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RNC’s Featured Small Business Owner: My Company Needs More Government Contracts

The first night of the Republican National Convention was heavy with “we built that” references and small business owners who feel overtaxed by the government. But one featured small business owner, Phil Archuletta of P&M Signs, went off-message when he took the stage to rail against the government…for not giving him enough contracts:

ARCHULETTA: For the last 40 years, my company has built the road signs on the Forest Service road system. In fact, in 1984, I was fortunate to receive the national award from President Reagan for being the most successful minority business in the United States. In 2004, President Bush made it possible for our company to manufacture signs for all federal agencies. When President Obama came on board and pushed the stimulus, I believed my business was going to explode with work. Unfortunately, it never happened. … Today, we are barely hanging on with the orders from the state of New Mexico – thanks to Governor Susana Martinez – and the few orders still coming through the Forest Service from our very loyal customers.

Watch it:

In expressing his frustration, Archuletta is exposing the fundamental lie of the Romney campaign’s “we built that” theme. Government small business loans and contracts have sustained almost every small business Romney has featured in his campaign. Archuletta’s business, like the others, has been sustained by the comparatively reliable supply of government work. Far from disparaging hardworking small business owners as Romney wants voters to believe, President Obama’s original comments celebrated the “American system” that helps bolster individual drive like Archuletta’s, concluding, “When we succeed, we succeed because of our individual initiative, but also because we do things together.”

Four Facts About New Jersey’s Economy Chris Christie Won’t Talk About At The Republican Convention Tonight

Gov. Chris Christie (R-NJ)

The first real night of the 2012 Republican National Convention will close tonight with a keynote address by Gov. Chris Christie (R-NJ). Christie has become a conservative darling for his blunt speaking style and his open willingness to berate public servants.

“I’ll be talking about the New Jersey experience and what that means for the country,” Christie said while previewing the speech. “If [listeners] say I like the vision he’s laid out for the country and for his party for the next four years, then I will have done the job for my party and my country.”

However, the “New Jersey experience” under Christie has been anything but rosy. Here are some key economics stats to know before Christie hits the stage tonight:

– New Jersey ranked 47th in the nation in GDP growth in 2011. [Bureau of Economic Analysis]

– The Garden state’s unemployment rate of 9.8 percent is fourth highest in the nation, trailing only Nevada, California, and Rhode Island. [Bureau of Labor Statistics]

– New Jersey lost 12,000 jobs last month, the most in the country. [Bureau of Labor Statistics]

– The state ranked 44th in personal income growth in 2011. [Bureau of Economic Analysis]

Christie has focused on cutting taxes for millionaires (while blocking a millionaires’ surtax), slashing social spending, and opposing plans to help New Jersey’s workers. He’s cheered the firing of public sector workers and scuttled important infrastructure projects on false pretenses.

Finally, he’s handed out a record number of corporate handouts, while getting little for it in terms of job growth. And for this, he’s been rewarded with a huge speaking slot at the Republican convention, from which he will likely proclaim Republican economic ideology a stunning success.

High-Frequency Trading Pioneer: Today’s Trading ‘Has Absolutely No Social Value’

Thomas Peterffy, who pioneered the computer-based high-frequency trading that generates millions of dollars in profits for big banks, said in an interview with NPR’s Planet Money that speed trading has gotten so fast that it now “has absolutely no social value”:

Peterffy says automation has done some very good things for the world. It’s made buying and selling stocks much much cheaper for everyone.

But Peterffy thinks the race for speed is doing more harm than good now. “We are competing at milliseconds,” he says. “And whether you can shave three milliseconds of an order, has absolutely no social value.”

When Peterffy first began using computers to trade, high-speed trading was rare. Now, as the Huffington Post noted, it makes up more than half of the stock market’s volume. This interactive chart from Nanex, a markets research firm, shows how high-speed trading has exploded:

Tho address this problem, Peterffy told NPR that a regulatory structure that slows down trading is necessary. Though he didn’t mention it specifically, one way to achieve that goal would be a financial transactions tax, a small levy on trades that would slow down markets while barely affecting normal traders. The European Union has considered a transactions tax in the wake of the financial crisis, and Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-OR) and Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA) have proposed one here in the U.S.

That tax could raise $35 billion annually, according to DeFazio, but more importantly it would remove volatility from the markets and make the entire financial system safer. Cries from industry insiders that a transactions tax would hurt economic growth, DeFazio told ThinkProgress earlier this year, are simply false. “For 50 years we had a tax that was about seven times larger than this when the country was seeing the greatest growth in its history, post-World War II,” he said. “So we’ve proven this will not have a detrimental impact on growth. In fact, it perhaps is beneficial to growth. It’s not necessarily beneficial to salaries of hedge fund managers on Wall Street.”

NEWS FLASH

CHART: America’s Unionizaton Rate Plummets While Canada’s Holds Steady | A new report from the Center for Economic and Policy Research shows that, while America’s unionization rate has plummeted over the last few decades, Canada’s has stayed relatively steady. CEPR notes that two Canadian pro-labor policies — allowing employees to form a union via signing cards and using so-called “first contract arbitration” to prevent stalling tactics at the bargaining table — likely account for the difference.

Michigan’s Republican Governor On Obama’s Welfare Policy: ‘More Flexibility To Governors Is A Good Thing’

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder

The Romney campaign has aggressively campaigned against President Obama’s recent changes to the welfare program, alleging that he “gutted” welfare, eliminating the work requirement so that “they just send you your check.” In fact, the administration’s welfare waiver initiative would strengthen work requirements by simply empowering states to innovate on new strategies.

And it turns out that at least one Republican governor, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, supports Obama’s policy change. On MSNBC Tuesday afternoon, Tom Brokaw pressed Snyder on how he felt about the increased flexibility Obama gave the states. Snyder’s response was surprisingly positive as he sat in the GOP convention hall waiting to choose Mitt Romney as his party’s nominee:

BROKAW: [Governors] want more flexibility in how they administer these welfare programs. He’s really responding to what they asked for. So my question to you is, has what President Obama done for welfare in the state of Michigan, has that given you more flexibility and are you happy with this policy in that regard?

SNYDER: It’s still relatively new, this change in policy, so we are still fully analyzing it. The concept of more flexibility to governors is a good thing, but I think there should be performance metrics. We should be held accountable for performance but flexibility on how to do it.

Watch it:

Before it became a policy of the Obama administration, Republicans pushed for more state authority over the welfare program. Additionally, Romney himself is advocating for more state flexibility on other policies, like food stamps, where he would like to block grant money to the states.

EXCLUSIVE: As Hurricane Isaac Targets New Orleans, GOP Rep. Calls For Making Disaster Relief Contingent On Budget Cuts

Rep. Raul Labrador (R-ID)

TAMPA, Florida — Though many Republicans are fretting about the optics of holding their party’s convention as Hurricane Isaac slams into New Orleans, a leading Tea Party congressman is vowing to use the opportunity to extract budget cuts if Congress wants to dole out disaster funding to help victims.

Rep. Raul Labrador (R-ID) told ThinkProgress at a Hispanic Leadership Network luncheon that Republicans should take a similar approach with disaster funding for Hurricane Isaac as they did after natural disasters last year. In 2011, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) led the Republican charge to deny disaster funding following major hurricanes and tornadoes unless the federal budget was cut in other areas.

Labrador said that Congress must “readjust everything we do” in order to find cuts to pay for Hurricane Isaac disaster relief. “If there’s emergencies, we don’t always need to keep borrowing money,” said the freshman Republican.

KEYES: Last year, for instance, after the Missouri tornado, Leader Cantor was a real “hold-the-line” to call for budget cuts to pay for disaster relief. Do you think that’s still the right strategy going forward if there’s damage from Hurricane Isaac?

LABRADOR: I think government should do what every family does. If you have an emergency, then you rethink your priorities and you still invest and you still do the things that you need to do to take care of your family. That’s what government should do is always reconsider. If there’s emergencies, we don’t always need to keep borrowing money, but we can actually take care of people that are in damaged communities by reconfiguring what we’re doing in Washington D.C.

KEYES: So find cuts to pay for those disaster funds?

LABRADOR: Find different ways to do it, absolutely. We have to readjust everything we do.

Watch it:

Disaster funding has traditionally been a non-controversial issue, with both parties typically agreeing to offer immediate help to victims and worry about congressional budget matters later. Tea Party Republicans broke that long-standing consensus last year, demanding dollar-for-dollar cuts to pay for any relief for victims of Hurricane Irene or the massive tornado in Joplin, Missouri.

Isaac, which is expected to make landfall overnight, will hit on the 7-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. The Chicago Tribune estimates that as much as $36 billion in property could be at risk.

Justice

GOP Platform Calls For Cutting Off Federal Funds From Colleges That Offer In-State Tuition To Undocumented Immigrants

Republicans this week are expected to approve the “most conservative platform in modern history” at their convention in Tampa Bay. The positions outlined cover everything from promoting anti-abortion measures with no exception for rape and incest to claiming that the Obama administration is advancing the “homosexual agenda” through foreign aid.

And the platform committee endorsed a provision that calls for universities to be denied federal funds if they allow undocumented immigrants to pay in-state tuition:

The difference between the lower in-state tuition price and the full tuition price for out-of-state students at public universities is picked up by taxpayer dollars. Republicans have argued against offering in-state tuition for undocumented immigrants as benefit rewarding illegal immigration.

Cutting off federal financing for universities who offer in-state tuition for undocumented immigrants could mean the loss of things such as Pell Grants and research funding if it was actually enacted into law.

The 2012 GOP platform is harsher on immigration issues after Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach (R), who wrote Arizona and Alabama’s harmful immigration laws, pushed for the tougher language. Kobach, who is an informal immigration adviser to the Romney campaign, has insisted that Romney wants SB 1070 as a national model, and he called President Obama’s directive to protect DREAM Act-eligible undocumented immigrants is “illegal.”

Several states already have laws allowing undocumented immigrants to pay in-state rates. And one college in Colorado is allowing students who are not citizens or legal residents to pay a reduced tuition rate, although it is still higher than the in-state rate. But other states are specifically blocking undocumented immigrants from receiving in-state tuition.

RNC Official: New Mexico Is ‘Going to Hell’ For Hosting Meeting With American Indians About Economic Development

Our guest blogger is Erik Stegman, Manager of the Half in Ten Campaign at the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

An executive member of the Republican National Committee said that his home state of New Mexico is “going to hell” because an annual meeting between the governor and the state’s 22 American Indian tribes dishonored the memory of Gen. George Armstrong Custer, who is widely known for his bloody campaigns against Plains Indians in the late 1800’s. Mandated by New Mexican law, the governor meets on a yearly basis with cabinet officials and tribal government leaders to address issues of mutual concern.

American Indians represent 10.1 percent of New Mexicans. What was on this year’s agenda? Sessions about improving education, healthcare, economic development, and infrastructure.

After Governor Susana Martinez (R) announced the upcoming Tribal Leaders Summit, Pat Rogers, a partner with the Modrall law firm, lobbyist, and member of the RNC executive committee, decided to share a piece of his mind with the governor’s staff over email, which was originally publicized by Progress Now New Mexico:

Quislings, French surrender monkeys, secret supporters (all along) of JAJ [Janice Arnold Jones]

The state is going to hell. Col. Weh would not have dishonored Col Custer in this manner.

I hope who ever recommended this is required to read the entire redist [redistricting law suit] transcript and sit through the entire meeting with the Gov.

“Quislings” is another term for traitor, referring to politicians who favor the interest of other nations over their own. And who are JAJ and Weh? Rogers blasted this email off two days after the state primary when Republicans confirmed former State Rep. Janice Arnold Jones as their nominee for a congressional seat. Retired Marine Corps Col. Allen Weh ran against Martinez in the 2010 Republican primary election

“I call upon the Republican National Committee to remove Mr. Rogers from his official capacity within the committee,” All Indian Pueblo Council Chairman Chandler Sanchez said in a statement Sunday. “His statement that Custer is some kind of hero demanding deference is offensive.” The All Indian Pueblo Council represents New Mexico’s 20 sovereign pueblo governments. A spokesman for Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly said, “It’s definitely something that is just insensitive and careless to even remotely joke about that in this day and age.”

Rogers told the Albuquerque Journal that his email was a “poor attempt at humor and apologized, but made no direct apologies to any tribes in the state.”

NEWS FLASH

Rate-Rigging Scandal Could Cost Banks $176 Billion | The LIBOR rate-rigging scandal that came to light this year could cost banks up to $176 billion, as investors pile on to sue the various big banks accused of manipulating the key interest rate. The firm Macquarie Research estimated that total “based on the assumption that Libor was ‘understated’ by 0.4 percentage points in 2008 and 2009.” Other estimates place the banks’ potential liability much lower, but still in the billions of dollars.

Romney Political Director Laughs Off Question About Falsity Of Campaign’s Welfare Ads

Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign has run multiple false advertisements accusing the Obama administration of “gutting” the 1996 welfare reform law through a waiver program that will give states more latitude in applying the law’s work requirements. The ads, debunked by many news outlets, are blatantly false — the waivers do not “gut” the law, and work requirements remain in place. Romney himself supported an even more expansive waiver program while he was governor of Massachusetts.

The Romney campaign, undeterred by the obvious falsehoods, has both continued running the ads and released new ones. On Tuesday, when asked by an NPR reporter why the campaign continues to run the ads, Romney political director Rich Beeson laughed off their brazen lack of truth, stating that “reasonable people can have a disagreement” about whether the oft-debunked ads are false:

STEVE INSKEEP (NPR): “Doesn’t the change mean that the governors can choose or can apply to change the work requirement as opposed to being forced to remove it?”

BEESON: “Again, that still is a change.”

INSKEEP: “But it’s not, quote, ‘they just send you your check,’ which is what the ad says.”

BEESON: (laughs) “I think reasonable people can have a disagreement over this but he [Obama] has significantly changed what President Clinton put in in 1996.”

The Romney campaign’s apparent disagreement with the notion that facts are true (and still matter) was reinforced later in the day, when campaign pollster Neil Newhouse told BuzzFeed’s Ben Smith, “We’re not going to let our campaign be dictated by fact-checkers.” Neither, judging by Romney’s repeated struggles with the truth, are they going to let their campaign be dictated by actual facts.

Update

The Washington Post’s Greg Sargent highlights Romney’s own words, from earlier this month, citing fact-checkers against an Obama advertisement and lamenting the days of past when false ads were pulled from the air:

You know, in the past, when people pointed out that something was inaccurate, why, campaigns pulled the ad,” Romney said on the radio. “They were embarrassed. Today, they just blast ahead. You know, the various fact checkers look at some of these charges in the Obama ads and they say that they’re wrong, and inaccurate, and yet he just keeps on running them.”

GOP Rep. Says He’d Support Raising Tax Rates To Stave Off ‘Fiscal Cliff’

Virginia Rep. Scott Rigell became the latest Republican to break with party orthodoxy on taxes this week, telling a local editorial board that he would back a compromise to raise taxes and cut spending. In an interview with the Charlottesville Daily Press, Rigell said he would back a plan to bring revenues to roughly 20 percent of gross domestic product in order to fix the unsustainable revenue levels caused by the Bush tax cuts and the GOP’s adherence to a no-new-taxes pledge:

“The American people are ready for the truth — they can handle the truth,” Rigell told the Daily Press editorial board. “They can handle solutions. They want solutions and they want leadership.”

And the truth, Rigell says, is that the “Bush tax cuts” coupled with Grover Norquist’s “no new tax pledge” signed by the vast majority of Republicans in Congress have locked federal revenue in at a rate that is unsustainable.

“We have a structural deficit that should scare every American across this country,” Rigell said. “I think our house is on fire.”

As Rigell noted in his interview with the Daily Press, federal revenues are at historically low rates thanks to the massive package of tax cuts signed by George W. Bush and the slumping economy. Republicans, though, have largely maintained that the U.S. doesn’t have a “revenue problem” and have blocked any efforts to raise taxes. Their stance nearly caused a debt default in 2011 — and did cause the first credit downgrade in American history — and could lead Congress over the so-called “fiscal cliff” this year.

A growing number of Republicans have begun to recognize this problem, criticizing Norquist and party leaders for refusing to consider revenue increases as part of any budget deal. Since last year, constituents at townhalls have criticized Republican members of Congress for signing Norquist’s pledge and remaining intransigent on taxes. Rigell disavowed the Norquist pledge earlier this year.

Rigell also criticized the House Republican budget for being “indefensible mathematically” if it did not include “revenue enhancements.” But Rigell’s moderate stance on taxes is new-found: he voted for the House budget, which gives $3 trillion in tax cuts to the rich and corporations, and has twice voted for the full extension of the Bush tax cuts. And instead of allowing the Bush rates to expire, Rigell told the Daily Press he would prefer to raise revenues by closing tax loopholes, a proposition that while not impossible is politically impractical.

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Econ 101: August 28, 2012

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.

  • President Obama declared a state of emergency in Louisiana yesterday, as the state prepares for Tropical Storm Isaac. [The Hill]
  • GM and Chrysler have both said that political candidates will not be allowed to campaign on their property this year. [CNN Money]
  • Los Angeles has sued U.S. Bancorp for failing to maintain foreclosed properties; the city called the bank a “slumlord.” [Reuters}
  • A Michigan court gave the go-ahead to a ballot initiative that would enshrine collective bargaining rights in the state's constitution. [Reuters]
  • Spain’s recession deepened even further in the second quarter of this year. [Bloomberg]
  • Mergers of small and medium-sized banks are on the rise. [Washington Post]
  • Apple is seeking the ban of eight Samsung phones, after a court ruled that Samsung infringed on Apple’s patents. [CNBC]
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