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Why Obama Has Pulled Ahead on Taxes and Economic Issues

By Mark Weisbrot, AlterNet. Posted October 25, 2008.


Republicans push policies that redistribute income from working and middle-class Americans to the rich. No wonder people are turning to Obama.

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Senator Barack Obama's campaign for the White House pulled ahead of his opponent, Senator John McCain, as soon as the current financial crisis hit the headlines. As one of McCain's top strategists recently blurted out, "If we keep talking about the economic crisis, we're going to lose."

There's a reason for this well-established trend that the Democrats tend to win among those who vote on economic issues. Although both parties are subject to undue influence from powerful corporate interests, the Republicans have been much more consistent in advocating government policies that redistribute income from working and middle-class Americans to the rich. They are also much less friendly to the most important government programs that insure people against economic catastrophe, such as Social Security and Medicare.

These partisan differences are evident in the current presidential campaign. On Social Security, McCain has in the past supported President Bush's partial privatization plan, which was rightly rejected as an attempt to undermine the nation's most important anti-poverty program and social safety net. McCain has also undermined Social Security by wildly misrepresenting its financial condition, alleging that the program is "going broke." (For the record, according to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, Social Security will pay all promised benefits for the next 40 years without any changes whatsoever. It would need only minor changes, less than those adopted in each of the decades of the 1950s, 60s, 70s, and 80s to remain solvent for 75 years).

Obama rejects privatization of Social Security -- as well as Medicare, where the Republicans have increased the role of private insurance companies by giving them wasteful taxpayer subsidies. On health care, one of the most interesting features of Obama's proposal is the establishment of a public insurance program similar to Medicare, which employers and uninsured individuals could buy into. This would be subsidized and could be an important step towards universal health insurance.

McCain wants people to buy their own private health insurance. He is willing to give them a subsidy from the government, but the $5000 he offers is far less than the $12,500 it costs to insure a typical family. Even worse, he proposes to tax the health insurance benefits provided by employers, which are currently tax-free. This would be a hefty tax increase for tens of millions of working Americans. It also puts at risk the health insurance of many of the 160 million people who depend on employment-based insurance policies.

McCain has also been reluctant to support a fiscal stimulus that will be necessary to limit the size and duration of the current downturn. This could be a costly mistake. As consumers cut back on spending -- which is already happening this quarter -- the recession will deepen unless the government is willing to make up for it. Obama has proposed a stimulus package that is too small, but will almost certainly support larger plans that will come from the Democratic Congress.

McCain has proposed yet another cut in the capital gains tax -- from 15 percent to 7.5 percent. This would go overwhelmingly to rich people, and would have little or no effect on economic growth. He also wants to make permanent President Bush's tax cuts for rich households. By contrast, Obama has proposed to cut taxes for everyone earning under $250,000 -- about ninety-five percent of taxpayers -- and pay for it with an increase on the five percent who make more than that.

With millions of Americans facing foreclosure notices on their homes, insufficient and collapsed retirement savings, rising unemployment, falling real wages, and what is likely the worst recession for at least three decades -- it's getting tougher to distract voters from the most important economic issues that affect their lives. Hence, the Republicans' bad luck in the polls.

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See more stories tagged with: republicans, economy, obama, mccain, financial crisis

Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director and co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research. He received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Michigan. He is co-author, with Dean Baker, of Social Security: The Phony Crisis (University of Chicago Press, 2000), and has written numerous research papers on economic policy. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy.

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First things first re economy
Posted by: xvictor on Oct 25, 2008 6:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's somewhat likely that Obama, after becoming a legally elected president, may push to extend unemployment benefits nationally, and a overwhelming dem majority Congress is likely to approve it. the last attempt to push for an extension of unemployment benefits by Congress was threatened a veto by Bushie. His explanation: "They should go back to work!" What a stupid moron that Bush is!! He thinks nothing of handing out generous welfare payments to his wealthy Wall Street cronies but bitches that handing out meager three digit unemployment checks to folks who are in desperate need.

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Hilarious anti-Palin/McCain YouTube cartoon show.
Posted by: USAFVeteran1966 on Oct 25, 2008 11:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For lots of laughs at Pathetic Palin and her senile running mate, click on: Palin/McCain cartoon show

Vietnam vet/Obama supporter
Eight reasons to vote against John McCain

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No tax cuts
Posted by: edgar1 on Oct 25, 2008 2:27 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No tax cuts for anyone in this crisis. Those who work or own businesses or own stock which is sold should pay taxes at the rates under Bill Clinton. McCaina and Obama are slimy panderers who promise cash for votes. Obama may not have been born in Chicago, but Mayor Daley I would be proud of him. McCain would keep the Bush tax cuts, so the middle class and the rich get tax cuts. Moron McCain, the Govt is broke you idiot. Taxes need to go up not down.

Liberals are idiots as are conservatives. We need to slash federal spending seriously, increase revenues, and thus raise the value of the dollar. We then need trade quotas and embargos on Asian products and a shutdown of the Pentagon/contractor spendathon. This will cause massive unemployment but we're getting that anyway. Eventually the nation will prosper under a small fed govt and state govts that have to balance their budgets. If people want health care or education or 'infrastructure' let em go to the state govt. With a strong dollar, oil prices will be stable, and the nonsensical Obama "green' Jobs boondoggle will be unnecessary, and the energy contractors will starve as they should instead of raking in big bucks under the ignorant Obama who never ran anything but the nonprofit HLR. Of course he didn't have to raise money for the HLR; he sat back and good ol Harvard paid for the paper and printing.

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Republican's and Class War.The Devils Greatest Trick,Is Convincing People That He Doesn't Exist.
Posted by: BlueGorilla on Nov 2, 2008 1:01 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Policiies produced by Cheney's administration,show a hard bias towards the very very wealthy,and against the interests of the masses.Big tax cuts,corresponding welfare cuts,an increasingly expensive health system which even leaves the firefighters of 9/11,struggling to meet health payments,as they suffer with asthma,cancer and other respiritory diseases,plus there are the ideologically driven factors, which left people to drown in New orleans..or if lucky to survive ,but with no home.
The vested interests that have cohered around this government,from big oil,to big pharma,to big Haliburton,have managed to shape policy,to meet the aim of maximum accumalation.These and a few other Cheney/Bush droogs,pushed for unregulated markets,and are the jerks responsible, for the worldwide economic crash.
The fact is,that the policies are based on accumalation for the few,and legitimation .The latter usually,takes the shape of welfare and state benefits,lest the workers become restless.However as the hegemony of the rich,has been virtually complete(but never totally),and strident individualism, such powerful central myth, of mainstream America,then such legitimation has not been necessary.Instead false religion,and bogus patriotism,have been the tools of the day,as the country was largely united by a stupid war.The GOP has cast itself as a non-class based party,in order to win votes,in truth of the two main parties,they are the more interlinked with big business,and act almost exclusively as the executive arm of the ruling class.
Laughably ,the GOP ,are busy trying to brand Obama, as a stinking neo-quasi-covert-Trotskyite-Marxist leninist (just take your pick of MacCarthy era slurs).
The fact is that Obama is a centrist leader,of a right of centre party,representing a transformed,economic crash shaped, left of centre constituency.
Democrat policies of extending health insurance,putting a little bit more tax onto the cheif expropriators,and preventing more privatisations,will keep America almost where it is now..it just wont get worse.
Obama isn't a socialist,or even a social democrat.For any uneducated right wingers out there,socialism is not monolithic,and has many different shades,from Marxist-type overthrow of capitalism ,sometimes referred to as communism,though this is actually a system which only emerges, several generations after capitalism's destruction.On the other wing of socialism,could be Swedish leader Olaf Palme's incredibly successful combinination, of socialism with capitalism.The latter is often referred to as social democracy.
If Obama is a socialist,he is a really crap one..instead Obama,just won't be kicking the people, quite so hard as the GOP has in the last eight years,and thats really upsetting to any republican vampire.

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Poor people will be hurt most by Obama's Tax Plan
Posted by: violawall on Nov 3, 2008 1:52 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. Poor people don't create jobs. Upper middle class and rich people do. You penalize them and they will most likely cut jobs or benefits or both.
2. 40% of people do not pay any or very little Federal or State taxes. To get a cut you will actually get a welfare check for about 600 dollars or so. That won't go very far if you loose your job or some of your benefits.

There was a survey of CEO's of company's recently and most of them said that they were very concerned about an Obama's Presidency. If you are thinking so what do care about those evil business men, think again. They said they were going to contract their business and not expand. That can't be good for the economy! Expect more layoffs!
Vi

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