Author Topic: The Non-Contract With America  (Read 3244 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

sirs

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 27078
    • View Profile
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
The Non-Contract With America
« on: October 29, 2006, 01:11:59 AM »
What Democrats aren't saying about their agenda, so we will.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

A joke in Washington these days is that the only thing that can save the Republicans on Election Day is the Democrats. House Speaker-in-waiting Nancy Pelosi seems to get this joke, because with few exceptions she's kept her Members tight-lipped and unspecific: As New York Senator Chuck Schumer has put it, why take the focus off the GOP?

This is in notable contrast to 1994, when the Gingrich Republicans ended a 40-year Democratic House majority by laying out a 10-item agenda known as the Contract with America. What Democrats are campaigning on this year is a Non-Contract with America--mostly generalities about "helping the middle class" and "ending the corruption in Washington."

As a campaign strategy, this may well pay off. But if they do win, Democrats will have to fill their campaign vacuum with something, and the best clue to what that would be is what they've already proposed. We've taken some time to inspect these policy priorities and thought we'd share a few of the highlights, if that's the right word. (Warning: Keep sharp objects away from drug-company and Wal-Mart shareholders.)

Tax increases. The Bush tax cuts expire in 2010, and any chance that they'll be made permanent will vanish with a Democratic Congress. The question is whether Democrats will try to raise taxes even sooner. Most Democrats voted against the Bush tax cuts, but this week Ms. Pelosi said on CNBC's "Kudlow & Co." that "Democrats like tax cuts. We support middle-class tax cuts."

The same isn't true, however, for the "investor" tax cuts of 2003 that coincided with the acceleration of the current expansion. Ms. Pelosi says reversing these tax cuts "at the high end" would be "an earlier resort." This would raise the top income and dividend tax rate back to 39.6% from 35%, and the capital-gains rate back to 20% from 15%, substantially raising the cost of new investment in the United States. Economist John Rutledge estimates that raising the dividend rate alone would reduce the value of the S&P 500 stocks by between 5% and 8.5%, roughly a $500 to $700 billion decline in the wealth of the 52% of American households that own stock.

"Paygo budgeting." President Bush would no doubt promise to veto any direct tax increase, but having the power of the purse would give Democrats plenty of leverage. What if they framed the political choice as a tax increase on "the rich" versus funding the war on terror?

Democrats have also pledged to restore so-called pay-as-you-go budget rules, which sound like a restraint on budget deficits but in practice restrain only tax cuts. They don't apply to the growth of current entitlement programs or to domestic discretionary spending, only to tax cuts or new entitlements. This formula would probably take us back to the 1980s, when Democrats insisted on higher domestic spending while fighting Ronald Reagan's increases in defense spending.

Health-care regulation. Big Pharma and private insurers, watch out. Michigan's John Dingell, who would run the Energy and Commerce Committee, has co-sponsored the "Patients Before Profits Act" that would gut funding for the new Medicare Advantage plans that are proving so popular with seniors. Instead, he and the other Democrats who run health-care panels want to direct all seniors into a single government-run Medicare drug plan. Another proposal from top Democrats, the Medicare for All Act, would make all Americans, of any age, eligible for Medicare and pay for it with a new 1.7% payroll tax on workers and 7% on employers.

Ms. Pelosi has also pledged to pass, in her first 100 hours as Speaker, legislation to require the government to "negotiate lower drug prices." That's a euphemism for imposing price controls on new medicines, which can take as much as $800 million in research and development to bring to market. The actor Michael J. Fox is getting headlines for his ads in favor of Democrats who support stem-cell research, but price controls would do far more to delay the introduction of new treatments for Alzheimer's, Parkinson's or cancer.

The union label. AFL-CIO headquarters would be rocking with hope once again. A job-killing hike in the minimum wage, to $7.25 from $5.15, would whisk through Congress, and we'd expect that Mr. Bush would sign it.

But another top priority for Democrats is the Employee Free Choice Act, which has at least 215 co-sponsors in the House and 44 in the Senate. This would allow labor to turn workplaces into union shops without an election or secret ballot. Unions would merely have to gather signatures from a majority of workers at a work site, which means labor organizers could strong-arm employees who opposed such a petition. This would almost surely pass the House.

Democrats have also moved well to the left on trade since the Bill Clinton-Nafta era. Mr. Bush's trade-promotion authority, allowing up-or-down votes on trade deals without amendment, expires next July, and there's little chance House Democrats would extend it. The entire Democratic leadership opposed free trade with tiny Oman and with Central America, so deals now in the works with Vietnam and other countries would also be long shots. Sorry, Robert Rubin.

Energy. The Pelosi Democrats favor a "windfall" profits tax on oil companies and a virtual moratorium on drilling for more domestic oil in Alaska and on the outer continental shelf (where the U.S. may have more energy than Saudi Arabia). These policies would make the U.S. more dependent on foreign oil. There would also be an effort to pass new, and higher, fuel-mileage mandates, which would make things tougher on what's left of Detroit. And lobbying would begin for the U.S. to sign the Kyoto Protocol on global warming and to subsidize, even more than Republicans already have, ethanol and other "alternative" fuels.

We could go on, in particular in the regulatory arena, where agencies would be under greater pressure to restrict mergers, among other things. But you get the idea. A Democratic triumph would produce a major shift in the national policy debate, and we can understand why Ms. Pelosi isn't plastering most of this agenda on billboards around the country. Not everything would become law, to be sure, especially if Mr. Bush were finally willing to use his veto pen. However, elections have consequences, and we thought our readers might like to know about them before November 7.


http://www.opinionjournal.com/weekend/hottopic/?id=110009166
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Mucho

  • Guest
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #1 on: October 29, 2006, 01:08:36 PM »
Only the rightWing Street Journal and their wealthy ilk seems to think there is anything wrong with the Dems :

http://www.latimes.com/news/columnists/la-op-chait29oct29,1,5491427.column?coll=la-news-columns
JONATHAN CHAIT

Running against the boogeyman
Jonathan Chait: Party of ideas? Not the GOP
Jonathan Chait

October 29, 2006

WHEN Republicans explain their strategy for the upcoming election, the two phrases they always use are "referendum election" and "choice election" — and the latter is how they want to frame this year's vote.

A referendum election is one in which voters make their decision on the basis of whether the party in power deserves to stay there. From the Republicans' point of view, that's very bad because almost everybody believes they have failed miserably.

A choice election, on the other hand, is one in which voters weigh the two parties against each other. That kind of election gives the Republicans a fighting chance. The subtext of a choice election is: We may have screwed everything up, but the other party is worse. That's how President Bush won reelection.

In principle, the Republicans are right about this. Democracy is a process of compromises and imperfect choices. Asking the voters to compare the two sides is the right thing to do. The trouble is, that isn't really what the Republicans want to do at all.

How do I know this? Because the Democrats running for the House of Representatives actually have an agenda. Republicans aren't saying why the Democratic agenda is wrong, or why their own is better. They're just ignoring it.

If you're like most people, you probably have no idea what that agenda is. Let me list it:

•  Put new rules in place to break the link between lobbyists and legislation.

•  Enact all the recommendations made by the 9/11 commission.

•  Raise the federal minimum wage to $7.25 an hour.

•  Cut the interest rate on federally supported student loans in half.

•  Allow the government to negotiate directly with pharmaceutical companies for lower drug prices for Medicare patients.

•  Broaden the types of stem cell research allowed with federal funds.

•  Impose pay-as-you-go budget rules, requiring that new entitlement spending or tax cuts be offset with entitlement spending cuts or tax hikes.

Republicans disagree with all these items. Indeed, the reason these items are on the Democratic agenda is that Republicans in Congress have blocked them from coming up for a vote. So where's the Republican rebuttal?

Now, I'm not saying that the GOP needs to hold some Oxford-style intellectual debate. But shouldn't the party offer some rebuttal?

You know, "Raising the minimum wage would kill millions of jobs," or, "Pay-as-you-go budget rules will require tax hikes or cuts in your Medicare benefits," or, "Why should we waste billions of dollars preventing terrorist attacks that haven't even happened yet?" These are just some off-the-cuff suggestions. I'm sure Republican political consultants could do better.

My point is, we're not even getting a debate about a caricature of the Democratic position, let alone the actual one. Instead, we're getting things like this: GOP Rep. John Hostettler of Indiana is running an ad warning that if Democrats take power and California Democrat Nancy Pelosi becomes House speaker, she "will then put in motion her radical plan to advance the homosexual agenda, led by Barney Frank, reprimanded by the House after paying for sex with a man who ran a gay brothel out of Congressman Frank's home."

What is the homosexual agenda? The ad does not say. (Apparently it involves raising the minimum wage and cutting the interest rate on government-backed student loans. I can just see it if the Democrats win — all those gay Wal-Mart employees, cackling with glee as they use their fat $7.25-an-hour salaries to pay off their suddenly puny college debts.)

Which is my point. Republicans don't want an actual choice election, they want to run against a mythological Democratic Party so frightening that the voters overlook all the GOP's failures.

Not all the Republican campaigns are as vicious and mindless as Hostettler's. But nearly all of those campaigns are trying to run against a boogeyman. They raise the specter of a radical Democratic agenda, but they refuse to say what they don't like about that agenda. And there's a good reason for that: It's popular.






The_Professor

  • Guest
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #2 on: October 29, 2006, 01:31:20 PM »
Well, let's look at a few of these:

"But another top priority for Democrats is the Employee Free Choice Act, which has at least 215 co-sponsors in the House and 44 in the Senate. This would allow labor to turn workplaces into union shops without an election or secret ballot."

You're kidding me, right? Are we living in a dictatrship? This simply shouldn't be allowed to happen!

"Energy. The Pelosi Democrats favor a "windfall" profits tax on oil companies and a virtual moratorium on drilling for more domestic oil in Alaska and on the outer continental shelf (where the U.S. may have more energy than Saudi Arabia). These policies would make the U.S. more dependent on foreign oil."

Why punish firms, energy-related or otherwise, from being profitable? Plus, they would just move their HQs offshore. Dumb idea. As far as offshore drilling, fine, but enact severe fines if any spills happen. Really severe. Besides, this is only a stopgap measure: REALLY INVEST in alternative energy sources: geothermal, solar, etc. Rewards R&D in this arena and businesses and consumers who use these.



As far as the other artticle, how about compromising:

"•  Raise the federal minimum wage to $7.25 an hour.

•  Cut the interest rate on federally supported student loans in half."

I am not in favor of the first, but let's compromise and implement this if you exempt really small businesses as I am afraid it mgiht put them out of business. The second issue should be implemented immediately!

What do you say?
« Last Edit: October 29, 2006, 02:05:01 PM by The_Professor »

sirs

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 27078
    • View Profile
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #3 on: October 29, 2006, 01:48:29 PM »
Well, let's look at a few of these:

"But another top priority for Democrats is the Employee Free Choice Act, which has at least 215 co-sponsors in the House and 44 in the Senate. This would allow labor to turn workplaces into union shops without an election or secret ballot."

You're kidding me, right? Are we living in a dictatrship? This simply shouldn't be allowed to happen!

"Energy. The Pelosi Democrats favor a "windfall" profits tax on oil companies and a virtual moratorium on drilling for more domestic oil in Alaska and on the outer continental shelf (where the U.S. may have more energy than Saudi Arabia). These policies would make the U.S. more dependent on foreign oil."

Why punish firms, energy-related or otherwise, from being profitable? Plus, they would just move their HQs offshore. Dumb idea. As far as offshore drilling, fine, but enact severe fines if any spills happen. Really severe. Besides, this is only a stopgap measure: REALLY INVEST in alrernative energy sources: geothermal, solar, etc. Rewards R&D in this arena and businesses and consumers who use these.

As far as the opther artticle, how about compromising:
•  Raise the federal minimum wage to $7.25 an hour.
•  Cut the interest rate on federally supported student loans in half."

I a not in favro of the first, but let's compromise and implement this if you exempt really small businesses as I am afraid it mgiht put thme out of business. The second issue should be implemented immediately!

What do you say?

Well, I say you're on track Professor.  Both in your criticisms & compromise advocation.  I completely agree about the student loan interest cut, but the minimum wage suggestion doesn't fly with me, even in compromise suggestion.  Our Economy is surging.  The Fed revenue being brought in via taxes is also surging.  If Congress can start holding down spending and/or Bush finds his veto pen, the deficit will be cleaned up even faster than it currently is.  1 of the worst things we can do now is to throw monkey wrenches at the economy.  Whether its raising income taxes, implimenting profit taxes, or increasing the minimum wage, any of those will have a direct effect at significantly slowing down the economy. 

I've read enough papers by economics professors to realize that the minimum wage issue is largely a red herring.  It sounds good, especially to a certin voting constituency that the left would like to expolit, but its effects on both the economy and to small business owners (who make up the vast majority of who hires the very constituents that this issue is aimed at) are hit the hardest.  There should not be "a living wage".  Minimum wage is a "start", where unskilled or very little skilled folks can begin working, begin making money, and learn skills to advance.  It should never be considered a starting point to which one should be able to live comfortably at home.  I'd actually advocate that the current minimum wages be decreased, but that'll never happen, so leaving them as is, will have to suffice.  When those folks gain more skills they can advance up their respective employment ladders, or use those skills learned to negotiate with other employers. 

The current system works, and works well.  No need to fiz something that isn't broken.  Especially by the Fed that ususally makes things worse
« Last Edit: October 29, 2006, 02:36:47 PM by sirs »
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

The_Professor

  • Guest
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #4 on: October 29, 2006, 02:07:54 PM »
Look, if you really, I mean REALLy want to help low-wage earners, then instead of raising the minimum wage, pay for continuing education for them so they can obtain the educaiton and/or skills to get better-paying jobs!

sirs

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 27078
    • View Profile
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #5 on: October 29, 2006, 02:48:05 PM »
Look, if you really, I mean REALLy want to help low-wage earners, then instead of raising the minimum wage, pay for continuing education for them so they can obtain the educaiton and/or skills to get better-paying jobs!

Now there's something I could compromise on
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Plane

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 26993
    • View Profile
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #6 on: October 29, 2006, 04:53:43 PM »
Look, if you really, I mean REALLy want to help low-wage earners, then instead of raising the minimum wage, pay for continuing education for them so they can obtain the educaiton and/or skills to get better-paying jobs!


What is the present growth industry ?


What is the best skill to learn ?

Mucho

  • Guest
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #7 on: October 29, 2006, 05:31:13 PM »
Look, if you really, I mean REALLy want to help low-wage earners, then instead of raising the minimum wage, pay for continuing education for them so they can obtain the educaiton and/or skills to get better-paying jobs!


What is the present growth industry ?


What is the best skill to learn ?

The present growth industry is bullshit. Some people call it sales.

The_Professor

  • Guest
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #8 on: October 29, 2006, 05:51:45 PM »
Well, education doesn't hurt!

Report: College degree worth extra $23,000 a year

WASHINGTON (AP) -- How much is a bachelor's degree worth? About $23,000 a year, the government said in a report released Thursday.

That is the average gap in earnings between adults with bachelor's degrees and those with high school diplomas, according to data from the Census Bureau.

College graduates made an average of $51,554 in 2004, the most recent figures available, compared with $28,645 for adults with a high school diploma. High school dropouts earned an average of $19,169 and those with advanced college degrees made an average of $78,093.

"There appear to be strong incentives to get a college degree, given the gaps that we observe," said Lisa Barrow, senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.

The income gap narrowed slightly from five years earlier, when college graduates made nearly twice as much as high school graduates. But the differences remained significant for men and women of every racial and ethnic group.

Eighty-five percent of people 25 and older had at least a high school diploma or the equivalent in 2005, according to the Census Bureau's 2005 Current Population Survey. In 2000, 80 percent had a high school diploma or the equivalent, and a little more than half did in 1970.

Twenty-eight percent had at least a bachelor's degree, compared with about 24 percent in 2000 and 11 percent in 1970.

"I think we've done a very good job of getting individuals into college," said Cecilia Rouse, professor of economics and public affairs at Princeton University. "But we don't fully understand why we don't do as good a job of graduating them."

Chester Finn, president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute in Washington, said too many high school graduates are unprepared to succeed in college.

"If you don't emerge from high school having done at least the equivalent of advanced algebra, you are not going to be ready for college math," Finn said. "You can make similar points about English."

Among the other findings in the report:


Minnesota, Utah, Montana, New Hampshire and Alaska had the highest proportions of adults with at least a high school diploma -- all at about 92 percent.

Texas had the lowest proportion of adults with at least a high school diploma, about 78 percent. It was followed closely by Kentucky and Mississippi.

Connecticut was the state with the highest proportion of adults with at least a bachelor's degree, nearly 37 percent. It was followed closely by Massachusetts, Maryland and New Jersey.

Nearly 47 percent of adults in Washington, D.C., had at least a bachelor's degree.

West Virginia had the lowest proportion of college graduates, at 15 percent. It was followed at the bottom by Arkansas, Kentucky and Louisiana.

Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/10/26/degree.value.ap/index.html 

The_Professor

  • Guest
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #9 on: October 29, 2006, 05:55:50 PM »
Top 10 Best Jobs:

1. Software engineer 2. College professor 3. Financial adviser 4. HR manager 5. Physician assistant
6. Market research 7. Computer IT analyst 8. Real Estate appraiser 9. Pharmacist 10. Psychologist

full article is at http://money.cnn.com/magazines/moneymag/bestjobs/index.html.

Amianthus

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 7574
  • Bring on the flames...
    • View Profile
    • Mario's Home Page
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #10 on: October 29, 2006, 06:10:37 PM »
Top 10 Best Jobs:

1. Software engineer 2. College professor 3. Financial adviser 4. HR manager 5. Physician assistant
6. Market research 7. Computer IT analyst 8. Real Estate appraiser 9. Pharmacist 10. Psychologist

full article is at http://money.cnn.com/magazines/moneymag/bestjobs/index.html.

Cross off #1 and #7. Both are dying professions in this country.
Do not anticipate trouble, or worry about what may never happen. Keep in the sunlight. (Benjamin Franklin)

The_Professor

  • Guest
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #11 on: October 29, 2006, 08:30:18 PM »
I disagree. IT is in a resurgence. BTW, that was a recent article, not one dated a while ago.

Why do you say this?

Amianthus

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 7574
  • Bring on the flames...
    • View Profile
    • Mario's Home Page
  • Liked:
  • Likes Given: 0
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #12 on: October 29, 2006, 08:32:51 PM »
Why do you say this?

Relative lack of jobs in my field as compared to last decade. It's been on a downswing since the mid-90s.
Do not anticipate trouble, or worry about what may never happen. Keep in the sunlight. (Benjamin Franklin)

The_Professor

  • Guest
Re: The Non-Contract With America
« Reply #13 on: October 29, 2006, 08:59:35 PM »
Or, has the job market shifted? I see less super techie jobs and more PM jobs.