not alone. In February, he was one of about 50 graduates of a training course for Michigan emergency managers, a two-day program promoted in Crain ‘s business magazine. The course was popular, with a waiting list exceeding 100 people, said Eric Scorsone, an economist at Michigan State University, who helped organize the session with the Turnaround Management Association, a corporate restructuring industry group. More than two-thirds of the participants in February were from the private sector, Scorsone said. At the next training program, held in April, public sector professionals were more heavily represented, and about 400 people participated. That course, too, had a long waiting list. “There’s constant chatter going on about this,” said bankruptcy attorney Harley Goldstein, a partner at the law firm K&L Gates. “Everybody wants to make a buck.” Michigan has had an emergency manager statute on its books for 20 years, but Public Act 4, signed by Republican Gov. Rick Snyder in March, endows these officials with expanded powers over the localities where they’re dispatched. Emergency managers now can suspend collective bargaining rights for unions. They can terminate worker contracts. They can strip the mayor and the city council of all their power. These officials were once called “emergency financial managers.” Now they’re called just “emergency managers.” “That’s to emphasize that it’s not just about finances,” Scorsone said. “It’s more like a CEO rather than a CFO.” But even “CEO” doesn’t fully capture the extent of emergency managers’ authority. In the city of Benton Harbor, Joseph Harris has been the emergency manager for a year . Elected officials have resisted his rule, but thanks to Harris’ new powers, he is able simply to “put them in the timeout chair,” state Rep. Al Pscholka (R) told Bloomberg Businessweek . For Detroit, the coming two months are a crucial period, a time in which the local elected officials must prove to the governor that they can take care of the city on their own. The fiscal year ends June 30, and a new budget, which local officials are now in the process of writing, will take effect the following day. Mayor Dave Bing’s proposed budget includes cuts totaling nearly $100 million from a $1.3 billion general fund. The actual cuts could be even greater, city council members say. But it might take more than a balanced budget to convince the state to leave Detroit alone. Local politicians are also writing a plan to eliminate the city’s accumulated deficit, which exceeds $200 million, according to the mayor’s estimate. The goal is to give the city a budget surplus in five years. But for all the planning, the city’s finances could remain tenuous. For one, Detroit’s deficit-reduction plan depends on the state’s allowing the city to collect certain taxes, and to raise others. The latest Census data showed Detroit’s population had declined by a quarter over the last decade, falling below a legal threshold and preventing the city from collecting a utility tax. To get this revenue, and to raise its income tax, Detroit needs approval from the Republican-controlled state legislature — the same body that passed the new emergency manager law. Already, the city has made deep spending cuts to compensate for its depleted coffers. Workers have absorbed furlough days that amount to a 10 percent pay reduction. But city officials say they’re prepared to cut even more. The mayor has proposed shrinking the workforce by nearly 200 positions to help achieve that $100 million in savings. Other layoff counts discussed around City Hall reach as high as 1,000 workers, Council Member James Tate said. The pension and health care systems, too, are frequently cited targets for cuts. Between June 2008 and June 2010, the assets in Detroit’s General Retirement System pension plan lost nearly 40 percent of their value as the financial crisis struck, an auditor’s report shows . In his budget address last month, Mayor Bing said he wants to replace the city’s defined benefit pension plan with a 401k-style defined contribution plan for future hires, and to reduce the value of future employees’ pensions. But the city’s organized labor has resisted. In the end, budget savings might depend on whether the elected officials can successfully negotiate with unions. “We have to make those unpopular decisions,” Tate said. “I truly believe that this particular city council and this mayor will probably go down as one of the most unpopular groups of city leaders in the history of this city. We’re talking about massive change, massive sacrifice.” Outside the city, prospective emergency managers say they can do better. “There’s no question that an outside party can move things along faster,” Imber said. “Whatever the constituencies are that are resistant to change need to recognize what the reality is. If they don’t, they’re going to lose the right to choose.” While some prospective emergency managers have little or no experience in the public sector, they say their private sector experience has prepared them for this job. “We run a process to solve the financial issues of the enterprise,” said Michael Boudreau, a director at the financial firm O’Keefe and Associates, who has 20 years of experience in private industry, and who attended the February training session. “That process works in one industry as well as another industry. In this case, I’m going to say that it works just as well in private as in public.” Like elected officials, emergency managers are paid by the municipality they serve. But private sector turnaround artists are accustomed to salaries far larger than what these cities would offer. A “typical” salary for an emergency manager is about $11,000 a month, according to Terry Stanton, spokesperson for the Michigan Treasury Department. For Detroit, the salary would likely be more, said Scorsone, the economist who helped organize the emergency manager training sessions. He estimated that the annual pay for managing Detroit could reach as high as $400,000. The Detroit Public Schools’ Emergency Manager, Robert Bobb, earns about $350,000 annually . Compensation for private sector restructurings is often many times that. But clients in the private sector tend to have deeper pockets than Detroit taxpayers, who would foot the bill for an emergency manager. The city could end up paying several salaries, since the emergency manager can appoint advisers. But Goldstein, the bankruptcy lawyer, said in an email that he would consider working on Detroit on a pro bono basis. “I strongly believe that restructuring professionals should give something back to the community,” he said, adding, “Detroit’s situation is a noble cause that is deserving of altruism.” Stanton, the Michigan Treasury spokesperson, refused to speculate about whether an emergency manager is in Detroit’s future. State officials are “not waiting with bated breath to send EMs into different local units of government,” he said. What’s more, the purpose of the new law is preventative, he said. “The goal here is not to name emergency managers,” Stanton said. “The goal is to avoid having to name emergency managers.” Indeed, the new law seems to have inspired a fresh sense of urgency in Detroit city hall. A state takeover would be “tragic,” said Council Member Kwame Kenyatta. Local officials are avoiding it “like the plague,” Council Member Tate said. “It would be the end of the democratic process as Detroiters know it,” said Gary Brown, the council president pro tem. “You’d basically have a dictator that’s not accountable to the citizens of the city of Detroit.” “I appreciate people getting their training, but we won’t need them,” Council President Charles Pugh said. “I hope that that training was in vain. I hope that they wasted their time.” But not all city leaders show such confidence in the way the city is currently run. Al Garrett, president of the local division of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, said the city council members have a vested interest in avoiding emergency receivership — to protect their own jobs. Garrett expressed frustration with the way local politics works. He strongly opposes an emergency manager takeover — “it’s just a host of bad things,” he said — but he also said the current city leaders aren’t exactly ideal. “There are decisions that are made daily that make no damn sense, that lead to our fiscal crisis,” he said. “Part of what we want to see, when we go to the table, is how are you going to deal with the other issues.” “I’m not willing to voluntarily take a bad deal,” he added, “just to get the city out of receivership.”

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Government May Force Big Banks To Reduce Loan Balances For Distressed Homeowners

May 11, 2011

The nation’s five largest mortgage firms may be forced to reduce loan balances for distressed homeowners as part of an agreement with state attorneys general and the Obama administration to settle claims of faulty mortgage practices, a top state official involved in the negotiations said Tuesday. The proposal is part of a set of remedies banks would have to agree to in order to settle the state and federal probes launched last autumn, which found that the largest mortgage firms illegally seized the homes of at least dozens of borrowers and engaged in shoddy practices that short-changed troubled borrowers. Mortgage principal reductions would comprise part of a larger fine levied on Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Wells Fargo and Ally Financial. Penalties could reach $30 billion, officials said. The forced reduction of mortgage principal as a penalty against flawed past practices has proven contentious. Some Republican attorneys general have objected, as have some Republican members of Congress. On Tuesday, however, a state official told The Huffington Post on condition of anonymity that the option “very much remains on the table.” While officials have not determined how much would be exacted from the banks — and specific dollar amounts to settle the probes have not yet been discussed between the state and federal governments and the banks — the proposal to compel financial firms to cut loan balances is part of one of two documents circulated Tuesday at a hotel in northern Virginia, where bankers, state officials and policy makers from the Obama administration began a three-day meeting. The targeted banks have argued vociferously, both in private discussions and in public, that they opposed cutting distressed homeowners’ principal balances. During meetings two weeks ago, representatives from such banks conducted a presentation which they claimed illustrated that mandating principal reductions would not prevent a significant number of new foreclosures and would be harmful to the general economy. The banks said “it would trigger a stampede of strategic defaults,” an official familiar with one of the two discussions said at the time, referring to instances in which borrowers who can afford to make good on their obligations choose not to. Strategic defaults are much more common in the business world than among homeowners, according to experts who study the issue. Homeowners generally feel a moral obligation to continue making their payments, whereas corporations view the breaking of contracts as pure business decisions. Government officials questioned the banks’ assumptions and fought back against their claims. The other document circulated Tuesday outlines standards that mortgage firms would have to adhere to for current and future borrowers, like forcing banks to ensure they have the right documentation when they move to repossess homes. The document was revised from an earlier draft first circulated in early March, The Huffington Post reported last week . The standards are a response to investigations launched last fall after the nation’s largest lenders voluntarily halted home seizures when faulty document practices — like so-called “robo-signing” — came to light, erupting into a nationwide scandal. Currently, no national standards govern how mortgage firms should treat borrowers who fall behind on their payments or default on their obligations. Congress has taken up the matter, and officials generally agree on how mortgage firms should treat borrowers. Tuesday’s bipartisan meeting included the Washington Attorney General Rob McKenna (R) and Colorado Attorney General John Suthers (R), who called in remotely. Top officials from Florida’s and Texas’ attorney general offices, both led by Republicans, attended, along with the Democratic attorneys general from Delaware, Iowa, Illinois, North Carolina and Connecticut. Top officials from the Treasury Department, Department of Justice and the Department of Housing and Urban Development were also present.

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Banks Illegally Foreclosed On Dozens Of Military Borrowers

May 5, 2011

WASHINGTON — Two of the nation’s largest mortgage firms illegally foreclosed on the homes of “almost 50″ active-duty military service members, according to a Thursday report by the Government Accountability Office. The report does not identify the two mortgage companies. GAO investigators attributed the finding to federal bank regulators, who recently completed a three-month probe into allegations of improper foreclosures carried out by the nation’s 14 largest home loan servicers. The GAO report, which focused on problems in the mortgage industry and the lack of federal oversight, is the first official study to feature a partial tally of military families whose homes have been illegally seized. The 50 or so wrongful foreclosures were discovered during regulators’ review of only about 2,800 loans that experienced foreclosure last year. Millions of other foreclosures in recent years have not been reviewed by regulators. More than 2.8 million homes received a foreclosure filing in 2009, and nearly 2.9 million residences got one last year, according to RealtyTrac, a California-based data provider. Federal bank supervisors “could not provide a reliable estimate of the number of foreclosures that should not have proceeded,” they said in their April report on improper mortgage servicing. Two months earlier, the head of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which oversees national banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, said that only a ” small number ” of home seizures should not have occurred. The large number of wrongful foreclosures identified by the GAO from such a small sample suggests that the problem could be more widespread. As foreclosures have surged to record levels, banks and other mortgage firms have been caught ill-equipped to handle the ever-increasing workload, Treasury Department and Federal Reserve officials have repeatedly said. Due to years of under-investment by banks in their mortgage processing operations, regulators and experts have found that shortcuts were taken and procedures were not followed. Homeowners are bearing the brunt of these decisions. Improper mortgage practices affecting military borrowers are ” perhaps the most egregious cases ,” wrote five Democratic lawmakers in a joint letter Thursday to bank regulators. “The idea of wrongfully forcing service members’ families from their homes while their loved ones are risking their lives to protect our country is not only unconscionable, it’s illegal,” said Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.), one of the co-signers, in an emailed statement. Members of the armed forces on active duty are covered by the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act , a law designed to protect them from financial distress. The legislation restricts foreclosure of properties owned by active-duty members of the military. Violations are handled by the Justice Department’s civil division. The Justice Department has reportedly said it’s investigating allegations of improper foreclosures on service members that were commenced by mortgage subsidiaries of Morgan Stanley and Deutsche Bank AG, two of the world’s largest banks. Bank of America recently announced it would change the way it handles military borrowers. A 50-state coalition of attorneys general and bank supervisors along with the Obama administration are also in talks with the nation’s five largest mortgage firms — Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial — to resolve allegations of wrongful foreclosures and improper mortgage practices. Fines could reach up to $30 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. JPMorgan Chase disclosed in February that it had improperly foreclosed on the homes of 18 military families. Stephanie Mudick, an official at the nation’s second-largest bank by assets, told a House panel that the lender had either rescinded the foreclosure sale or reached a settlement for 12 of those military borrowers, and was working through the rest. The firm’s mistakes were a ” painful aberration ,” Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan’s chairman and chief executive, said in a February statement. In April, the bank agreed to pay $56 million to settle claims of improper mortgage practices when dealing with military borrowers. On Thursday, JPMorgan spokesman Tim Keefe said that the bank had found additional cases of military families whose homes were illegally seized. Although he did not specify the exact number, a separate JPMorgan official said the total was less than 30. Keefe said the bank had committed to providing new homes and full forgiveness of any mortgage debt owed to the lender for these borrowers. By taking shortcuts in processing troubled borrowers’ home loans, the nation’s five largest mortgage firms have saved more than $20 billion since the housing crisis began in 2007, according to a confidential presentation prepared for state attorneys general by the nascent Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection inside the Treasury Department and obtained by The Huffington Post in March . In February, Holly Petraeus, who leads the bureau’s unit overseeing military borrowers, sent a letter to the chief executives of the nation’s 25 largest banks urging them to follow the law when it comes to dealing with service members. “I appreciate your assistance in ensuring that your bank does not overlook its obligations -– legal and otherwise -– to your military customers,” wrote Petraeus, whose husband, David, leads U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

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Dem Group Targets DNC Chair For Wall Street Ties

May 5, 2011

WASHINGTON — The escalating lobbying blitz surrounding debit card swipe fees has now pitted a prominent Democratic messaging organization against the newly elected chair of the Democratic National Committee. New ads launched as part of a million-dollar campaign funded by merchants opposed to high swipe fees criticize Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz’s (D-Fla.) efforts to delay new rules which would lower such fees. Similar ads target Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) and a host of congressional Republicans. It is extremely rare for a Beltway-based progressive advocacy group to directly target the DNC chair, the formal head of the Democratic Party. Such infighting exposes a deepening schism between Democrats who hope to pull the party away from Wall Street and the party establishment, which still relies on the financial sector for campaign funds. Democratic insiders said Wasserman Schultz’s ability to raise money was a major factor in her elevation to the role of DNC chair, a post she was officially elected to Wednesday. A prolific fundraiser, Wasserman Schultz counts Wall Street among her most generous donors. Throughout her congressional career, she has raised over $945,756 from the finance, insurance and real estate industries, second only to the $956,800 she has raised from labor unions, according to data from the Center for Responsive Politics. In recent years, FIRE industries accounted for more of the DNC chair’s campaign contributions than any other donor category for both the 2008 and 2010 elections. And such firms have billions at stake in the swipe fee battle. Banks charge retailers swipe fees — also known as “interchange” fees — every time a customer pays for something with plastic. Stores pass some of these higher fees on to consumers wherever they can, in the form of higher prices for just about anything money can buy. Last year’s Wall Street reform bill required the Federal Reserve to restrict the amount that banks can charge on debit card swipe fees, but the bank lobby has come out in full force over the past few months in an effort to delay the implementation of the new Fed rule, part of a longer-term strategy to repeal the law outright. Banks score $16 billion from debit card swipe fees each year , with $8 billion flowing to 10 banks, according to The Nilson Report. Retailers of all sizes are lobbying hard to ensure that the Fed follows through with its rule on time, with Walmart, Target and Home Depot leading the charge. The Fed’s swipe fee crackdown — which would lower the average debit card fee from 44 cents to 12 cents — is currently scheduled to go into effect in July. Tester and Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) are pushing a bill in the Senate that would delay the rules by two years. Wasserman Schultz, along with Rep. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), are spearheading a companion bill in the House. Like many politicians, Tester does not want his swipe fee position to be viewed as a defense of Wall Street banks. “For Senator Tester, this isn’t a matter of right or left, it’s a matter of what’s right and wrong for rural America,” Tester spokeswoman Andrea Helling told HuffPost. Wasserman Schultz, a longtime opponent of swipe fee reform, similarly avoids invoking Wall Street in her opposition to swipe fee reform, arguing instead that caps would harm consumers who use debit cards. “If this amendment stands, our constituents will pay more for basic banking products and credit cards and no longer receive valuable services like fraud and identity theft protection paid for by the current interchange system,” she said. The new ads defending swipe fee reform, first reported by Politico’s K Street newsletter, started Sunday in Washington on cable and the talk shows and will expand to Congress members’ home states. In addition to targeting Wasserman Schultz, Tester, Corker, and Capito, the campaign goes after Sens. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.), Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) and Mike Lee (R-Utah), as well as Reps. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas), Kenny Marchant (R-Texas.), Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-Mo.) and Ed Royce (R-Calif.). The spots are being run by American Family Voices, a Democratic public relations firm backed by the merchant lobby that includes retail giant Walmart. AFV’s president is Mike Lux, who co-founded Americans United for Change with Brad Woodhouse, now a top aide to Wasserman Schultz at the DNC. Lux is the secretary and member of the board of directors for AUFC, according to the group’s tax records. AFV and AUFC share an office and regularly coordinate messaging and work together on projects, but both Lux and AUFC officials say there was no coordination on the swipe fee ad campaign that attacks Wasserman Schultz. “They’re on the same side as I am on the swipe fee thing. There’s some very indirect connections,” Lux told HuffPost, emphasizing that the the two groups did not directly connect on the ads. Bob Creamer, a consultant with AUFC, said that he was unaware that Lux’s group was launching the ad campaign, but doesn’t disagree with the position Lux is taking. Creamer and Lux have both written for HuffPost in favor of swipe fee reform. “I totally agree with that position. I think that position is right and Americans United has been totally in favor” of capping swipe fees, Creamer told HuffPost, adding that the group had “no knowledge” of the AFV ad campaign. Two other officials at AUFC reached out to HuffPost independently to note that AUFC had nothing to do with the ads against Wasserman Schultz, and a third said AUFC was not involved with the ad campaign. (In 2008, HuffPost shared office space in DC with three other organizations, one of them being AUFC.) Lux said that he wasn’t sure whether Wasserman Schultz, who wields new power over donors as DNC chair, would retaliate by clamping down on AFV’s donors, but he wasn’t concerned. “Who knows?” he said of the prospect. “I don’t tend to get money from establishment Democrats anyway. I get money from populist progressives. I think the bankers gave up on giving money to me some time ago.” The infighting over swipe fee reform extends to the Republican party. In March, a group linked indirectly to Karl Rove, Americans for Job Security, blasted Republican Sens. Roger Wicker (Miss.), David Vitter (La.) and Capito for opposing swipe fee reform in an ad campaign. A GOP firm founded by Mike Dubke and Dave Carney, AJS operates out of the same office as Crossroads Media, which Dubke and Carney now run (the pair no longer officially head AJS). Crossroads Media was responsible for the campaign’s ad buy and includes Rove’s American Crossroads, the national GOP and the Republican Governors Association on its client roster. For his part, Lux maintains that he has no reason to worry about siding with the merchants on the swipe fee issue. “I think that Democrats need to get off the side of the bankers and get on the side of consumers and small business. That’s the bottom line, and I don’t think Wasserman Schultz should be helping them as much as she is. I don’t think Tester should be helping them as much as he is,” he said. “I think the politics of it are crazy,” he added. Why be on the side of the banks when you can be on the side of small business folks, cab drivers, restaurant owners, consumers, hardware-shop guys. Why would you pick the banks over all those folks?”

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Pakistan Pays U.S. Lobbyists To Deny It Helped Osama Bin Laden

May 5, 2011

WASHINGTON (Reuters/Tim Reid) – Pakistan’s Washington lobbyists have launched an intense campaign on Capitol Hill to counter accusations that Islamabad was complicit in giving refuge to Osama bin Laden. Alarmed by lawmakers’ demands to cut off billions of dollars of U.S. aid after bin Laden was found living in a Pakistani safe house for six years, President Asif Ali Zardari has ordered a full-court press to quell mounting accusations that it helped the al Qaeda leader avoid capture. Mark Siegel, a partner in the Washington lobbying firm of Locke Lord Strategies — which is paid $75,000 a month by the Pakistani government — told Reuters on Thursday he had spoken twice to Zardari since U.S. special forces killed bin Laden on Sunday, and “countless” times to the Pakistani ambassador in Washington. “They are certainly concerned,” Siegel said, adding that suggestions the Pakistani government knew about bin Laden’s whereabouts was nothing more than speculation. Referring to a statement by President Barack Obama’s counterterrorism adviser, John Brennan, that there must have been a support system for bin Laden inside Pakistan, Siegel said: “There is no proof that a support system was government-based.” There is much at stake for Pakistan as many lawmakers question how bin Laden could have lived in a large fortified compound close to a Pakistani military base for so long. Some members of Congress are now demanding that nearly $3 billion in annual aid for Pakistan, included in Obama’s 2012 budget, be blocked until the Zardari administration explains how bin Laden lived untouched just 30 miles outside Islamabad, the Pakistani capital. Pakistan has received over $20 billion in U.S. aid since the September 11, 2001, attacks. Patrick Leahy, the Democratic chairman of the Senate subcommittee that allocates foreign aid, said on Thursday he wants a complete review of U.S. aid to Pakistan. Leahy said he was certain that some Pakistani military and intelligence officials knew that bin Laden was hiding so close to Islamabad. “It’s impossible for them not to have some idea he was there,” Leahy told Vermont Public Radio. But Siegel, referring to claims by the Afghan government that Pakistan must have known bin Laden’s whereabouts, said: “Must have known doesn’t mean knew.” Siegel’s firm was retained by the Zardari government in 2008 and has earned nearly $2 million in fees since then, according to Justice Department records. Siegel said his firm is paid $900,000 a year by Pakistan. Since bin Laden’s death, Siegel says he has been on Capitol Hill every day to promote Pakistan’s position on the bin Laden killing, talking to congressmen, senators and their aides. (Editing by Xavier Briand) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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GOP Blocks Bid To Make Elizabeth Warren Head Of Consumer Bureau

May 4, 2011

WASHINGTON — Republicans don’t even want public advocate Elizabeth Warren to head a watered-down Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. At least that’s what Democrats tried to show Wednesday with a number of amendments to three Financial Services bills that aim to alter the nascent CFPB. The Democratic measures were all nixed by the GOP. One amendment would have required Congress to name Warren the head of the bureau once she finishes the job of creating it and getting it running by July. The provision, offered by CFPB proponent Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), was designed to put Republicans, who have vehemently opposed Warren in the past, on the spot. “This debate is clearly about Elizabeth Warren, so let’s make it about her,” said Maloney, the top Democrat on the Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit Subcommittee. The amendment, which said the top job had to be filled by the person “credited with coming up with the idea” for the CFPB, failed on a party-line vote. It was offered to a bill that would, among other things, turn the bureau into a commission with five members leading it. Subcommittee Chairwoman Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) argued that a commission offers greater stability in the leadership than a single boss. “If they’re going to make it a commission, at least put someone in the chair’s seat who has been the vision behind it and can make it work,” Maloney told The Huffington Post after the heated hearing. Another GOP bill aims to make it easier for the Financial Stability Oversight Commission to overrule decisions that the CFPB might make in favor of consumers. It would require a simple majority vote by the FSOC, instead of a two-thirds majority. That bill would also change language in current law to give the FSOC authority to protect not just the “safety and soundness” of the U.S. financial system — a key goal of the Dodd-Frank legislation passed last year — but of individual institutions . Republicans argued that the changes the bill would produce would make the consumers’ bureau more transparent and accountable, and protect more small banks. Democrats contended that the revisions would only weaken the CFPB, and give financial institutions a stronger say. To prove Democrats’ point, Maloney offered another amendment that would have defined the “safety and soundness” mentioned in the proposal to exclude profits. Her point was that consumer-friendly decisions generally come at the expense of profits, and — if profitably is a standard — there would be a ready rationale to overturn almost any CFPB rule or finding. “I am not saying that a financial institution should not be able to make a profit,” Maloney said in the hearing. “I am simply saying that, if you are going to put an extraordinary check on the CFPB’s ability to protect consumers, then a financial institution’s profitability should not come at the expense of consumers.” The amendment also failed, while the subcommittee passed the three GOP-sponsored bills. The third aims to delay the July 21 starting date for the CFPB. The full Financial Services Committee is expected to consider the bills next week. Democrats in the Senate will likely squash the measures there, but they could be offered as amendments to larger pieces of legislation.

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Government Borrowing Goes On Under GOP, Obama Plans

May 2, 2011

WASHINGTON — It’s all but impossible to glean from the political rhetoric, but government borrowing will grow by trillions of dollars over the next decade if the budget backed by House Republicans translates into law. And by a few trillion more if President Barack Obama gets his way. Call it the unpleasant truth behind a political struggle over raising the debt limit that is expected to intensify as lawmakers return Monday from a two-week break. While polls show voters angry over the debt, and politicians support a goal of paying it down, the two principal deficit-reduction plans would merely restrain its growth for the next decade – the Republicans’ significantly more so than the president’s. To do otherwise, Congress “would have to enact policies that would produce a surplus,” with money left over to begin retiring debt, said Robert Bixby, executive director of the anti-deficit Concord Coalition. The last government surplus was in 2001. For one to occur in the future would require “Republican spending policies and Democratic tax policies,” Bixby said, referring to GOP calls for deep program cuts, and Obama’s support for higher taxes. “Right now the two parties haven’t been able to agree on those kinds of changes.” The increase in debt woven into their budgets is not a fact that Obama, Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., chairman of the House Budget Committee, or any other official chooses to trumpet. The president and most lawmakers generally avoid saying directly that government debt will rise if their budget prevails – although they are careful not to claim it won’t, either. Instead, they use similar, vaguely reassuring terms. “We have to live within our means, reduce our deficit and get back on a path that will allow us to pay down our debt,” Obama said last month as he called for $4 trillion in deficit reductions over the next dozen years. Unlike the Republicans, he favors about $1 trillion in tax increases, in addition to allowing Bush-era tax cuts on upper-income households to expire. Administration officials say they have no estimates of the impact the president’s new proposals would have on the future size of the government’s debt, which now stands at nearly $14.3 trillion. The president’s original budget for 2012, unveiled last winter, would leave debt at $27.6 trillion at the end of the decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The administration itself put the figure at $26.3 trillion. “The House Republicans’ budget reduces government spending by $6.2 trillion over the next decade and puts the budget on a path to balance in the years ahead,” Ryan wrote on the panel’s website, a theme that is similar to the one Obama struck. Congressional Budget Office figures, however, show that if Ryan’s plan were put into law, there still would be new borrowing each year and government’s debt would total $23.1 trillion at the end of 2021. The House Republicans’ plan relies on repealing the year-old health care law, as well as deep cuts in Medicaid and domestic programs. Its most controversial provision, phasing out Medicare as it now exists, would not begin for 10 years and has no impact on debt in the current decade. The GOP plan would generate about $4 trillion less debt than Obama’s budget envisions over the decade. Republicans point out that unlike Obama’s plan, theirs would quickly begin shrinking the debt as a percentage of the overall economy. Even so, debt would rise by nearly $9 trillion in 10 years. The administration has asked Congress to approve borrowing beyond the current $14.3 trillion debt ceiling. In exchange, Republicans want the White House and Democrats to agree to a series of measures to cut spending in the near term and make sure it stays under control in the future. They sometimes suggest that their approach would put an end to borrowing. “While America cannot default on its debt, we also cannot continue to borrow recklessly, dig ourselves deeper into this hole and mortgage the future of our children and grandchildren,” House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio said last winter on the day Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner notified lawmakers the limit on borrowing would have to be raised. More recently, Rep. Jeb Hensarling of Texas, a member of the GOP leadership, said Obama “is going to have to start the process of cutting up the credit cards, pure and simple.” Voter anger over government spending and rising debt helped generate tea party enthusiasm for Republicans and propel them to control of the House in the 2010 elections. An AP-GfK poll taken last month showed continuing concern. Among Republicans, 95 percent said they were very or somewhat worried that the increasing federal debt would harm the financial future of their children or grandchildren. Among independents, 82 percent agreed, and among Democrats, 79 percent. Yet polls also show the public is less willing to support changes in Medicare, spending cuts and certain tax increases that have been proposed to stop the debt from growing. Two plans have been advanced that project a surplus in less than a decade, one by the conservative Republican Study Committee in the House, and the other by first-term Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. The RSC proposal projects a $50 billion surplus in 2020, while Paul’s shows red ink disappearing even more quickly, in 2016. Both rely on highly controversial spending cuts to meet their targets and have drawn relatively little political support. In the House, the RSC plan split Republicans down the middle, with 119 GOP members voting in favor and 120 against. In addition to cuts of domestic and defense programs, it recommends gradually raising the age of eligibility for Medicare to 67 for those born in 1952 or later. Paul’s blueprint has not yet come to a vote in the Senate, but it has less than a handful of supporters. Among other recommendations, it calls for abolishing the Departments of Commerce, Education, Energy, and Housing and Urban Development.

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Donald Trump: ‘I Am Very Proud Of Myself’

April 28, 2011

DOVER, N.H. — After weeks of suggesting Barack Obama was born in Africa, Donald Trump hastened to boast that he had forced the Democratic president to release a detailed Hawaii birth certificate disproving that claim, painting an apparent setback as a victory within minutes of arriving in the first-in-the-nation primary state. The developer and reality TV show host, who is considering a White House run, again showed the difficulty establishment Republicans are having in controlling the early stages of their wide-open nominating contest. He also proved himself a nimble messenger, or spinner. “Today I am very proud of myself because I have accomplished something that nobody else has been able to accomplish,” Trump told reporters Wednesday shortly after his black and red helicopter, emblazoned “TRUMP” on the side, touched down in Portsmouth. He arrived not long after the White House released the president’s long-form birth certificate from Hawaii. He said he was honored “to have played such a big role in hopefully – hopefully – getting rid of this issue. Now, we have to look at it, we have to see, is it real.” Trump said he hoped the birth certificate “checks out beautifully,” but he used the opportunity before television cameras to again sharply criticize Obama on several fronts, including Libya policy and gasoline prices. He also raised questions anew about Obama’s educational record and how he got into college. But he again offered no proof of anything amiss. Trump’s blistering attacks on Obama, including raising widely debunked rumors that the president was born abroad, have piqued the interest of some Republican voters. He has seen his standing in some polls grow in the months since he first dangled a presidential candidacy before a GOP primary electorate looking for a leader to aggressively challenge the Democratic president. Many rank-and-file Republicans still dismiss Trump as a non-serious distraction. But as he easily grabs headlines, other potential candidates are playing a more cautious game, and most don’t seem eager to talk about him. They’ve been distancing themselves from the so-called “birther” claims in recent days, and most weren’t eager to weigh in Wednesday. Sarah Palin, the former Alaska governor, sent a brief tweet that said: “Media: admit it, Trump forced the issue. Now, don’t let the WH distract you w/the birth crt from what Bernanke says today. Stay focused, eh?” That was a reference to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s news conference. And former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney said on Twitter: “What President Obama should really be releasing is a jobs plan.” Less than a year before Iowa and New Hampshire Republicans become the first to vote in the race, the GOP field is far from set. There’s no true front-runner and no single establishment candidate. That leaves ample room for attention-getting events by less orthodox politicians such as Trump and third-term Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota. Romney, who lost the nomination in 2008, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich all have taken initial steps toward full-fledged runs but none has emerged as the candidate to beat. Many Republicans expect Bachmann and former Sen. Rick Santorum to make their interest official. They also are waiting to hear from former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman and Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels. The 2008 vice presidential nominee, Palin, and the Iowa caucus winner, Mike Huckabee, have dropped hints they will not run, but Republican insiders say no one is sure. Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour became the latest Republican to opt against a presidential run this week. “This is shaping up to be a wacky year,” said Scott Reed, who managed Republican nominee Bob Dole’s 1996 campaign and had been advising Barbour. It’s the most wide-open GOP primary in four decades, he said, and the eventual nominee conceivably could jump in as late as September. “There is still room for someone to emerge as the conservative alternative to Romney,” Reed said. Most veteran Republicans don’t believe that person will be Trump, the thrice-married, much-caricatured developer who has donated heavily to Democrats in past years and switched his stands on key issues such as abortion. Karl Rove, the top political adviser to President George W. Bush, calls Trump a “joke candidate.” Jennifer Horn, a 2008 Republican congressional nominee from New Hampshire, said in an op-ed column that Trump has flip-flopped on major issues and is not a credible candidate. If Republicans allow him to “hijack the primary process then they deserve exactly what they get,” she wrote. Over the years, Trump has given thousands of dollars to Democratic candidates, including New York Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada. Trump talked of running for president as a third-party candidate in 2000, and he made a brief splash with a 1988 New Hampshire speech that some took as a preliminary Republican candidacy. In New Hampshire on Wednesday, Trump breezily dismissed his critics. “I think I’m quite conservative as a Republican,” he told reporters in Portsmouth. In at least two instances, he said, “I’m leading the polls.” Forcing Obama “to finally come out and issue a birth certificate can only help,” he said. Trump said he has given campaign money to “many Republicans, many Democrats. And I think there’s something nice about that,” because it promotes bipartisanship. As for switching his stand on issues, he said, “My views change. … I tell people, you have to remain flexible because the world changes.” He also turned the conversation to Obama. “Nobody even knows what’s going on in Libya,” Trump said. He said Obama claims to have little control over gasoline prices, but “he does if he gets on the phone or gets off his basketball court or whatever he is doing at the time.” After holding court before reporters, Trump traveled to several other stops, all within a nine-mile radius of the Portsmouth airport. He spent a few minutes shaking hands at a Portsmouth diner but spent little time in conversation. Passing by a table of older men, he waved and said, “Why aren’t you at work?” “We’re retired!” answered the group of former workers at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. “Don’t touch Medicare, right?” Trump said, moving on without waiting for an answer. Joe Lovell, of Somersworth, said seeing Trump arrive by limo was a surprise in this state that values close contact with presidential hopefuls. Asked what he thought of Trump, he said, “Nice hair.”

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For-Profit Colleges Mount Unprecedented Battle For Influence In Washington

April 25, 2011

The morning after an 11th-hour deal to avert a government shutdown earlier this month, as many in Washington were still catching up on lost sleep, a group representing the for-profit college industry raced to send an online plea marked “urgent.” After a lobbying and campaign finance blitz totaling millions of dollars over the past year, the industry appeared to be on the verge of getting a special provision in the budget bill that would block increased government oversight of their schools. The matter was still not decided, they insisted. “We need you to make calls this weekend!” urged the letter from the group to its more than 1,600 member colleges. “Members and staff are meeting over the weekend to finalize the details of the [bill]. We encourage you TODAY and throughout this weekend to contact the offices of your Congressman/Senators urging them to support inclusion of the … amendment in the final package.” The email communique was a last-ditch bid to protect the massive federal subsidies that have fueled the spectacular growth of what is now a multibillion-dollar, publicly traded industry in higher education. With student loan defaults growing alongside profits at many of the largest companies, the government is seeking more accountability for colleges that promise training for careers, but leave students with unsustainable debts. As the stakes for this fast-growing industry rise, so have the dollars spent on an expansive lobbying campaign to ensure the government money keeps flowing. Some of the largest publicly traded college corporations receive nearly 90 percent of their revenues from federal student aid programs. While government money fuels increased enrollments and record profits, the industry has poured increasing amounts of those proceeds into an unprecedented effort to preempt the rules through greater influence in Washington. In other words, an industry that derives a vast majority of its revenue from federal funding is actively using that money to fight government efforts for accountability. The last-minute scramble earlier this month was only the latest chapter in the industry’s yearlong battle against increased federal oversight of their schools. Overall, the industry spent more than $8.1 million on lobbying in 2010, up from $3.3 million in 2009, according to a Huffington Post analysis of lobbying data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics. (Source: Analysis of data from the Center for Responsive Politics) In addition, campaign spending from the industry’s political action committees and executives increased to more than $2 million from $1.1 million between the 2008 and 2010 election cycles, according to a Huffington Post analysis of campaign finance records from the Sunlight Foundation’s website, TransparencyData. The industry’s political action committees and executives spent nearly twice as much on Democrats as on Republicans. Industry representatives say the uptick in spending for a business that derives most of its money from the government is not at all unusual in Washington. “It’s not unique in any sense,” said Harris Miller, the president and chief executive of the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities, “any more than it is for traditional higher education lobbying to get earmarks for their schools, or Boeing or defense contractors using their money to promote an agenda, which is to win a contract of the U.S. government.” For-profit college companies and trade associations have hired a dream team of Washington insiders to lobby on their behalf, however, bringing on 14 former members of Congress, including former Democratic House Leader Dick Gephardt. Some of the most powerful lobby shops in Washington have been employed in the fight: Tony Podesta and the Podesta Group; former Clinton special counsel Lanny J. Davis; numerous former staffers from the Department of Education and the education oversight committees on Capitol Hill. Until scrutiny of the schools intensified last year, when the Obama administration announced plans for new accountability rules, many of the colleges’ parent companies were known on Wall Street for their exemplary profit margins. The stakes for industry executives and shareholders have been huge. Andrew Clark, the chief executive at Bridgepoint Education Inc., which owns two online colleges, brought home more than $20 million in compensation last year. Corinthian Colleges Inc., which owns a string of more than 100 campuses across the nation, saw profits increase from $4.5 million in 1999 to more than $146 million in 2010. Revenues for publicly traded college corporations topped $20 billion last year. The industry has not been shy about funneling its money into marketing. Ubiquitous advertisements for the colleges fill subway cars in major cities and are plastered on billboards along highways across the country. Advertising Age listed The Apollo Group, which owns the University of Phoenix, as one of the top 100 spenders on U.S. advertising in 2009: The company spent in excess of $377 million, more than Apple Inc. But the outcomes for students at such schools have prompted deep concerns about the federal government’s increased investments. Students at for-profit colleges default on federal loans at double the rate of their counterparts at nonprofit schools, according to recently released data from the Department of Education. And although only 10 percent of students nationwide attend such institutions, they account for nearly half of all student loan defaults, leaving the government to pick up the tab. On average, the tuition at many of the largest for-profit colleges is nearly twice that of in-state tuition at four-year public universities and more than five times the average tuition at community colleges, according to a Senate report released last year. Critics have pointed to an unfair bargain behind those statistics: Students and taxpayers take on all the risk while the schools reap all the rewards, in the form of profits from federal money. “Going to college should not be like going to a casino, where the odds are stacked against you and the house always wins,” Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), a vocal critic of for-profit colleges, said at a Senate hearing last fall. For their part, for-profit colleges argue that they provide educational opportunities for many Americans who would otherwise have no such options, and that additional regulation could deny such students advancement. “It does literally threaten the existence of hundreds if not thousands of programs, and threaten the ability of hundreds of thousands of students to continue to get an education,” said Miller, of the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities. Advertisements in Washington newspapers and on websites across the country have broadcast the same message: The Department of Education is trying to prevent students from going to college, especially low-income students who have struggled in other educational fields. Education advocacy groups, meanwhile, argue the for-profit college rhetoric skillfully twists reality. “They’ve mastered the art of marketing,” said Jose Cruz, vice president for Higher Education Policy at the Education Trust, a student advocacy organization. “In an attempt to protect the most important revenue source, which are the federal subsidies, they have launched this campaign to appeal to Americans’ belief in choice and opportunity, particularly for those who have been traditionally underserved.” As the industry pours more money into lobbying, marketing and campaign finance, both Republicans and Democrats in Congress have shown their support. (Source: Huffington Post analysis of data from the Sunlight Foundation) Its increased clout was on display during a House vote in February, when more than 50 House Democrats, including House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and incoming Democratic National Committee chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.), joined Republicans in voting to block new regulations on the industry. (Source: Huffington Post analysis of data from the Sunlight Foundation) And during this month’s budget fight, a bipartisan group of House members pushed to prohibit the Department of Education from moving forward with such regulations later this year. The Senate eventually stripped from the budget bill the rider that would have exempted for-profits from further regulation, but the industry has vowed to continue seeking such an exemption. Many of the lawmakers who voted in support of the exemption in February, and who signed on to a letter urging its inclusion in the budget earlier this month, were the most well-compensated by the for-profit college industry. “These burdensome and unnecessary regulations unfairly single out the private sector of postsecondary education and will negatively affect the landscape of our nation’s higher education system,” read a letter from six Democratic and six Republican House members urging that the budget compromise include a provision to block additional regulations. Five of the signatories were among the top 10 recipients of campaign cash from the industry, receiving more than $20,000 apiece in the last election cycle. (Source: Huffington Post analysis of data from the Sunlight Foundation) AN EXISTENTIAL THREAT The rules at issue, developed by the Department of Education, are known as “gainful employment” regulations. It’s an effort to measure the quality of for-profit college and nonprofit vocational college programs by analyzing student outcomes in the workplace, gauging whether the schools set students up for careers that will allow them to pay off debts. Rules requiring that vocational colleges prepare students for “gainful employment in a recognized occupation” have been on the books since the 1970s, adopted following a series of problems with unscrupulous, fly-by-night trade schools that didn’t provide the training they promised. This marks the first time the Department of Education has ever sought to officially define those rules written into the law by Congress. For-profit colleges say that would pose an existential threat to the industry. The Department of Education, on the other hand, has said the regulations are designed as both a consumer protection measure for students and a student aid accountability test for the federal government. A final version is expected within months. The rules have been in the works since 2009, and were first drafted and presented to the public by the Department last summer. According to the draft version, the Department of Education would track students after leaving college and evaluate them using two criteria: whether they are paying down the principal on their student loans and whether graduates have attained an income that allows them to manage debts. Programs at certain for-profit colleges and other vocational college programs that do not meet targets for student loan repayment or debt levels would be restricted from receiving federal student aid or forced to disclose debt levels to prospective students. As drafted, the rules would allow programs to remain fully eligible for aid even if less than half of students are repaying the interest on loans, plus at least one penny of the principal after graduating or dropping out of the program. Programs could also remain fully eligible if less than a third of students are repaying the principal on loans, as long as graduates are not spending more than 20 percent of discretionary income toward paying off student loans. Student advocacy groups say the standards are not overly stringent, since each scenario would allow more than half of students to be behind on repaying the balance of their loans. The industry says there have not been enough studies of the effects the rules would have on the industry. The rules would not punish entire schools; rather, individual programs that fail to meet the standards could face sanctions. The regulation would not go into effect until the 2012-’13 school year and the rules would punish only the worst 5 percent of offenders during the first year, giving programs time to adjust their curriculum or reduce costs. “There hasn’t been much discussion about what the regulation actually would do,” said David Hawkins, director of public policy and research at the National Association for College Admission Counseling, whose member colleges include mostly nonprofits. “Instead there has been this hyperbolic, grand debate about limiting student choice. Really what the debate is about is the federal government drawing a line, beyond which they will be prepared to say, ‘I’m sorry, we cannot fund this program anymore.” The Department of Education estimates the rules would completely restrict federal aid to about 5 percent of for-profit college programs, and that 55 percent of such schools would have to warn students about average debt levels. Industry estimates, of course, are much higher. A study financed by the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities estimated that 33 percent of students at such schools would be affected. Rep. Robert Andrews (D-N.J.), an opponent of the regulations who is also one of the top campaign recipients from the industry, said he disagrees with the government’s focus on measuring debts compared to earnings. Instead, he said gainful employment should be measured by job placement that increases a graduate’s income. “I think the question is how we do this, not if we do it,” Andrews said. “If they don’t place enough students up to a fair standard, kick them out of the program. Whether they’re owned by a for-profit, nonprofit or public institution.” Davis, the Democratic lobbyist and former special counsel to Bill Clinton, questioned why the the regulations should not be applied to all sectors of higher education. “If we’re looking at the problem of excessive student debt, it is a problem and there needs to be a national solution,” Davis said. “I, as a liberal Democrat, would say the national solution isn’t cracking down on poor people who default.” REVOLVING DOOR CULTURE Many critics of the for-profit sector who have long argued for more oversight say the rules proposed by the Obama administration are simply a reaction to a loose regulatory approach practiced during the administration of George W. Bush. During those years, the corporations and their regulators developed a distinct revolving-door culture, where administration and congressional officials shifted from policy work for the government to advocacy work for the industry. Both Bush Education Secretaries, Rod Paige and Margaret Spellings, have worked in connection with for-profit college corporations since leaving their posts. And for the majority of the Bush years, the assistant secretary overseeing higher education in Washington was Sally Stroup, a former lobbyist for the University of Phoenix, the largest of the for-profit college corporations. After leaving the administration in 2006, she became a top aide for the House Education and Labor Committee, now known as Education and Workforce. That same year, current House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), then the chairman of the lower chamber’s education committee, helped to successfully pass legislation that lifted restrictions on federal student aid flowing to online college programs. The provision nixed a previous rule that required schools to have at least half of students attending ground campus classes in order to be eligible for federal student aid. The old rule’s elimination allowed for unprecedented growth at primarily online, for-profit schools. DEFINING THE MESSAGE The final gainful employment rules were supposed to be released last fall, but the Department of Education delayed publishing them after receiving more than 90,000 comments from the public — the most ever received on any regulation in the Department’s history. Many of the comments came from identical email form letters set up by colleges and trade associations for employees and students to send out — the byproduct of an extensive online marketing campaign. Some of the form letters sent in as comments were not even filled out. One filed by Alyssa Hoskins of Edinburgh, Ind., read, “I am a career college student at [INSTITUTION] studying [PROGRAM]. [INSTITUTION] is providing me with the education and training necessary to obtain the job I’ve always wanted as a [CAREER].” One anonymous comment from an employee at Herzing University included an email from the university president, Renee Herzing, stating that, “If you have not already you need to make a comment/letter through this web site … E-mail me to confirm that you entered a comment -– we (are) counting our total comments.” The lobbying efforts directed at members of Congress in recent months have been similarly strategic. During a “Hill Day” organized by the Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities last month, the trade group handed out a series of tip sheets for students talking to the media, which were first obtained by CampusProgress, an advocacy group affiliated with the Center for American Progress. Most of the instructions dealt with potential questions about student loan debt or recruiting tactics. “Should a reporter ask if or how much debt you incurred at a career institution, you can firmly but politely reply: ‘I made an adult decision to invest in my education, and I am confident in my ability to meet my financial responsibilities,” one bullet point read. “Should the reporter continue to push on the debt point, you can politely but firmly reply: ‘I have answered that question, and am happy to talk more about how my degree/diploma/certificate has enhanced my career prospects.’” (See the document here ) The Association of Private Sector Colleges and Universities has represented the industry for decades. But last year, two of the larger publicly traded education companies, Education Management Corp. and ITT Educational Services Inc., joined other colleges to form a separate lobbying organization called the Coalition for Educational Success. They brought on Davis, a former legal counsel to Bill Clinton, to lobby on their behalf last fall — a time when scrutiny of the sector was reaching an all-time high. The Department of Education had announced new rules, Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) had begun a series of hearings probing abuses in the industry, and the Government Accountability Office had released scathing findings from an undercover investigation of recruiting tactics at 15 for-profit schools. The coalition and other corporations have brought on a wide array of lobbying expertise over the past year, employing many with deep connections to the committees and constituencies who could control the debate. (Source: Analysis of data from the Center for Responsive Politics Other major Democratic lobbying powers hired on for the fight include the Podesta Group, hired by Career Education Corp. and APSCU; and Steve Elmendorf, a major organizer for John Kerry’s 2004 presidential campaign, who was hired by the Washington Post Co.’s Kaplan Inc. College corporations have also focused on outreach to minority lawmakers and interest groups, fueling the debate about access to education for disadvantaged groups. One of the lobbyists hired from the Podesta Group is Paul Braithwaite, a former executive director of the Congressional Black Caucus, whose members have been split on the question of the gainful employment regulations. Former Maryland Congressman Albert Wynn Jr., a longtime member of the CBC, was hired by Bridgepoint Education Inc. of San Diego. Other lobbyists had backgrounds with the National Association of Latino Elected Officials, on education committees in both the House and Senate, and as staffers with the Department of Education. Corinthian Colleges Inc. brought on Gephardt, the former Democratic House leader for 14 years, and a number of his former staff members. Aside from Davis, none of the lobbyists or firms mentioned in this article returned phone calls and emails seeking comment; but trade groups for the industry have defended the increased advocacy, arguing they are no different from other industries seeking to be part of the debate. “I wouldn’t say that it’s unusual for companies that feel regulation is going to either put them out of business, or drastically change their business, to advocate for their point of view,” said Penny Lee, the managing director of the coalition. Davis, who was lobbying for the Coalition for Educational Success until last week, said the outreach to Democrats has been a way to shift debate on the issue away from a traditional anti-government, pro-business perspective. “I had an argument to make that was not a conservative, anti-regulation argument, and that was unusual,” Davis said. “I think they reached out to other liberal and Democratic lobbyists for exactly the same reason. It’s the ‘man bites dog’ point of view, because I’m criticizing my own fellow Democrats in the administration.” GROWING REACH The for-profit college industry’s influence has been noticeable during public hearings in Washington. At a hearing last September focusing on recruitment practices at for-profit colleges, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) read aloud an op-ed letter written by Davis and published by The Huffington Post and other publications. The letter criticized Democratic support for the gainful employment rules. “We’ve done a battle on many occasions,” McCain said, but later pointed out that, “I find myself in complete agreement with Lanny Davis.” He then walked out of the hearing in protest, without noting the fact that Davis was being paid more than $40,000 to lobby on behalf of a number of schools. Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) noted that fact later in the hearing. “Lanny Davis is being paid by the industry to make these arguments that we get regurgitated here,” Franken said. “I would appreciate it if the other members would stay, instead of making a comment, quoting a paid lobbyist — with great umbrage — and then leaving.” For-profit education companies gave more than $18,000 to McCain in the last election cycle, making him one of the top recipients in the Senate. McCain and other Republicans on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee wrote a letter to committee chairman Harkin last week, asking him to reconsider holding a scheduled May hearing on for-profit colleges. “Should you decide to decline this request, we will not participate in the next hearing on for-profit institutions,” the letter stated, calling the previous hearings “disorganized and prejudicial.” The letter was released the same day the budget amendment was finalized, without the rider that would prevent regulations. Most of the Republicans who signed the letter have either not attended previous Senate hearings on for-profit colleges or have walked out in protest. That letter and others sent by Republicans and Democrats fighting against regulations over the past few months have also focused on two lines of attack pushed by industry lobbyists: one against the Department of Education, and another against the Government Accountability Office. Rather than focusing on the substance of the rules at issue, the industry has instead tended to assert that it is under attack by the federal government. The coalition in particular has been vocal in criticizing the GAO, Congress’ independent investigative arm, over corrections made to an undercover investigation of for-profit college recruiting last year. The group has sued the GAO and publicly attacked the agency. Members of Congress have followed suit, calling into question the report’s findings. The GAO has stuck by its conclusions in the report, which was updated to include tweaks to language and more elaborate descriptions after GAO lawyers reviewed undercover footage. Lobbyists for the industry say the changes should invalidate the entire report. The video evidence shown, however, is compelling: Recruiters encouraged investigators posing as prospective students to falsify federal financial aid documents and refused to provide details about tuition costs until they had signed paperwork to enroll in classes. “I don’t recall any kind of frontal assault the way they have mounted this one against the GAO,” said Barmak Nassirian, associate executive director of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars & Admissions Officers, which mostly represents nonprofit colleges. “We saw with our own eyes how they were lying to and defrauding students.” The coalition has also sought to discredit the Department of Education by accusing department officials of conspiring to develop the regulations with Wall Street short sellers –- investors who profit when stocks tumble. The theory is based on four meetings that Department of Education officials had with short sellers who had done analysis on publicly traded for-profit schools, and a number of mostly one-way emails from four hedge fund managers to officials in the department. Representatives of for-profit colleges, who are also invested in how stocks fare on the market, have met privately and publicly with top-level Department of Education officials and the Office of Management and Budget on nearly 50 occasions over the past year, according to public schedules posted by the department. CRITICS GET CASH Some of the most vocal regulatory critics in Congress have also been the most well-compensated by the industry. Rep. John Kline (R-Minn.), who chairs the House Education and the Workforce Committee, received more than $40,000 in campaign contributions during the last election cycle. His political action committee, the Freedom & Security PAC, received an additional $35,000. Kline was instrumental in introducing the legislation in the House that aimed to block the gainful employment rules, and led the effort earlier this month to have the prohibition included in the budget bill. Rep. Howard “Buck” McKeon (R-Calif.), another longtime member of the education committee, received more than $20,000 from the industry in his personal campaign and more than $65,000 to his political action committee, the 21st Century PAC. While McKeon was serving on the committee during the Bush administration, he owned stock in one company, Corinthian Colleges Inc., at the time the restrictions on online programs were being lifted. Staffers for McKeon and Kline did not respond to requests seeking comment. Democrats who have opposed regulations on for-profit colleges have also been rewarded with contributions. Reps. Andrews and Carolyn McCarthy (D-N.Y.), who signed onto the letter pushing for the budget bill rider, are among the top five recipients of campaign cash: Andrews received more than $70,000, and McCarthy more than $41,000, during the last election cycle. Andrews said he has been involved with the industry for a long time and believes that career programs can offer many benefits for students. “I do what I do based upon what I think is right,” he said. “I’m interested in the outcome for the student and the taxpayer, not on the outcome for the school. But I also disagree with people who say that by definition for-profit education is bad. I think bad education is bad, and I think we ought to come up with a measure to figure that out.” One notable exception is Rep. George Miller (D-Calif.), the former chairman of the education committee until this year, who took in more than $105,000 from the industry — the most of any single candidate in Congress. His son also works for a lobbying firm in California that lobbies for Education Management Corp., the second-largest publicly traded college corporation. But Miller has supported the Department of Education’s proposed regulations, and has been critical of attempts to delay or water them down. A spokeswoman for Miller said the contributions are “completely separate” from any policy work. “The fact is that Rep. Miller has a long and successful track record of holding for-profit schools accountable and reforming this industry,” said the spokeswoman, Melissa Salmanowitz. Other top recipients of campaign money who have not supported the industry include Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), who took in more than $50,000; and Iowa Democrat Harkin, who received about $13,000 but has held a series of highly critical hearings probing the industry. Looking at the February House vote, however, Democrats who supported the amendment to block regulations received on average nearly twice as much in political donations as Democrats who opposed the regulations. Harris Miller, the president of the trade group representing for-profit colleges (who is not related to George Miller), downplayed the importance that political contributions play in changing policy, pointing to the donations to many who have actively opposed the industry. “I know some people like to think there’s this simplistic correlation between writing a check and getting a vote,” he said. “I wish it were that easy.”

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OECD: Tax Hike In Japan Will Help Economy During Recovery

April 21, 2011

TOKYO — Japan should as much as quadruple its sales tax rate to deal with a crushing deficit that’s bound to grow as it spends on reconstruction from last month’s earthquake and tsunami, the OECD said Thursday. Economists for the association of wealthy, industrialized nations said in a report that Japan’s public debt of more than twice its gross domestic product leaves it little choice but to gradually raise its sales tax, now 5 percent, to as high as 20 percent. “Japan has not so much room to cut spending because it has a small government,” Randall Jones, the OECD’s head economist for Japan and Korea, said at a press conference. “Most of the consolidation will have to be from the revenue side.” Tax increase proposals have proven vastly unpopular in the past. Prime Minister Naoto Kan’s suggestion that sales taxes be raised to as high as 10 percent just before July’s parliamentary elections contributed to the ruling Democratic Party’s loss of control of Japan’s upper house. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development suggested in the report that “the Japanese people’s sense of solidarity” following the March 11 disaster may make an increase more palatable. The extensive damage from the March 11 disasters across seven prefectures (states) resulted in direct losses of between 16 trillion yen ($198 billion) and 25 trillion yen ($309 billion), according to Japan’s Cabinet Office, making it the world’s most expensive natural disaster on record. OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurria said the disaster, while unquestionably a tragedy, may have the upside of forcing Japan to confront its fiscal problems earlier than they otherwise would have. “Right now, there is the opportunity to plant the seeds of a better tomorrow,” he said. “Perhaps this can precipitate some decisions that were longstanding, that probably should have been taken before.” Gurria said the disasters will have a limited economic impact, as its negative short-term impact on output is followed by a rebound once reconstruction spending kicks in. In addition to the tax hike, the OECD recommended changes to Japan’s education system aimed at helping students from poor families and suggested measures to boost the status of so-called non-regular workers, who receive lower pay and enjoy less job security. The economists said the country should also increase women’s participation in the work force as a partial remedy to the deceasing number of working age taxpayers who must support the growing population of elderly retirees. Another suggestion was for Japan to access additional markets by increasing its participation in regional free trade agreements. The suggested corporate tax decrease, meanwhile, would make it cheaper and easier for Japanese companies to increase employment, the economists said. Gurria said the economic growth that these reforms would create is vital to Japan’s ability to finance disaster-area reconstruction while cutting debt. “Economic growth is going to critical to be able to have success in this very careful balance that needs to be struck,” he said.

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While Attacking Government Spending, GOP Govs Quietly Accept Federal Cash

April 20, 2011

Republican governors stormed into state houses this January after campaigning against federal spending, and various so-called state bailouts. They won in part by painting a slanted picture of fiscal mismanagement by their Democratic predecessors…

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Did Obama Plan His Budget Speech Months In Advance?

April 19, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s much discussed speech last week on how to remedy the country’s fiscal future was part of a far broader, more strategically detailed political strategy than has been previously reported. Several high-ranking administration officials have confirmed that the White House laid out plans for the address as far back as the last calendar year, with the president’s economic team and other senior staff members “meeting regularly since February to put the policy together and work on the speech.” In presenting a fiscal roadmap, the administration aimed to demonstrate Obama’s fundamental seriousness towards what is widely perceived to be a looming deficit crisis. But the speech also illuminated both the lack of communication between the White House and Capitol Hill and a growing conviction among insiders that the president must move the deficit debate off center stage in order to tackle other domestic priorities. The address, delivered at George Washington University last Wednesday, outlined an expansive approach towards leveling the federal government’s balance sheet. Obama expressed a need for simplifying the tax code and raising the rates on the highest earners. He called for a “debt fail-safe” trigger, mandating Congress to pass across-the-board spending reductions if the nation’s debt does not decline. He advocated stronger cuts in the Pentagon’s budget and less waste in Medicare. His remarks, in all, were positively received by Democrats and derided as partisan waste by Republicans. Yet build-up to the speech illustrated more than reactions to it. Capitol Hill officials, including the White House’s top allies, say they were left completely in the dark. No one, it appears, knew Obama would deliver an address until his top aide, David Plouffe, announced plans on the Sunday shows. Key aides were briefed on its content only days (if not hours) before the president took the stage. “Members and staffs had no idea what they were going to say until about four hours before the speech—three days after the speech was announced,” said a senior Senate Democratic aide. “It was pretty ham-handed in its roll out and members weren’t pleased.” The abundance of secrecy left the impression that White House officials came up with the idea for Obama’s speech at the eleventh hour in an effort to divert attention away from the debate raging in Congress. “They were scrambling to change the subject from the budget debacle and this was what they latched on to,” said the aide. Having failed to effectively brief members of Congress on the details of his plan, few lawmakers could therefore amplify the president’s message. Administration officials, for their part, steadfastly refute the idea that they simply “winged” it. According to one Obama aide, the president and his team decided in December that he would have to “lay out a comprehensive plan” for deficit reduction “after the FY2011 funding debate had completed.” Another White House official described the planning as even more specific, asserting, “Its been on the schedule for the Wednesday after the [continuing resolution avoiding a government shut down] was resolved for months now.” Because a vote on the continuing resolution was delayed on several occasions, the date of the speech remained, consistently, in flux. According to these individuals, the President’s staff had been considering university locations near or in Washington, D.C. for venue well before the speech was announced, with an eye toward delivering subsequent deficit-focused addresses outside the nation’s capital the following week. Michelle Sherrard, a spokesman for George Washington University, did not have a specific date for when the administration first contacted the university. She noted only that “The White House and GW regularly communicate about the possibility of hosting upcoming events on campus.” One administration aide defended congressional outreach, adding, “Throughout this process the President’s team has been in touch with leaders on the Hill, including both the Gang of Six [Senators meeting on their own deficit proposal] and Congressman [Paul] Ryan, and other stakeholders like the deficit commission chairs.” “In touch,” however, remains an inherently subjective phrase. As late as the Tuesday night before the speech was delivered, one extremely close White House ally professed to not having a clue about what would be said. “I don’t think they have briefed anyone and I am not sure the speech is done!” In fact, the speech wasn’t done. According to an administration aide, “the president worked until late in the night Tuesday, and put final touches on the speech on Wednesday morning.” Why did it take so long to finalize the details on a speech planned months in advance? For one, various areas of policy disagreement within the White House remained unresolved. In particular, officials familiar with the discussions say, Obama’s economic advisers warned against calling for a final balance of three dollars in spending reductions for every dollar generated in additional tax revenue, arguing the ratio was too explicit. Medicare reform sparked another element of disagreement. In his speech, the president proposed strengthening the Independent Payment Advisory Board, a group tasked with finding excessive and unnecessary spending within the system. Several aides wanted him to further outline specific ways to empower Medicare to negotiate over drug prices and medical procedures. In the end, Obama kept the speech broad, leaving Democrats officials on the Hill largely pleased. Several members of Congress also expressed agitation with the timing. Obama’s speech came after Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) unveiled his own budget plan , giving his own remarks the veneer of a presidential response rather than executive leadership. Moreover, by calling for additional talks on deficit reform, the president miffed lawmakers either working on or invested in the Gang of Six talks currently ongoing. “The fact that the president has come out with his vision should be a positive reinforcement, another indication that this is important work that needs to be done,” Press Secretary Jay Carney said on Monday in response to complaints Obama stepped into Gang of Six territory. “And the fact that the President built his vision by borrowing in many ways from the recommendations of the bipartisan commission on which a number of members of that Senate group sat… gives a good sign, a good indication, of the fact that there is a building consensus around the way to approach this problem. So he thinks it’s very complementary to the process.” But many Democrats don’t want “complementary.” The Gang of Six already gives progressives angina, with the Democratic members of the group — including Sens. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Mark Warner (D-Va.) — openly supporting elements of Social Security reform and even extending the Bush tax cuts. Should the president end up complementing or even embracing their approach, the worry goes, no progressive counterpoint to Ryan’s proposal will emerge. Instead, the distance between the Gang of Six and the Republican alternative will become the “compromise.” The White House has been noticeably tight-lipped about its thoughts on Gang of Six conversations, perhaps because scarce information exists as to what, exactly, the lawmakers are discussing. But signs of mounting concern permeate both on and off the Hill. When Vice President Joe Biden hosts a deficit reduction meeting with members of Congress at the Blair House on May 5, no Democratic lawmakers from the Gang of Six will be present. Instead, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is sending Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) and Appropriations Committee Chairman Dan Inouye (D-Hawaii). Gang of Six member and Budget Committee Chair Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), one Democratic Senate aide relayed, was more than “irked” by his absence from the talks. Other Democrats voiced relief over the Gang of Six absence, speculating that both Reid and Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) were growing wary about the bipartisan group’s role. Gang of Six criticism is more intense off the Hill, with several of the nation’s most powerful union groups laying down crisp lines in the sand over elements they consider non-negotiable, such as ending tax cuts for the richest Americans. “Any plan to reduce the deficit that does not include ending the Bush tax cuts — a clear contributor to the deficit — is not a serious plan,” said Michelle Nawar, Director for Legislation at the Service Employees. “Every middle class family should be offended if Congress calls on them to bear the burden for reducing a deficit they did not cause while continuing to handout more tax giveaways to millionaires and corporations. We’ll see what the Gang of Six proposes, but how could any Democrat support a plan that cuts needed services for seniors and children while continuing these expensive tax giveaways?” Nawar’s question presumably extends to Obama, who has punted once on letting the Bush tax rates for the wealthy expire (they will now lapse at the end of 2012). A far more immediate and pressing concern, however, is whether the administration’s attempt to jump ahead of the deficit debate will yield the type of political fruits the White House envisions. The president’s advisers — chiefly, former Senior Communications Aide David Axelrod –- have long seen benefits to deficit hawk-ery in private polling. But the payoff this time around has been limited: An ABC News/Washington Post poll released on Tuesday showed that 57 percent of Americans disapproved of the way Obama is handling the economy. “I think they were concerned about how to give the president credibility on this issue and how to win over some independents,” one top party strategist said of Obama’s speech on Wednesday. “The irony is it won’t give him any. He could have offered $10 billion more in cuts for the CR and it would never be good enough for the GOP.” Jen Bendery contributed to this report.

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Robert Reich: Extortion Politics: Why Won’t American Business Stop the GOP From Threatening to Blow Up The Economy?

April 19, 2011

As the government approaches its borrowing limit of $14.3 trillion, Republicans are seeking political advantage over what conditions should be attached to raising that limit. This is a scandal — or should be. Raising the debt limit shouldn’t be subject to party politics. Economic extortion should be out of bounds. It’s bad enough government shutdowns have become an accepted part of political negotiation. But failure to increase the amount the Treasury can borrow would have far graver results. Not only would the government be unable to issue Social Security or Medicare checks but the United States couldn’t pay interest on its current debt. We’d go into default. The full faith and credit of the United States would be in jeopardy. Treasury bonds would go into free fall. Interest rates would skyrocket. We, and most of the rest of the world, would fall into financial chaos. The recovery is still fragile. All this would force us and most of the rest of the world into a deeper recession or worse. No one in their right mind would threaten this. Yet it’s talked about as if it’s just another aspect of Washington politics — a threat that might be carried out in early July when the Treasury runs out of ways to keep paying our debts. In fact, it’s a giant game of highway chicken, and if one driver doesn’t yield the crash will be catastrophic. Games of chicken are won by drivers able to convince their opponents they won’t swerve. That gives a strategic advantage to Republicans backed by the Tea Party, who are so convinced government is evil they’ve signaled they’d be willing to risk it. But this shouldn’t be a matter of political strategy. Disagreement about the nation’s budget should be worked out through the constitutional process of majority votes in Congress, followed by the president’s signature or veto, and Congress’s right to override the veto. No group of legislators is entitled to threaten to crash the United States economy if its demands aren’t met. The biggest surprise is the silence of American business and Wall Street. They have as much if not more to lose as anyone if this game ends in tragedy. Yet the GOP — which big business and Wall Street fund — insists on playing it. Why isn’t the Business Roundtable decrying the use of this tactic? Where are the leaders of Wall Street? Where are the corporate statesmen? They should insist this game of chicken be called off or they’ll stop the funding. Maybe they think the crash won’t happen, that Obama and the Democrats will cave in to Paul Ryan’s and the Republicans’ before that. If so, they’re wrong. The Republicans’ demands are so far beyond the pale — turning Medicare into vouchers that funnel money to private insurance companies, turning Medicaid and food stamps into block grants that would deliver less to the poor, giving a giant tax windfall to the very rich — they cannot be met without causing the Democratic base (and most Independents) to revolt. Yesterday Standard & Poor’s (hardly a beacon of reliability after the Crash of 2008, to be sure) downgraded America’s credit outlook. Expect more downgrades if the game of chicken continues. Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future , now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

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N.C. Gov. Vetoes Controversial Unemployment Bill

April 18, 2011

North Carolina Gov. Bev Perdue (D) has vetoed legislation that would have cut the state’s budget while allowing 37,000 laid off workers in the state to receive their final 20 weeks of federal unemployment insurance benefits. Republicans in the North Carolina General Assembly attached budget cuts to a bill maintaining the state’s eligibility for the federal Extended Benefits program last week. Perdue issued her veto threat on Saturday, after tornadoes smashed houses and killed 22 people throughout the state . In the aftermath of the unemployment showdown, Perdue and state Republicans lobbed unkind press releases at each other. “The General Assembly has once again shown they are willing to play games with people’s lives in holding hostage some 37,000 unemployed North Carolinians,” a Perdue spokeswoman said in a Saturday statement. “But to sign the bill and suffer the extreme cuts proposed by Republicans would risk the future of this state and the lives of 9.5 million citizens.” North Carolina Republican Party Chairman Robin Hayes returned fire : “It is a shame that Governor Perdue would cut off the jobless benefits of 37,000 families to avoid cutting one cent from her big spending, big government budget proposal.” The GOP-crafted bill would cut spending in the governor’s fiscal 2011-2012 budget by 13 percent. To do so, it would halt raises for public workers and require workers to contribute a larger portion of their salaries to their pension plans. North Carolina is one of three states where the Extended Benefits program began phasing out on April 16 . EB is fully funded by the federal government and does not affect state deficits. In states with high unemployment rates, it provides up to 20 weeks of benefits for layoff victims who exhaust 53 weeks of federal Emergency Unemployment Compensation and 26 weeks of state benefits without finding work. States are eligible for the EB program if the local unemployment rate is at least 10 percent higher than it was in either of the two previous years. Even though unemployment remains high — it’s 9.7 percent in North Carolina — it hasn’t risen enough to meet that requirement. In December, Congress said states could change the “look back” period to cover the previous three years instead of just two, but several state legislatures have balked at the offer of additional aid for the jobless. Republican lawmakers in Michigan and Missouri used the EB opportunity to pass an unprecedented reduction in state unemployment insurance. The EB legislation in North Carolina moved under the radar of local and national advocates for unemployed workers. “There was very little notice around this bill moving, and so there’s a lot of concern there was an effort to play politics with the unemployed,” said Alexandra Sirota, director of the North Carolina Justice Center, a local affiliate of the progressive Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington think tank. She added that she expected Democratic lawmakers to push a clean version of the EB fix later this week. The legislature is controlled by Republicans. Spokespeople for party leaders in the General Assembly didn’t respond to requests for comment from HuffPost. Ron, a 61-year-old human resources manager who said he lost his job in mid-2009, told HuffPost federal unemployment benefits helped he and his wife “keep the lights on, keep food, keep a reasonable portion of gasoline in the car. It helps to meet the basic needs.” Ron, who lives in Research Triangle Park, asked his full name not be used because he’s had some interviews recently and doesn’t want potential employers to know he’s struggling. He said he has a few more weeks before he’s eligible for Extended Benefits. If those benefits disappear and he doesn’t land a job by the end of the year, he said, he’ll apply for early retirement benefits from the Social Security Administration. “Without the unemployment benefits, we’re going to be in some trouble,” he said.

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Dean Baker: Representative Ryan Puts the Republicans on the Record

April 18, 2011

For years people have accused the Republican Party of being the servants of the rich and powerful at the expense of the broader public. In the past, they would deny this charge and claim that they just had a different view of how the economy works. Republican House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan sought to eliminate any confusion on this point. He proposed, and last week the Republican House approved, a budget bill that will transfer tens of trillions (yes, that is “trillions” with a “T”) of dollars from ordinary working people to the insurance industry, the pharmaceutical industry and generic rich people from any industry. This money will come in the form of higher payments by seniors in their old age for health insurance and another round of tax breaks for the country’s richest people. The Medicare story is the bigger transfer here. Representative Ryan wants to replace the current Medicare system with a voucher system. The size of the voucher in Ryan’s plan is held even with the overall rate of inflation. This means that it will not rise at anywhere near the rate of projected health care cost growth. As a result, a greater portion of the cost of health care will be shifted from the government to retirees. However, this is the less important part of the story. The main reason that retiree health care costs will increase is that the private sector is less efficient at delivering care than the existing Medicare program. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that, under the Ryan plan, the increase in the cost of buying Medicare equivalent policies would be more than $30 trillion over Medicare’s planning horizon. This additional waste comes to almost $100,000 for every man, woman, and child in the country. It is approximately equal to six times the size of the projected Social Security shortfall. This waste is a direct transfer from retirees to the insurance industry and the health care industry. This is not the only way that Representative Ryan and the Republicans dip into the pockets of ordinary workers for the benefit of the obscenely rich. He also wants to give an additional $2.9 trillion in tax breaks to the wealthy over the next decade. These tax breaks would be paid for with cuts to Medicaid, Food Stamps and other programs that middle-income and poor people depend upon. The tax breaks would be real money for the people who get them. For example, Representative Ryan’s tax breaks could give Lloyd Blankfein, the CEO of Goldman Sachs, another $3 million a year based on his $20 million annual paycheck. That’s the equivalent of more than 2,600 monthly Social Security checks. Representative Ryan and the Republicans in Congress are likely to justify their budget by saying that they believe that their health care plan will hold down costs and their tax cuts will spur economic growth. While we can never know what politicians believe, we do know that these are not plausible stories. We have already tested expanding the role of private insurers in the Medicare system. We did this in the 90s when the Gingrich Congress pushed through their Medicare Plus Choice plan. We did it again more recently with the Medicare Advantage program that was promoted by President Bush. These plans did not lower costs; they raised them. That is the basis for the non-partisan CBO’s projections that the Ryan plan will raise costs. Similarly, Representative Ryan and the Republicans claim that tax cuts for the wealthy will spur growth. We have also twice tested this one. The first time was when President Reagan gave us big tax breaks beginning in 1981. The 80s were the worst decade of growth since the Great Depression, prior to the 00s, when President Bush tested his tax cuts for the wealthy. Certainly the economy’s bad performance during these decades cannot be blamed solely on the tax breaks for the wealthy, but it is a bit hard to maintain tax cuts to the wealthy gave a big boost to growth in these years. While Representative Ryan and the Republicans may actually believe that giving private insurers more control over health care lowers costs and that cutting taxes for the rich increases growth, who cares? These people may believe that the moon is made of green cheese, but this does not make the green cheese theory true or even plausible. We have extensively tested both parts of the Ryan transfer program to the wealthy, and they don’t work as he claims. They redistribute money to the rich: end of story. Thanks to Representative Ryan we have the Republican Party on record as supporting these massive transfers to the wealthy. We just have to hope that the Democratic Party takes a different position.

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Richard (RJ) Eskow: Bipartisan Senators Indict Wall Street, Media Yawns. Six Guys Push Stale Deficit Hype, Media Goes Wild

April 18, 2011

It should have been the lead story from coast to coast: A bipartisan panel of senators, including some of that body’s most conservative members, released a damning report that slammed bankers, regulators and ratings agencies — and they made it clear that they’d like to see warrants issued against the CEO of Goldman Sachs and other financial executives. This report was endorsed by all of its Republican members, including conservative co-chair Tom Coburn and Tea Party Senator Rand Paul. Hey, editors, how’s this for a headline? “Libs and Tea Party Senators demand: ‘Bring me the head of Goldman Sachs.’” Now that’s what I call news! The media responded with a collective yawn. Last week also saw yet more coverage of the relentlessly publicity-grubbing “Gang of Six.” It’s hard to imagine a more stale story. The Gang’s just the latest in a series of right-leaning groups that throw a few persuadable Democrats in with Republicans, label them ‘bipartisan’ or even ‘centrist,’ then start issuing calls for a conservative agenda that cuts entitlements and keeps taxes low for the wealthy. We’ve seen that story a thousand times, both in general and specifically about these six Senators. What’s more, the Democratic Gang members have been bypassed by the president and Harry Reid, so a few more interviews with this over-exposed crowd aren’t exactly “man bites dog” stuff. Guess which story got more coverage? A Google News search on “Gang of Six” yielded 4,600 hits this morning, while a search on “Levin Coburn” came up with only 180 hits. And coverage of the Gang of Six continues to be overwhelmingly (and falsely) flattering. Reporters continue to cite the Gang’s inaccurate talking points, which were generated in think tanks and crafted by marketers, as if they were Holy Writ. But the exhaustively researched Levin/Coburn Report was treated as if it were empty Senatorial bluster. The coverage of these two stories tells us all we need to know about the media’s negative effect on the political process. Sloppy journalism doesn’t just cheapen our discourse. It changes the way that politicians govern, too. Senators, like all politicians, thrive on favorable publicity. When a self-seeking initiative like the “Gang of Six” receives twenty-five times as much coverage — and much more positive coverage — than a detailed and comprehensive study like the Levin/Coburn Report, it affects Senatorial behavior. And when truly bipartisan initiatives like Levin’s and Coburn’s are dismissed, while the phony bipartisanship of the Gang is celebrated, that sends a message to politicians who rely on independent voters. The Levin/Coburn report really is newsworthy. These senators — Democrats and Republicans, liberals and die-hard conservatives — laid the blame for the financial crisis directly at the feet of Wall Street’s executives, and they document a pattern of risky lending and fraudulent marketing by U.S. banks. They also placed the blame with regulators, who displayed both incompetence and a(sometimes embarrassing) subservience to Wall Street. The Senators slammed the morally compromised, incompetent ratings agencies. The panel even called for more regulations. That’s right. Senators like Tom Coburn, John McCain, Rand Paul, and Scott Brown signed a report that includes recommendations like “Narrow Proprietary Trading Exceptions” and “Design Strong Conflict of Interest Prohibitions.” When four of the Senate’s most prominent Republicans, including Tea Party Senators, endorse more regulation, that’s news. And the panel didn’t mince words. “Our investigation found a financial snake pit rife with greed, conflicts of interest, and wrongdoing,” said Democrat Levin. Republican Senator Coburn said: “Blame for this mess lies everywhere from federal regulators who cast a blind eye, Wall Street bankers who let greed run wild, and members of Congress who failed to provide oversight.” The panel made it clear they felt laws had been broken. Sen. Levin stated that they were referring several reports regarding Goldman Sachs executives, including CEO Lloyd Blankfein, to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution on perjury and other charges. And the panel report includes a number of sentences like this one: “Federal regulators should review the (investment banking) activities described in this Report to identify any violations of law.” That’s incendiary stuff. But, as the Columbia Journalism Review reports, the story was downplayed by major media outlets and its major findings were softened. The Wall Street Journal placed the story in section C1, and falsely claimed that the report “lacked evidence of outright fraud.” Sen. Levin’s call to investigate Goldman executives was described this way: “Sen. Levin said Wednesday that he believed some Goldman executives may have misled Congress during a committee hearing in April 2010. He didn’t specify how.” Actually, he did specify how. And how did the New York Times , the nation’s “paper of record,” handle this story? An otherwise excellent story failed to mention it altogether. Other outlets either didn’t cover the story at all or, like the Journal , buried it deep in the bowels of their back sections. Contrast that with some of the recent headlines about the Gang of Six and their mediocre work: Senators Boast New Deficit Reduction Plan Will ‘Make Everybody Mad’‎ – Fox News Alan Simpson: ‘Pray for Gang of Six’‎ – Wall Street Journal ‘Gang of Six’ hopes to spur bipartisan action on deficit‎ – USA Today Gang of Six plan in demand – Congress.org Who They Are and Why They Matter: Senators Work Behind Closed Doors On Bipartisan Debt Reduction Deal – ABC News Coverage like that explains a lot. Sen. Dick Durbin has been heroic on banking reform issues, especially debit card reform. Last week he laid a mighty smackdown on overrated bank CEO Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase, who has led the charge to roll back bank regulations and return us to the pre-2008 days of uncontrolled misbehavior by too-big-to-fail banks. That confrontation brought Durbin almost no publicity. But his Gang membership has provided him with fawning coverage from coast to coast. Is it any wonder that Sen. Durbin’s reluctant to leave the Gang and devote more time to combating Wall Street? The Times story on the Levin/Coburn report — co-written by Gretchen Morgenson — created a stir last week by asking the burning and critical question: Where are the prosecutions for Wall Street crime? That’s the same question that senators like Levin and Coburn are asking, along with committee members like Rand Paul, John McCain, and Scott Brown. Their report should increase the pressure on the Justice Department to reverse its shameful refusal to enforce the law when rich bankers are the perps. But with coverage like this, it’s more likely that we’ll see unnecessary cuts to Social Security and Medicare instead. __________________________________ Richard (RJ) Eskow, a consultant and writer (and former insurance/finance executive), is a Senior Fellow with the Campaign for America’s Future. This post was produced as part of the Curbing Wall Street project and the Strengthen Social Security campaign. Richard also blogs at A Night Light . He can be reached at “rjeskow@ourfuture.org.” Website: Eskow and Associates

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