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Perry’s Tax Plan Would Cost More Than $500 Billion A Year While Increasing Taxes On Most Of The Middle-Class

2012 GOP presidential hopeful and Texas Gov. Rick Perry released a tax plan last week that would institute a 20 percent “flat tax,” while giving taxpayers the option of continuing to use the current tax code and all of its deductions and credits. Perry claims that he will be able to balance the budget while making the tax code simpler and fairer.

We already knew that Perry’s plan is the epitome of complicated and unfair, as it layers a new tax code on top of the old, and makes the new code incredibly advantageous to the wealthy by entirely exempting investment income from any taxation at all. And according to a new analysis by the Tax Policy Center, Perry’s plan would blow a gigantic hole in the deficit, while increasing taxes for those at the lowest end of the income scale.

In fact, compared to a current policy baseline (where tax revenue is already at historic lows), Perry’s plan would cost $570 billion in one single year. That’s more than half a trillion dollars in revenue, or more than 25 percent of the total revenue that will be collected this year.

At the same time, compared to current policy, 40 percent of Americans would pay higher taxes under Perry’s plan (due to many provisions of the current tax code that are set to expire in 2012, which the Perry campaign has not said would be extended). Meanwhile, millionaires would receive an average tax cut under Perry’s plan of nearly $500,000 every year. The richest 0.1 percent of Americans would receive a tax cut of $1.5 million apiece. Meanwhile, a family making $10,000-$20,000 would pay $215 more under Perry’s plan, while a family making $20,000-$30,000 would pay nearly $500 more.

Perry’s plan would, quite literally, cut a Medicare-sized hole in federal revenue (Medicare costs $523 billion in 2010), while asking those at the lowest end of the income scale to pay more in taxes. The plan is almost shocking in the amount of money it would hand out via tax breaks to the rich, which would then necessitate obliterating the social safety net as we know it in order to balance the budget.

Former GOP Ohio Supreme Court Judge: Ohio’s Anti-Labor Law Is ‘Tragic For Our Communities,’ ‘Must Be Rejected’

Retired Ohio Supreme Court Judge Andy Douglas

In eight days, Ohio voters will go to the polls to decide whether GOP Gov. John Kasich’s deeply unpopular anti-labor law, Senate Bill 5, should remain on the books. Thousands of Ohioans, including right-wing radio host Bill Cunningham, have urged Ohioans to stand behind teachers, police officers, and firefighters and repeal the law by voting no on Issue 2.

Now, former Republican Ohio Supreme Court Justice Andy Douglas is lending his voice to the repeal effort, noting that before the state passed its 1984 collective bargaining law, it led the nation in safety forces work stoppages. Since collective bargaining became the law of the land, however, there have been no work stoppages. “It would be tragic for our communities to return to those dark days,” he said. “That is what Senate Bill 5 — if it becomes law — would do”:

DOUGLAS: In the decade before the enactment of Ohio’s collective bargaining law in 1984, Ohio, for four years, led the nation in safety forces work stoppages. The reason was clear. When a city and its safety forces had a dispute concerning wages, working conditions, and adequate staffing, there was no way to resolve the dispute. That is why we passed the collective bargaining law. The law has worked. There has been no safety forces work stoppages in Ohio since the law was passed. It would be tragic for our communities to return to those dark days. That is what Senate Bill 5 — if it becomes law — would do. To fully protect our citizens and police officers and firefighters, Senate Bill 5 must be rejected.

Watch it:

Douglas added, “I’m a Republican and I’ve been working side by side with independents and Democrats to see that this bad bill does not become law.” He told Ohioans that “Senate Bill 5 must be rejected” to stop “politicians who would turn back the clock on public safety and on those who protect and serve us.”

Cantor Falsley Claims He Doesn’t Support Cuts To Pell Grants

Speaking today at the University of Michigan’s Ford School of Public Policy, where he was interrupted by 99 Percent Movement protesters, House Majority Leader (R-VA) fielded a question from a student asking why Cantor and the GOP support “reducing or getting rid of Pell Grants,” the federal grants that help low- and middle-income students pay for higher education.

Cantor disputed the claim, saying, “your direct question, allegation, I don’t know is accurate,” before launching into a non-answer about how the real issue is not the grants but the increasing cost of higher education. Watch it:

In fact, since coming to power, the House Republican majority — led by Cantor — has repeatedly set its sights on Pell Grants. Republican lawmakers have not only proposed lowering the maximum Pell amount from $5,500 (which is the level to which the Obama administration raised it) but also limiting eligibility, knocking one million students from the Pell program entirely. Republicans claim “we don’t have the money” to afford the grants, but the same House GOP budget that made cuts to Pell — for which Cantor voted — provides huge tax breaks for the wealthy and corporations that dwarf the cost of preserving the grants.

It’s also worth nothing that it was Cantor himself who, during July budget talks with the White House, proposed a cut “aimed squarely at college students” that would make students stat paying interest on their federal loans right away, instead of deferring until after graduation.

At a time when student loan debt is hitting new heights and joblessness is above 9 percent, Cantor’s response to a student genuinely concerned about financing his higher education is quite telling, especially when the GOP leader claims to agree that “the investment on higher education has an infinite return.”

Tax Exemption For Halloween Costumes Costs New Jersey Revenue

This guy would have paid no sales tax in New Jersey.

Tonight, Americans all over the country will don capes and masks to celebrate Halloween, hitting the streets to trick-or-treat or heading out to costume parties. For Halloween revelers in New Jersey, the holiday has been just a bit cheaper for the last six years — and therefore more expensive for the government — due to a law removing the state’s sales tax from Halloween costumes:

For the past six years, adults looking to buy a Halloween costume in New Jersey have avoided a 7 percent sales tax because of a law that took effect in October 2005 classifying the outfits as “clothing,” which is tax-exempt.

Michael Froumy, 54, of Brigantine, owner of Fro Me A Party in Egg Harbor Township, said that change has saved shoppers at his party-supply store between $7,000 and $8,000 annually. But he wonders if the state should really be giving a tax break on vampire capes and sexy French maid costumes.

Even before the 2005 law took effect, childrens’ costumes were tax-exempt in New Jersey. Deborah Howlett, president of New Jersey Policy Perspective, said that while it makes sense to exempt food and clothing from sales taxes, “when it gets to the point when they are not taxing Dracula capes, that might be a chance to revisit things.” It is unclear how much the state loses each year in revenue from the tax break.

This is only the latest instance of an unwarranted Jersey tax break coming to light. Just last month, Gov. Chris Christie (R) found himself having to veto a $420,000 tax credit that was awarded to MTV’s Jersey Shore. “As chief executive I am duty-bound to ensure that taxpayers are not footing a $420,000 bill for a project which does nothing more than perpetuate misconceptions about the state and its citizens,” Christie said. Evidently, MTV’s crew will have to hit a local costume shop in order to catch a break on their Garden State taxes.

(HT: Citizens for Tax Justice)

Climate Progress

Latest Disaster In A Dangerous Mine Kills Two Kentucky Miners After 15 Safety Violations Since 2010

What a highwall collapse can look like (Courtesy of MineSurveyor.net)

A western Kentucky mine where two miners were trapped and killed by the collapse of a highwall Friday has been repeatedly cited for safety violations in the two years it has been operated by Armstrong Coal. The miners died at Equality Boot Mine in Centertown, Kentucky Friday after an unexcavated face of an exposed strip-mining site — known as a highwall — collapsed on their truck as they were driving.

In April, the Mine Safety and Health Administration cited Armstrong Coal for an incident involving the stability of a highwall at the same mine, the Associated Press reported Saturday. Though a company spokesman said that citation was unrelated to last week’s collapse, Armstrong Coal has a history of safety violations at the site. MSHA has cited Armstrong for at least 15 safety violations in the two years it has operated the mine, the Louisville Courier-Journal reports:

Armstrong has operated the Equality mine since December 2008 and has been producing coal there since 2010.

As of the end of September, the mine employed 129 people and had produced 1.5 million tons of coal for the year to date, MSHA records show.

The mine was cited for nine safety violations with $1,531 in penalties in 2010 and 6 violations carrying $1,394 in penalties this year, according to MSHA’s citation database.

Some of the citations were for violations of regulations governing the placement of materials on the tops of pits or highwalls and the operation of mining equipment, the records show.

Armstrong isn’t the only coal company to experience a fatal accident at a mine where it had been repeatedly cited for safety violations. Massey Energy amassed thousands of safety violations at its Upper Big Branch mine near Beckley, West Virginia, before an explosion there killed 29 miners in 2010. Days later, two miners died in a roof collapse at the Dotiki Mine in Providence, Kentucky. Federal inspectors had cited owner and operator Alliance Resource Partners with 840 safety violations in the 16 months preceding the accident.

Still, many of Kentucky’s politicians continue to look the other way when it comes to enforcing and strengthening mine safety laws. After the 2010 accidents, Sen. Mitch McConnell (R) and other Kentucky politicians largely avoided questions about the efficacy of the nation’s mine safety laws. Just days after the Dotiki explosion, Gov. Steve Beshear (D) appeared at the opening of another Kentucky mine owned by Alliance but made no mention of mine safety or of Alliance’s shoddy safety history. Before that, Beshear fired Ron Mills, head of Kentucky’s mining permit agency, for refusing dozens of Alliance’s permits, and Beshear also appointed one of Alliance’s top safety officials to the Kentucky Mining Board, despite the fact that at least nine miners have died at Alliance-owned mines since 2005.

Most infamously, Sen. Rand Paul (R) — who issued a statement on the accident Friday — suggested during his 2010 campaign that the coal industry should be able to regulate itself, as ThinkProgress noted at the time:

The bottom line is: I’m not an expert, so don’t give me the power in Washington to be making rules,” Paul said at a recent campaign stop in response to questions about April’s deadly mining explosion in West Virginia…“You live here, and you have to work in the mines. You’d try to make good rules to protect your people here. If you don’t, I’m thinking that no one will apply for those jobs.”

Federal investigators determined that both the Upper Big Branch and Dotiki disasters could have been prevented, and given the recent safety violations, a similar verdict at Equality would not be a surprise. Still, little has emerged from those tragedies to improve mine safety laws, with political leaders instead using industry-wide talking points to decry others of waging a “War on Coal.” It’s enough to beg the question: Are Kentucky’s political leaders putting their Big Coal campaign donors ahead of actual human lives?

House Education Commitee Chair Calls Obama’s Student Loan Plan ‘A Mistake’: ‘We Don’t Have The Money’

House Education Committee Chairman John Kline (MN)

American college students will hit a milestone this year by having a record $1 trillion in student loan debt. Aware of the burden, President Obama announced a plan to help college students reduce their loan debt by consolidating their loans and lowering the maximum required loan payment from 15 percent of a student’s income to 10 percent. Debt would be forgiven after 20 years, instead of 25. The plan could help millions of students by lowering monthly payments by hundreds of dollars.

Naturally, Republican lawmakers are slamming the plan. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich called it a “Ponzi scheme.” Rep. Michele Bachmann (MN) called it an “abuse of power” that creates a “moral hazard.”

House Education Committee Chairman John Kline (R-MN), meanwhile, insisted that the plan actually “means more debt for students” because it encourages “more borrowing.” Kline continued his rant this morning on Fox and Friends, calling the executive order “a mistake” that will only “encourage” borrowing that leaves “taxpayers holding the bag”:

KLINE: This is a mistake. It’s very confusing. I’ve talked to a lot of people about what the president proposal is, it’s very difficult to figure out. Some of the changes are going to affect a very small group of students, some of them are going to affect a larger group of students. All of it we’ll encourage more borrowing, I’m afraid, and leave taxpayers holding the bag. [...]

We’ve seen the cost of college go up and up and up. Tuition and fees. The colleges and universities are going to have to face the fact that there is not an endless supply of money coming from state and federal governments. They’re going to have to look at their own operating costs and start to curtail the costs of going to college. We simply can’t keep providing money from the federal government in the form of subsidized or actual loans and Pell grants when we don’t have the money.

Watch it:

Kline noted that the executive order is “technically legal, but it is a stretch for him to do this and it was not the intent of Congress to do this at this time.” But the fact that Republicans don’t wish to address the record amount of student loan debt should not be surprising.

As TP Economy editor Pat Garofalo notes, the GOP “vigorously opposed reforms that stopped billions of federal dollars from going to banks to act as unnecessary middlemen in the federal student loan program.” They called the elimination of corporate welfare a “Washington takeover” of the industry. Pair that with Republcians’ callous cuts to the Pell Grant program and it’s easy to see that, whatever Kline and the GOP intend to do, it has nothing to do with helping students.

Cantor Rakes In Wall Street Donations While Calling Occupy Protesters A ‘Mob’

When the Occupy Wall Street demonstrations first gained some national prominence, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) derided the protesters as a “mob,” saying, “Believe it or not, some in this town have actually condoned the pitting of Americans against Americans.”

Cantor eventually softened his rhetoric, and even scheduled a talk about income inequality (that he proceeded to cancel when he realized that the public would be allowed to attend). But Cantor has plenty of reasons to bash the protests because, as Roll Call noted today, Cantor’s top contributor this year is Wall Street:

Cantor’s personal political action committee has collected close to $2 million so far this year, placing it well ahead of any other leadership PAC in the House or Senate. In all of his fundraising efforts, top executives at banks, hedge funds and securities and investment firms play a starring role. Securities and investment industry donors have given close to $350,000 to both Cantor’s campaign and his leadership PAC this year, making them his top source of donations, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

But Cantor has raised millions more than that for a lucrative operation known as the Cantor Victory Fund 2012…Ten major donors, many of them top executives with finance industry firms, have given $50,000 or more this year to the Cantor Victory Fund, which has collected $2.4 million, according to the most recent public disclosures.

Cantor has pushed several policies near and dear to Wall Street’s heart, including protecting tax loopholes for hedge fund managers, while managing to come up with no ideas for addressing income inequality. In fact, he believes we should just depend on the wealthy to bring down inequality through the goodness of their hearts. And so far, Wall Street has certainly shown its appreciation for Cantor’s positions.

Rep. DeFazio: GOP Can’t Address Income Inequality While ‘Chained To Grover Norquist’

Across the country, thousands of people have registered their anger at a political and financial system that rewards the richest 1 percent at the expense of everyone else by joining the 99 Percent Movement. Last week, the Congressional Budget Office added fuel to the fire, releasing a major report showing that average household income for the top 1 percent has nearly tripled since 1979 while income growth for other groups was largely non-existent.

And it’s not just protesters who are concerned, as a new poll shows two-thirds of voters think the middle class is shrinking and 55 percent believe income inequality is a big problem for the country.

In response to the increasing attention on income inequality, many Republicans are trying to show they are committed to addressing the problem. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) recently planned a major speech on the subject, but abruptly canceled when he learned the speech would be open to the public. As Politico noted today, income inequality is “working its way into the discourse of Republicans on Capitol Hill,” even though their policy response has been to push the same old tax cuts they always suggest.

During an interview last week on Capitol Hill, Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-OR) cast doubt on the seriousness of Republican efforts to fight inequality. DeFazio blasted the GOP for signing onto the Americans for Tax Reform (ATR) “Taxpayer Protection Pledge,” as all but six House Republicans have done, effectively binding them to the opinions of ATR leader and extreme anti-tax zealot Grover Norquist:

DEFAZIO: They’re saying, you know, unleashing the job creators, protecting their tax loopholes, you know, and their tax breaks, protecting the Bush tax cuts will somehow solve income inequality. Well, we’ve got ten years of experience now of tax cuts that don’t create jobs and they have exacerbated the income inequality of this country. So, they are chained, they are chained to Grover Norquist and they can’t do anything that he doesn’t like so they can’t deal meaningfully with it. [...]

They can pretend, they can change their rhetoric, they’re very good at that. They’re just really in a position with Grover Norquist over there and Wall Street over there. Where are they gonna go?

Watch it:

Karl Singer

Econ 101: October 31, 2011

Welcome to ThinkProgress Economy’s morning link roundup. This is what we’re reading. Have you seen any interesting news? Let us know in the comments section. You can also follow ThinkProgress Economy on Twitter.

  • The Treasury Department “is likely to put off its second sale of shares in American International Group…because of unfavorable market conditions.” [Wall Street Journal]
  • Bank of America is rethinking its unpopular proposal to impose a $5 monthly debit card fee. [CNN Money]
  • According to new predictions, “home values are expected to fall another 3.6% by next June, pushing them to a new low of 35% below the peak reached in early 2006 and marking a triple dip in prices.” [CNN Money]
  • In the last week, “more than 90 lower-chamber Democrats have officially endorsed the president’s jobs bill.” [The Hill]
  • Federal agencies “have blown about 77 percent of the rule-making deadlines” in the Dodd-Frank financial reform law. [Politico]
  • The Organization for Economic Development and Cooperation said today that “advanced economies are looking at two years of weak growth and high unemployment, and the outlook is likely to worsen unless the euro zone reins in its sovereign-debt crisis.” [Wall Street Journal]
  • Japan intervened yesterday “to counter speculation that officials say is hurting the world’s No. 3 economy.” [Reuters]
  • Yet another lawsuit accuses Goldman Sachs of “purposely unloading $93 million in mortgage-backed securities it knew to be junk onto a client, then betting against those same securities.” [Huffington Post]

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