Friday, November 28, 2014

GOP 'Payback' to White Working Class That Voted Them in: Cut Earned Income Tax and Child Tax Credit | Ian Reifowitz

GOP 'Payback' to White Working Class That Voted Them in: Cut Earned Income Tax and Child Tax Credit | Ian Reifowitz

 Rep. Joe Barton and Rep. John Boehner announce something or other.

JohnButts@JBMedia - Reports:
First, some data. In the recent midterm elections, a study by the Public Religion Research Institute found that white working-class voters -- defined as those lacking a college degree, and whose jobs paid an hourly wage -- voted for the Republican over the Democrat for Congress by a whopping margin of 61 percent to 26 percent.

Got that? Good. Also, the "vast majority" of recipients of the Earned Income Tax Credit -- and remember, that credit only goes to people who earn enough money that, without it, they'd be paying income taxes -- are
white, according to data collected by the National Bureau of Economic Research. Finally, the 2009 Obama stimulus package expanded the Child Tax Credit to make more working class families eligible. We don't have exact data on the racial composition of those who benefited from the expansion, but given that about half of families in poverty are white, we can extrapolate that somewhere around half of beneficiaries are white.

Still with me? Okay. Now check this out, from a New York Times article about a deal in the works that centers around making corporate tax cuts permanent:

The emerging tax legislation would make permanent 10 provisions, including an expanded research and development tax credit, which businesses and the Obama administration have wanted to make permanent for years; a measure allowing small businesses to deduct virtually any investment; the deduction for state and local sales taxes; the American Opportunity Tax Credit for college costs; deductions for employer-provided mass transit; and four different breaks for corporate and charitable giving.

Smaller measures already passed by the Senate Finance Committee, from tax breaks for car-racing tracks to benefits for racehorse owners, would be extended for one year and retroactively renewed for the current tax year.

[snip] Left off were the two tax breaks valued most by liberal Democrats: a permanently expanded earned income credit and a child tax credit for the working poor. Friday night, Republican negotiators announced they would exclude those measures as payback for the president's executive order on immigration, saying a surge of newly legalized workers would claim the credit, tax aides from both parties said.

It's worth noting that the deal would also mean the expiration, in 2017, of tax credits that support the development of wind power because, oh noes, the oil and gas industry thinks they are unfair. Doesn't the oil and gas industry receive billions in tax breaks? Er, well, hey, look over there!

The absurd hypocrisy of that aside, think for a second about how Republicans understand payback. President Obama does something Republicans don't like on immigration, and their idea of payback is to stick it to working-class Americans who have kids, most of whom -- when we are talking about whites -- just voted to make them the majority party in both the House and the Senate. At this point, the only thing standing in the way of the loss of those tax breaks for working Americans is President Obama. Oops.

I guess the lesson of the story is: be careful who you vote for. A better lesson of the story is: Republicans are boot-licking corporate sycophants who hate working families.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Obama defends plan to act on immigration: CBS interview - Yahoo News

Obama defends plan to act on immigration: CBS interview - Yahoo News
 JohnButts@JBMedia - Reports:
U.S. President Barack Obama defended his plan to use executive powers to implement some immigration reforms, saying in an interview broadcast on Sunday he had waited long enough for Congress to act.


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Obama told congressional leaders on Friday he would try to ease some restrictions on undocumented immigrants, despite warnings from Republican leaders that such actions would "poison the well" or would be "a red flag in front of a bull".

The meeting came after Obama's Democratic Party was punished in midterm elections on Tuesday. Republicans seized the U.S. Senate and kept a majority in the House of Representatives, in what Obama said was a message from voters who held him responsible for how Washington worked, or didn't.

In an interview on CBS' "Face the Nation," Obama said he had watched while the U.S. Senate produced a bipartisan immigration reform bill, only to have it not taken up by House Republican Speaker John Boehner.

Obama said he had told Boehner if he could not get it done by year's end, the White House was going to have to take steps to improve the system.

"Everybody agrees the immigration system's broken. And we've been talking about it for years now in terms of fixing it," Obama said in the interview, according to a CBS transcript.

U.S. borders needed to be secure, the legal immigration system needed to be more efficient and there needed to be a path to legal status for the 11 million undocumented immigrants.

"We don't have the capacity to deport 11 million people -- everybody agrees on that," he said.

Obama insisted he was not telling Republicans they had run out of time or trying to circumvent them.

"The minute they pass a bill that addresses the problems with immigration reform, I will sign it and it supersedes whatever actions I take," Obama said in the interview.

"And I'm encouraging them to do so ... on parallel track we're going to be implementing an executive action.

"But if in fact a bill gets passed, nobody's going to be happier than me to sign it, because that means it will be permanent rather than temporary."

Without any changes, the government will continue to misallocate resources, deport people who should not be deported and not deport those who are dangerous, he said.

Any unilateral action promises to draw the ire of Republicans in Congress. U.S. Senator John Barrasso, the No. 4 Republican in the Senate, told Reuters on Friday members of Congress had told Obama that would be a "toxic decision".

"It will hurt cooperation on every issue," Barrasso told "Fox News Sunday".

"What the president does over the next two months is going to set the tone for the next two years."

Representative Darrell Issa, chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said on ABC's "This Week" he hoped Obama would delay action "and have a real comprehensive discussion about what’s possible, because a great deal is possible on immigration reform.”

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Sarah Palin Warns GOP: 'You Didn't Build This'

Sarah Palin Warns GOP: 'You Didn't Build This'
JohnButts@JBMedia - Reports:
Sarah Palin congratulated the Republicans on their sweeping victory in Tuesday's elections, but she also issued a warning.

"Now, new Republican Congressional majority in the House and Senate, please realize that Americans were not necessarily voting FOR any party; they were voting AGAINST the continued dysfunction and corruption in D.C.," the former vice presidential candidate wrote in a post on Facebook.

Just like the Democrats got "mauled" on Tuesday, Palin warned the same thing could happen to the GOP next time around.

"The Democrats got mauled today, deservedly so. To prohibit that from happening to the GOP in 2016, it must learn the lesson from the last time Republicans held the Senate majority. This time they must not retreat, and it's our responsibility to hold them accountable.

The former governor of Alaska also echoed a quote from President Barack Obama that was often used against him in the 2012 campaign, only this time she repeated it as a warning for Republicans.

"So, establishment types, remember that you didn’t build this! This majority that swept you into power tonight is thanks to the rank and file commonsense conservative grassroots. That’s who built it. And they expect results. They deserve the best for America."

See her full post below:













Sarah Palin 











Sarah Palin-Politician · 4,389,048 Likes· 16 hrs · Edited ·

Thank you, wise voters! Tonight is a big victory for We the People! Credit is due to the victorious candidates. Your message to President Obama is undeniably received, though he'll try to ignore it.

Now, new Republican Congressional majority in the House and Senate, please realize that Americans were not necessarily voting FOR any party; they were voting AGAINST the continued dysfunction and corruption in D.C. We the People were saying, “enough is enough” to the scandals, cr...

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Saturday, November 1, 2014

Burkina Faso appoints new transitional leader - Yahoo News

Burkina Faso appoints new transitional leader - Yahoo News


JohnButts@JBMedia - Reports:
Burkina Faso's army appointed a
military colonel as transitional leader on Saturday, it said, after the
West African country's president resigned from 27 years in office amid
violent protests against his continued power.

Lt. Col. Isaac
Yacouba Zida was unanimously appointed by the army to lead Burkina
Faso, the army said in a declaration. "The period of transition" and its
"form and duration will be determined later," said the declaration that
was drafted and signed after senior officers met with the joint chief
of staff Saturday.
Blaise Compaore resigned Friday after
protesters stormed parliament and set the building ablaze following two
days of violent demonstrations against his bid to amend the constitution
to stand next year for another term. His move left the impoverished
West African country in a state of uncertainty, and both Joint Chief of
Staff Gen. Honore Traore and Zida had made remarks that they were in
power.

Compaore, his family and those close to him had been taken
in by Ivory Coast, according to a statement from the office of President
Alassane Ouattara. It did not elaborate. It said Ouattara was following
events "with particular attention."

Earlier Saturday, Zida said
that the president's resignation amid violent street protests was an
"insurrection" and not a coup, and that Compaore and a top aide were
both safe.

"Starting today I
will assume all the responsibilities of this transition and of head of
state," he said in an announcement carried on radio early Saturday.
Zida was the second in command of the president's security
regiment. Having been in Burkina Faso's ranks for more than two decades,
Zida is close to the president and appreciated by lower ranking
soldier.

Zida called on the
international community including the African Union to "support our
people during this difficult ordeal." He had announced that the
country's borders had been closed, a transitional committee had been set
up and the constitution had been suspended.
Gen.
Traore, the joint chief of staff, had on Friday told reporters that he
would assume the presidency until elections were called, so Lt. Col.
Zida's declaration Saturday caused initial confusion.
Over the
course of several dramatic hours, Compaore, 63, went from looking likely
to jam through parliament a bill that would let him seek a fifth term
to agreeing to step down next year to abandoning office immediately.

The
quick succession of events took many by surprise, since Compaore had
long out-maneuvered his adversaries and has in recent years become an
important regional mediator. Burkina Faso hosts French special forces
and serves as an important ally of both France and the United States in
the fight against Islamic militants in West Africa.

The United States called on Burkina Faso's military to follow
"the constitutionally mandated process for the transfer of power and
holding of democratic elections."

"We
condemn any attempts by the military or other parties to take advantage
of the situation for unconstitutional gain and call on all parties to
respect the people's support for the democratic process," State
Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.
Compaore
first came to power following the October 1987 coup against
then-President Thomas Sankara, Compaore's longtime friend and political
ally who was killed in the power grab.
While
he was respected on the international stage, critics noted that, under
Compaore's semi-authoritarian rule, the country of 18 million people
remained mired in poverty. The landlocked country's fortunes rise and
fall with gold and cotton prices — and adequate rain in a region plagued
by drought.