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Stories tagged with “Terry Branstad

Economy

Iowa GOP Governor Uses Tax Loophole To Cut His State Income Tax Bill To $52

President Obama and Senate Democrats have been trying to implement the Buffett rule, a minimum tax on millionaires, which would remedy the problem of millionaires being able to pay lower tax rates than middle class families. One state lawmaker in Iowa thinks his state needs its own version — the Branstad rule — after Gov. Terry Branstad (R-IA) was able to pay just $52 in state income taxes on his nearly $200,000 in income:

Gov. Terry Branstad’s $52 state income tax bill in 2011 is proof that fixes are needed in the tax system, Sen. Robert Hogg, D-Cedar Rapids said today.

“Some people talk about nationally we need a Buffet rule, maybe in Iowa we need a Branstad rule,” said Hogg, who additionally noted that a person making between $30,000 to $40,000 a year can expect to pay somewhere around $1,000 or more in state income tax.

Branstad was able to pay such a low amount because Iowa is one of just six states in the country that allows residents to write off their federal income tax payments from the previous year on their current year’s tax return. So Branstad was able to apply his 2010 federal income tax payments — which were paid on the salary he received from his prior job as the president of Des Moines University — to this year’s state income tax bill.

Iowa loses $642 million annually due to this provision, nearly one quarter of its total income tax revenue. More than half of the benefit of the deduction goes to the richest 5 percent of Iowans, while 76 percent of the benefits go to the richest 20 percent. “States should take a hard look at eliminating, or at least capping, their deduction because of the impact this lopsided tax policy has on state budgets and tax fairness,” the Institute for Taxation and Economic Policy wrote. Branstad’s administration called his low tax bill an anomaly. (HT: CTJ)

Justice

Iowa Gov. Branstad Falsely Claims Voter ID Is Needed Because People ‘Falsely Vote’

Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad (R)

Iowa is joining the 26 states that are already looking to enforce harsher voter ID requirements this year. Succeeding to get a voter ID bill through the House last year, Iowa Secretary of State is set to try again and proposed a new measure last week. Quick with ready praise, Republican Gov. Terry Branstad declared the photo ID requirement a “good idea” to combat the apparent problem of people who “falsely vote”:

“I think it’s a good idea to protect the integrity of the voting process and prevent theft of personal identification,” Branstad, also a Republican, said during his weekly news conference Monday.

Under Schultz’s proposal, voters would be required to present a government- or university-issued photo ID before being allowed to cast a ballot, although it also contains exemptions allowing people without IDs to vote under certain circumstances. The Legislature has taken no formal action on the bill.

We have had efforts in past elections where people falsely vote in an area where they’re not eligible,” Branstad said. “I think it’s important. I do support requiring identification.”

Of course, those “efforts” are conspicuously absent from Iowa’s — or even the U.S.’s — voting history. As Chairman of the State Government Committee Sen. Jeff Danielson (D) noted, “There’s no evidence that voter fraud is a problem in Iowa or has ever affected the outcome of an election.” Indeed, the Brennan Center for Justice noted that someone is statistically more likely to get struck by lightning than commit voter fraud. Even Schultz admitted when he unveiled the bill that “he didn’t know how common voter fraud was in Iowa but said it was important to close potential loopholes.”

What photo ID requirements like this do actually close is the opportunity for a significant number of Americans to use their right to vote. These voter laws disproportionately affect low-income voters, minorities, seniors, and students and could end up disenfranchising more than five million of them. But according to Branstad and Iowa Republicans, this ranks as just another “good idea.”

Justice

Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad’s Push To Close 36 Unemployment Offices Declared Unconstitutional

Earlier this year, the Iowa legislature enacted a budget that shields three dozen state unemployment offices from Gov. Terry Branstad’s (R) desire to close those offices. In response, Branstad used a line-item veto to remove the prohibition on closing these offices from the bill, and proceeded with a plan to shut them down and replace them with a series of computer kiosks. Unfortunately for Branstad, however, this targeted veto was just declared unconstitutional:

The lawsuit contended that a governor cannot redirect money struck through a line-item veto. The lawsuit cites a successful court case in 2004 when Republicans sued Democratic Gov. Tom Vilsack over line-item veto authority.

Polk County Judge Brad McCall agreed, saying that for Branstad’s veto to be valid he must also veto the allocation.

To clarify, the Iowa constitution allows Gov. Branstad to either refuse to take a chunk of money appropriated by the legislature, or to take that money and spend it as the legislature directs him to. Instead, however, Branstad tried to have it both ways by taking the money the state legislature appropriated to keep the 36 unemployment offices open, and then reallocating it to computer kiosks. It remains to be seen whether Branstad will appeal this decision.

Economy

Iowa’s GOP Governor Vetoes Tax Break For The Poor Because It Didn’t Lower Corporate Taxes

Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad (R)

Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad (R) has a curious justification for vetoing a tax break last week for 240,000 Iowa families making $45,000 or less a year: the plan didn’t also include a tax break for corporations. Members of both parties in the Iowa House and Senate agreed to increase the state’s Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), which reduces the amount of income taxes lower-income families owe:

The change would have saved Iowa families an estimated $28.5 million in taxes over two years.

Branstad vetoed that part of the bill writing that it is his desire to approach tax policy in a more comprehensive and holistic manner. [...]

Branstad additionally campaigned last year to slash Iowa’s corporate income tax rate by 50 percent, which he said would attract businesses while costing the state about $200 million a year in lost revenue. That proposal also failed.

Ironically, given Branstad’s fondness for expensive corporate tax breaks, he said he was concerned about the cost of the measure, estimated at $28.5 million a year. Branstad explained that he would only support “an overall tax reduction package that both fits within our sound budgeting principles while reducing those taxes that are impeding our state’s ability to compete for new business and jobs.”

Tim Albrecht, a spokesman for the governor, reiterated that Branstad would have supported the tax break if it had been part of a “larger effort” that included lower taxes for corporations. But since this tax break was only for poor families, Branstad suddenly abandoned his “strong support for tax relief.”

Sen. Joe Bolkcom (D), the chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, points out that the EITC “is the most effective antipoverty program for working families.” Bolkcom said of Branstad’s veto, “He has again shown that he will only consider tax cuts that benefit Iowa’s wealthiest citizens and corporations.” The tax break for working families would have translated into more money for people to spend in Iowa’s economy, but Branstad apparently prefers “huge, unaffordable tax breaks for Wal-Mart and other wealthy out-of-state corporations.”

Branstad has the authority to veto individual items in spending measures. He also effectively shut down dozens of unemployment offices by vetoing language that would have prohibited the Iowa Workforce Development from closing 37 unemployment field offices across the state.

Economy

Iowa Republicans ‘Excited’ To Start Their Own Union-Busting Effort Tonight

Gov. Terry Branstad (R-IA)

Wisconsin’s dispute over a union-busting bill seems to have reached an impasse, with the New York Times reporting that talks between Gov. Scott Walker (R-WI) and the state senate’s Democrats have broken down. Meanwhile, Ohio passed its union-busting bill out of the state senate last week, moving it to the Republican-dominated state house.

Another state considering a similar union-busting bill is Iowa, which tonight will hold a public hearing on legislation that would strip the state’s public employees of most of their collective bargaining rights. The bill includes a provision excluding public employees from bargaining over “outsourcing” or working to impose “any restriction” on factors the government may consider in a layoff. And Iowa’s Republicans, including Gov. Terry Branstad (R), are looking forward to their union-busting effort:

“We’re excited about that bill. It addresses a whole lot of different things,” said House Speaker Kraig Paulsen, R-Hiawatha. “We tried to be sensitive to all sides concerned.” [...]

Gov. Terry Branstad said he welcomes the proposed changes to what he called a “dinosaur” law that is creating employee costs that are unsustainable

Branstad claims that he has “no plans to seek an end to [public employees'] collective bargaining rights,” but this bill would do exactly that, as it not only removes key parts of employee compensation from the bargaining process but would allow “free agent” workers to craft their own side agreements with employers, in a more radical version of “right to work.” “[The bill] does gut collective bargaining, which we’ve had for 37 years in Iowa,” said state Rep. Pat Murphy (D).

Other Republican governors have pointed to their state’s deficit in a false attempt to justify their union-busting efforts. But Iowa can’t even do that. “”The state of Iowa is not broke. We are in the black. We will have a $252 million ending balance in June and we have $650 million in our reserve accounts in case the economy falters,” explained state senator Pat Jochum (D). Iowa’s pension system is currently 81.2 percent funded, putting it on much better footing than most of the pension systems in the country.

Iowa Republicans have already planned to cut back on their universal pre-school program in order to reduce corporate taxes. Passing their union-busting legislation would be just one more way in which they are taking advantage of national economic anxiety to push for changes that are purely ideological and anti-labor.

Climate Progress

Heartland Grows New Crop Of Anti-Climate Governor Candidates

The Wonk Room has previously identified seven key U.S. Senate races and fourteen U.S. House races between a vote for climate action and a global warming denier. Today, the Wonk Room highlights four gubernatorial races which could shut down the clean energy revolution in the Midwest. In Iowa, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Wyoming, four Democratic governors who have supported clean energy may be replaced by Republicans who have expressed fealty to big oil. The Republican candidates — Terry Branstad in Iowa, Sen. Sam Brownback in Kansas, Rep. Mary Fallin in Oklahoma, and Matt Mead in Wyoming — hold commanding leads in the polls over their Democratic opponents. The Republicans mock global warming as a conspiracy, doubt that it is caused by manmade pollution, and promote the expansion of the coal and oil industries in their states.

The heartland of America is under extreme threat from the destructive power of global warming, including increasingly frequent catastrophic storms, heat waves, and drought. Furthermore, by denying the opportunity of clean energy jobs, these potential governors risk turning their states into economic wastelands.

IOWA – Terry Branstad
KANSAS – Sam Brownback
OKLAHOMA – Mary Fallin
WYOMING – Matt Mead

IOWA

Terry BranstadFormer governor Terry Branstad is leading Gov. Chet Culver (D-IA) in the race to run Iowa’s government. Remarkably, even though Iowa is increasingly devastated by catastrophic floods, Branstad’s only public policy position on global warming pollution is:

– To “wholeheartedly” support a coal-fired power plant opposed by NASA scientist Jim Hansen because it would emit 5.9 million tons of carbon dioxide each year, and

– To support the construction of a South Dakota oil refinery near the Iowa border that will emit 19 million tons of carbon dioxide each year.

Furthermore, Branstad has attacked Culver’s $875 million flood recovery plan, falsely claiming “it saddled Iowans with excessive debt.”

Read more

Politics

Iowa Gubernatorial Nominee Branstad Opposes Stimulus Money, State Aid Bill

Terry BranstadThough Republicans in Congress voted unanimously against the stimulus bill last year and all but two opposed the state aid bill this month, Republican governors have overwhelmingly supported the measures. Every single governor, Republicans and Democrats alike, accepted stimulus money from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. Similarly, 16 of the 23 Republican governors, including such conservative stalwarts as Bob McDonnell of Virginia and Haley Barbour of Mississippi, called on Congress to pass the state aid bill and help relieve state budget shortfalls.

Today, Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R-MN) expressed doubt about whether he will accept money from a bill he has criticized as a “reckless spending spree.” Last week, ThinkProgress spoke with former Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad (R), who sounded a similar note as Pawlenty. Branstad, who is currently running for his old job, kowtowed to extremists in his party:

TP: They just passed that big state aid bill out in Washington. I was curious how you felt about that.

BRANSTAD: I have real concerns because there’s strings attached to that. And it’s one-time money, so it doesn’t solve the problem, it just puts it off a year. And it increases the federal debt. I don’t think they should have done it. I’m not sure, we’ve got to see what the strings are and whether or not we should even accept it or not.

TP: Also, I’m just curious with the stimulus bill. If you were governor do you think you’d be requesting some of that money to help out Iowans or is that not so much what you’re interested in?

BRANSTAD: Well, it just depends whether there’s strings that are attached and whatever. I don’t think they should have done it. I’m against it. But I don’t know that I want to penalize the state. But I also, in some cases, some states are turning it down because the strings that are attached are just going to make the situation worse. So I think you’ve got to analyze it and really determine whether to take part of it or don’t take it or whatever.

Listen here:

Iowa has already received over $1 billion in stimulus funds and is scheduled to receive at least $1 billion more over the next two years. That money saved 10,000 Iowa jobs in the last quarter alone. The state aid bill provides an additional $225 million in funding for Iowa, without which the state would have faced a $121 million budget shortfall. Branstad may oppose using federal money to save Iowa jobs and balance the state budget, but he has yet to give specifics about how he would do so without stimulus funds.

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