by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, and Ryan Powers
Redistributing To The Rich
Seizing
on comments Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) made
to "Joe
the Plumber," Sen. John McCain
(R-AZ) campaign has argued that Obama's economic
policies
would redistribute the wealth of hard working Americans
and provide
"just
another government giveaway to others." "The
redistribution of
wealth is the last thing America needs right now. The
goal is not to redistribute
wealth, but to create it," McCain said
during an event in Manchester, NH. But as the Tax Policy
Center points out, "today's tax code
is riddled with examples of government 'taking' money from one
taxpayer
and giving
it to another." "[F]or decades,
government has used the tax code for
much
more than raising money. These days, redistributing tax revenues are
the principal
way government encourages people to do what it wants
and
discourages them from doing what it doesn't," TPC wrote. In
fact, during the last eight years, President Bush's regressive economic
policies have
effectively redistributed the nation's wealth to
the richest
Americans. According to a recent
report released by the
Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), "the
BUSH REDISTRIBUTED TO THE WEALTHY: An analysis by the Center for American Progress Action Fund shows that President Bush's economic policies have "redistributed wealth to the richest Americans and left the majority with stagnating wages and declining household incomes." Looking at the effects of the first three Bush tax cuts, the Congressional Budget Office concluded that "the percentage by which the effective tax rate was cut for high-income families was nearly twice the rate cut for those in the middle of the income spectrum." Meanwhile, the administration's failure to raise the minimum wage coupled with its poor enforcement of federal wage and hour laws, trade agreements, and union rights further undermined the economic security of middle and lower-income Americans. Data prepared by the IRS from tax returns filed during the post-9/11 recovery (2002 to 2006) reveals that household income grew by $863 billion during the period. "The 15,000 families at the top of the income scale saw their annual incomes go from about $15 million a year to nearly $30 million," accounting for more than 25 percent of all of the growth in income for the entire country. The remaining 1.7 million families in the top 1 percent of households accounted for nearly another 50 percent. But while the "top 10 percent of families accounted for 95.3 percent of the nation's income growth between 2002 and 2006," the average real income for families in the bottom 90 percent of households increased by about $300 to a little less than $30,700."
MCCAIN WOULD
DOUBLE DOWN: McCain claims that
"in this country, we
believe in
spreading opportunity." But his
Bush-like economic policies would
only further
MOBILITY THREATENED:
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Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA) has been "orchestrating meetings with lobbyists and lawmakers from both parties to craft legislation that would greet the new president with a plan to provide affordable medical coverage to all Americans, a measure he has called 'the cause of my life.'"
THINK
PROGRESS: Former Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan uses the
Bush excuse: Financial crisis was "broader than anything I could have
imagined."
WONK
ROOM: Sen. Norm Coleman's (R-MN)
plan for economic recovery: A
variety of spending freezes.
YGLESIAS:
Idaho, carbon hero.
TAPPED:
When it comes to unemployment in America, the levies are breaking.
CALIFORNIA:
Prop. 2 ballot initiative gives farm animals "the opportunity to spread
their hooves and claws, rather than being confined to restrictive
cages."
NEW
JERSEY: "Without a large
infusion of federal aid to struggling
homeowners, New Jersey could see its rapidly growing foreclosure
problem spread from its cities to its more affluent suburban areas."
TEXAS:
"Texans earn
more than they did eight years ago, but their health insurance premiums
have jumped six times faster than their wages and gone up faster than
the national average."
"Just and open societies protect and rely on the freedom of the press.
That freedom is enshrined in the First Amendment to the United States
Constitution, because freedom of speech is integral to a free society."
-- White House statement on World Press Freedom Day, 5/1/08
VERSUS
"On a list of 173 entries...the United States comes in only at number
36."
-- San Francisco Chronicle, 10/23/08,
on the annual Press Freedom Index
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