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Think Progress

February 9, 2009

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, and Ryan Powers

ECONOMY

Dueling Recovery Bills

Last week, the Senate took up the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, an economic stimulus package aimed at boosting the tanking economy. The legislation that emerged from the Senate debate, which is up for a procedural vote today, is substantively different from that which passed the House in January. The differences are due to an effort by a group of "centrist" senators -- the 'gang of moderates' -- to rein in what they characterized as unnecessary spending in the House version. Led by Sens. Ben Nelson (D-NE) and Susan Collins (R-ME), the gang crafted a compromise that cut spending in the bill by about $100 billion, reducing the total cost to about $780 billion. However, that total does not factor in two new tax breaks that the Senate added -- one for new car purchases and another for home-buyers. With these tax breaks added in, the estimated cost stands at about $827 billion. As a result of the "compromise," though, the Senate bill is now inferior to the House's in terms of stimulative effect. More than two-thirds of the cuts are in areas that would provide the most effective stimulus. As the Center for American Progress' Michael Ettlinger wrote, "there are other smaller cuts in the remaining third that make little sense if the goal is, in fact, to weed out the least effective stimulus provisions."

THE DIFFERENCE IS JOBS: The unemployment rate is currently at 7.6 percent, after employers shed 598,000 jobs in a "brutal January." This number jumps to 13.9 percent when the underemployed -- those working part-time who want to be working full-time, or those who have simply given up on finding a job -- are factored in. Over the last three months, 1.8 million jobs have disappeared. As the Center for American Progress' Heather Boushey pointed out, "the United States has not seen job losses of this magnitude over a three month period since 1945." This highlights why job creation in the stimulus package is critical, yet the Senate bill would create between 430,000 and 538,000 fewer jobs than its House counterpart. Of course, as economist Brad Delong noted, "relative to the alternative of no bill we do boost employment in America a year from now by on the order of 3 million." But with potential job losses expected to continue "for another year nationwide" those jobs would mean a lot, and the stimulus should be aimed at those areas in which it can do the most good.

OUT -- STATE AID AND EDUCATION: Of the $83 billion cut by the Nelson-Collins gang, $40 billion of it was for state stabilization funding. This is incredibly important funding meant for "helping states and localities avoid wide-scale cuts in services and layoffs of public employees." There are 46 states facing budget shortfalls this year or next, and at least 41 states anticipate shortfalls for fiscal 2010 and beyond. Economist Mark Zandi calculated that every dollar invested in aid to the states has a return of $1.36. Also, this funding moves into the economy quickly, as "states that receive a check from the federal government will quickly pass on the money to workers, vendors, and program beneficiaries." A second area hard-hit by the gang's compromise is education (which the state funding would also have gone towards); the Senate bill "cuts all $16 billion from the original bill for K-12 school construction, [and] trims more than $1 billion from Head Start programs for youngsters." But as the Center on Budget Policy and Priorities pointed out, "thirty-four states have cut education or proposed such cuts because they face massive, devastating budget deficits in this recession." These cuts come in the form of per-pupil expenditure, school meal programs, and teacher layoffs. As one school board president said, "We are at that point where we have no other place to go (for cuts)." This money would have had immediate effects "in terms of forestalling layoffs and really preventing the symptoms of recession from exacerbating the economic woes that we're currently experiencing," CAP's Raegen Miller noted.

IN -- INEFFECTIVE TAX BREAKS: While state aid and education were cut, added into the bill in the Senate were tax breaks that will do little to jumpstart the economy.  The Senate found just $18 billion in tax breaks it was willing to cut, but among these was a scaling back of the Child Tax Credit expansion proposed by the House. The House bill eliminates the income floor for the credit in 2009 and 2010, opening it up to the working poor who are most apt to spend it; the Senate set an income floor of $8,100. The Senate also included patching the Alternative Minimum Tax, which takes place every year and can hardly be called stimulative. Finally, the Senate included a $15,000 home-buyers credit, in an attempt to address the housing crisis. While it is undeniable that a fix for housing must be found, this tax credit is not it. It is not likely to incentivize anyone who was not going to purchase a home anyway, and as Dean Baker noted, the credit will "cost more than promised." Furthermore, it can go to any home-buyer, "the vast majority of whom will be people who already own a home. If a person buys a home, but sells their current home, it has no net effect on the market." In the end, it will amount to little more than a "house-flipping subsidy."

UNDER THE RADAR

MEDIA -- GOP EMBRACES RUSH LIMBAUGH AS ITS 'UNOFFICIAL LEADER': The Los Angeles Times wrote yesterday that "Rush Limbaugh has his grip on the GOP microphone," having become "the politically wounded party's unofficial leader." Limbaugh -- who said he hopes that Barack Obama will fail -- has seen his "prominence and political import" increased. One example of Limbaugh's influence, unmentioned in the article, is the fact that he coined the messaging strategy for stimulus opponents, referring to the economic recovery package as "porkulus." On his Jan. 23 radio show, Limbaugh said that "it's not a stimulus, it's a porkulus." On his Jan. 28 show, Limbaugh introduced the term to Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA), saying "You could call this the 'porkulus.'" "Right. ... It is porkulus. That's a great description," Cantor replied. Limbaugh cynically wrote in the Wall Street Journal last month, "This 'porkulus' bill is designed to repair the Democratic Party's power losses from the 1990s forward, and to cement the party's majority power for decades." Eventually, Limbaugh's phrase trickled down to Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), who has also embraced the term. Bloomberg's Hans Nichols wrote recently, "Every superhero needs an archenemy. President Barack Obama has yet to find one." Rush Limbaugh seems eager to acquire that role.

TERRORISM -- RIGHT-WING SENATORS FAIL TO NOTICE 50-DAY HUNGER STRIKE AT GITMO: Recently, Sens. James Inhofe (R-OK), David Vitter (R-LA), and other Senate Republicans went on a fact-finding mission to Guantanamo Bay to rally opposition to President Obama's executive order closing the detention facility within one year. Upon returning, Inhofe praised the conditions of the prison, saying it is "the only complex in the world that can safely and humanely hold these individuals." Vitter agreed, telling right-wing radio host Laura Ingraham last week, "There is no abuse issue. There is no torture issue." He even claimed there were "specific cases that prove" that detainees would prefer to stay at Guantanamo than return to their home countries. But according to a Guantanamo military lawyer, detainees are still being "beaten" and are living in horrific conditions. Yesterday, the Guardian reported that Lt. Col. Yvonne Bradley is demanding the release of her client, who is "dying" because of his treatment. "Fifty of its 260 detainees are on hunger strike and, say witnesses, are being strapped to chairs and force-fed, with those who resist being beaten. At least 20 are described as being so unhealthy they are on a 'critical list', according to Bradley." None of the senators, however, reported on these disturbing -- and worsening -- conditions. In fact, Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC) praised the facility for being "in keeping with our Nation's highest ideals," adding, "If anyone receives mistreatment at Guantanamo, it is the guard force."

ADMINISTRATION -- FEMA DENIES ASSISTANCE TO 650,000 HURRICANE IKE VICTIMS: Victims of Hurricane Ike, which hit southeastern Texas in September 2008, have had a hard time receiving assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Roughly 650,000 applicants have been denied any assistance so far. Lawyers for many of the people found ineligible are saying that "unqualified or poorly trained FEMA inspectors" are to be blamed for FEMA's failure to help the region. According to Mark J. Grandich, who represents a homeowner whose request for aid had been denied, FEMA merely "hired a bunch of people, basically just anybody, and put them on the street after one day of training."  The 2,360 inspectors hired by FEMA appeared to have been "motivated to work quickly because they are paid a flat fee per inspection and must cover most of their own expenses." One former FEMA inspector said that the agency's training program is "a scam" and that FEMA's "goal is to get as many inspections as they can done every day to keep their heads above water." FEMA argues that many people "do not understand the limits of the agency's help" and that the agency attempts to make only the most uninhabitable homes "safe, secure and functional."


THINK FAST

Congressional Republicans are "so far ahead of where we thought we'd be at this time," according to Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI), who is thrilled his party is "standing on our core principles" against President Obama's recovery plan. Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA) agreed, saying that what "will give us a shot in the arm going forward is that we are standing up on principle and just saying no."

Sixty-seven percent of Americans approve of how President Obama "has handled the government's efforts to pass an economic stimulus bill," according to a new Gallup poll. Forty-eight percent approve of how congressional Democrats have acted while only 31 percent approve the performance by congressional Republicans. Fifty-eight percent disapprove of the GOP's actions.

In a Washington Post op-ed this morning, Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA) says that he is "supporting the economic stimulus package" because "the country cannot afford not to take action. "Failure to act will leave the United States facing a far deeper crisis in three or six months," writes Specter. "By then the cost of action will be much greater -- or it may be too late."

Experts say that the Senate's "proposed $15,000 tax credit for home buyers would boost the ailing housing market but do little to help low-income people who need it most." The provision focuses on high-income households rather than "on the lowest-income people and people really teetering on the edge of homelessness," said Linda Couch, deputy director of the National Low Income Housing Coalition.

"In an effort to build support for his signature economic stimulus plan," Obama will travel to Elkart, IN today. With a 15.3 percent jobless rate, Elkhart leads the nation in unemployment. "Shovel-ready" projects could create 2,000 jobs in the area.

The New Deal "planted three billion trees, constructed 46,000 bridges, and restored 360 Civil War battlefields. ... More than 65,000 buildings...rose from the hands of previously unemployed Americans." But hundreds of these structures are now "being demolished or threatened with destruction, mourned or fought over by small groups of citizens in a new national movement to save the architecture of the New Deal."

Nissan will "slash 20,000 jobs and post its first loss in nine years as the global recession cripples car demand."

And finally: In his new book "The Gamble," Thomas Ricks recounts an example of the "loathing" Donald Rumsfeld generated. Shortly after he left the Pentagon, Rumsfeld visited the upscale D.C. restaurant Buck's Fishing and Camping. Chef-owner Carole Greenwood told her co-owner, James Alefantis, that she wanted Rumsfeld kicked out: "I'm not serving a war criminal in my restaurant." Greenwood eventually relented, "but only on the condition that someone else cook Rumsfeld’s meal."



GOOD NEWS

"The whistleblower site Wikileaks has released more than a billion dollars of Congressional Research Service Reports," which are not circulated to the public. The release marks "a new day for public transparency in government."

BLOG WATCH

THINK PROGRESS: New poll: Just 47 percent of Afghans express favorable view of the United States.

WONK ROOM: Conservatives resurrect Sen. John McCain's (R-AZ) health care rhetoric.

YGLESIAS: Sens. Ben Nelson (D-NE) and Susan Collins (R-ME) slash education funding in economic recovery package while touting the bills' boost to education.

THE TREATMENT: An aide to President Obama says that health care will be a "central focus" in the budget.

STATE WATCH

ALASKA: Alaska Senate votes to find Gov. Sarah Palin's (R) husband, Todd, and nine Palin aides in contempt in the "Troopergate" scandal. 

ILLINOIS: Roughly 65,000 gallons of oil sludge contaminates a three-mile section of a local river.

EDUCATION: The recession has created a "growing wave" of homeless students.

DAILY GRILL

"If anyone receives mistreatment at Guantanamo, it is the guard force."
-- Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC), 2/2/09

VERSUS

"Fifty of [Guantanamo's] 260 detainees are on hunger strike and, say witnesses, are being strapped to chairs and force-fed, with those who resist being beaten."
-- Guardian, 2/8/09


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