Archive for the ‘Democrats’ Category

Ken Calvert: The Democratic agenda is financially punishing working families – OCRegister

FILE President Joe Biden speaks from the Treaty Room in the White House on April 14, 2021/ (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, Pool, File)

Democrats in Washington, D.C. and Sacramento love to talk about their support for the working class. Unfortunately for the working class, talk is cheap. Democrat policies? Anything but cheap.

President Joe Biden has repeatedly pledged to oppose any tax increase on households making less than $400,000 per year. Meanwhile, Gov. Gavin Newsom proclaimed that we dont leave our workers behind during his State of the State Address last year.

These Democrats have a funny way of protecting working families.

California has some of the highest electricity costs of any state in the country. Last year, Gov. Newsom signed into law Assembly Bill 205, requiring Californias private electric utilities to implement a new income-based fee and rate structure. Those utilities just proposed a new income-based monthly fee topping out at $85 a month for Southern California Edison customers. The fee, which is designed to pay for fixed utility costs, is in addition to the rate-based charges families are used to that are determined by their monthly energy usage.

These new income-based fees are not just for the wealthy households earning between $69,000 and $180,000 will see a fixed cost fee of $51 on their bill every month, and those earning more than $180,000 will pay $85 a month. According to Edison, half of their ratepayers will see lower overall bills under this new fee and rate structure which means the other half of the ratepayers will not be so fortunate. And if you think this income-based billing is going to stop with your electric bill, then you clearly havent been paying attention to Democrats in Sacramento.

Back in Washington, the Biden Administration has rolled out a proposal that performs mental gymnastics to get around the Presidents pro-middle class pledge. The proposal is so outrageous, it punishes Americans for having a high credit score. Thats right, under this new stupefying policy, individuals and families with high credit scores will pay a new fee on their monthly mortgage. If thats not bad enough, the revenue from these new fees will be given to people with bad credit scores to lower their mortgage payments.

Homeowners with good credit who put 20% down when purchasing their home will be paying the highest fees. This is a dangerous policy targeting responsible families. Bear in mind that we already have significant first-time, veteran, and other homebuyer assistance programs that do not include President Bidens punitive shakedown of fiscally-sound homeowners.

Your electric and mortgage bills are just the start. Next year, the IRS will begin implementing a new tax law passed by Democrats and signed into law by President Biden that will require massive amounts of new reporting requirements.

Under the Democrats law, any online transactions totaling more than $600 annually will have to be reported to the IRS. Money received through online platforms like Venmo, PayPal, Square, and CashApp totaling $600 or more will trigger the reporting requirement. If you couldnt make it to that Taylor Swift concert or Lakers game and sell your tickets via a website like StubHub or Ticketmaster, and receive payments of more than $600, it will also trigger an IRS reporting requirement.

This sure doesnt sound like a tax law designed to protect middle-class families making less than $400,000 a year, does it?

The Biden Administration will tell you that despite the new law, it doesnt actually change what income is taxable. Yet the Biden Administration also just passed a law to hire 87,000 new IRS agents who will no doubt be assigned to auditing regular Americans who are simply trying to keep ahead of devastating inflation rates impacting every sector of the economy.

Innovation has always been an American strength. Usually thats good news, but in this case Democrats in Washington and Sacramento are innovating new ways to drain working families of their hard-earned money. Make no mistake, when they realize that these tactics are not enough to implement their big spending dreams, they will continue to find ways to take more and more of middle-class Americans paychecks.

Ken Calvert serves in the U.S. House of Representatives.

The rest is here:
Ken Calvert: The Democratic agenda is financially punishing working families - OCRegister

Florida Democrats fight back after end of the legislative session – WMNF

May 8, 2023 by Josh Holton and filed under Abortion Rights, Florida History, Gun Control, LGBT, News and Public Affairs.

Hundreds of protesters marched in Tampa this Sunday to protest of some of the many controversial bills passed during the Florida legislative session. Many organizations are standing up against legislation that they say makes the state more dangerous and less free for Floridians.

The recently completed legislative session included bans on gender affirming care for minors, limits on diversity initiatives at universities, and attacks on Disney. Florida Democrats came out to say they are fighting back. Democratic State House Representative Dianne Hart said the new law to limit abortions after the 6th week of pregnancy might only be the beginning if DeSantis has his way.

You think six weeks is bad? Next year well be looking at zero! To ban abortions altogether. Next year youll be looking at open carry; put your gun on your hip and dont worry about it. You dont need a permit, so everybody will be armed. You all saw what happened yesterday.

Only a day earlier a shooter killed 8 and wounded 7 people in Allen, Texas, prompting President Biden to urge an assault weapons ban. But DeSantis signed a law in April eliminating the need for Floridians to acquire a permit to carry a concealed firearm. Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried was arrested in April for joining a protest against the 6-week abortion ban, saying these issues are important to all people.

These are issues that transcend partisan politics, but we are the ones, Democrats, who are going to fight back and make sure that the people are represented.

Sarah Parker is the president of Womens Voices of Southwest Florida and was one of 10 others arrested in April for protesting the abortion ban.

We did not expect Senator Book and Nikki Fried to get arrested. They didnt expect him to throw oxygen on the ember that we call the Democratic Party. They did not expect activists, Gen Z, and Millennials, to now sit at that table. And we are doing it. We are going to be Ron DeSantis worst nightmare.

According to the Florida Division of Elections fewer than half of state registered Democratic Party members voted in 2022, so Parker called on organizers to work to redefine the state Democratic Party and encourage greater turnout in the next election. For WMNF News Im Josh Holton.

Tags: abortion, Democrat, Dianne Hart, Florida Democratic Party, gun control, LGBTQ, Nikki Fried, sarah parker

Go here to read the rest:
Florida Democrats fight back after end of the legislative session - WMNF

Don Walton: Lincoln mayor’s reelection a rare win for Nebraska … – Lincoln Journal Star

The reelection of Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird by a comfortable margin establishes Lincoln as the current Democratic hot spot in the state.

But Omaha remains highly competitive for Democrats and the anchor for a potential and highly prized 2024 Democratic presidential electoral vote from the 2nd Congressional District.

Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird speaks with supporters as she makes her rounds around an election night party for Democrats on Tuesday at the DelRay Ballroom.

The Omaha-dominated district handed an electoral vote to Barack Obama in 2008 and to Joe Biden in 2020, but Republicans continue to build on their string of victories in the 2nd District House race, thanks to Sarpy County voters, while maintaining control of the Omaha mayor's office despite a Democratic voter registration advantage within the city.

West of Lincoln and outside the two big cities, the elephant roams.

And the elephant rules.

With a sole exception in Thurston County in northeastern Nebraska, which joins Douglas County (Omaha) as the only counties in the state with a Democratic voter registration majority.

People are also reading

The county tally in Nebraska dramatically displays overwhelming Republican dominance, 91 to 2.

Rural Nebraskans are strongly Republican and that can be seen even in recent figures in Lancaster County: Lincoln voter registration, 66,589 Republicans, 64,141 Democrats; rural registration in the county, 13,194 Republicans, 5,181 Democrats.

But there also are a hefty 46,965 registered non-partisans in Lancaster County.

All those Lancaster County figures contained in a recent breakdown are edging up slowly.

Out west in Grant County, it's 411 Republicans and 24 lonely Democrats.

In Blaine County in north-central Nebraska, it's 302 to 20.

Statewide: 600,389 Republicans; 337,232 Democrats.

* * *

It's never over until it's over.

Circulating among state senators at the end of the week were newspaper stories about the North Carolina Legislature's recent enactment of a 12-week abortion ban with exceptions for rape, incest and serious fetal anomalies.

Supporters of new abortion restrictions in Nebraska already have identified a bill with priority designation still sitting in a legislative committee that conceivably could be transformed into an abortion restriction bill and scooted to the floor of the Legislature for action if it can gain a spot on the agenda.

Sen. Merv Riepe of Ralston, a Republican whose decision not to vote on a filibuster-ending cloture motion effectively killed a bill that would have reduced Nebraska's current abortion ban from 20 weeks to about six weeks, has made it clear that "I'm a 12-weeker, period."

When his earlier non-vote blocked the bill, it disappeared from the agenda.

With just 17 days left on the legislative calendar and a filibuster-delayed collection of priority bills backed up for this session's tedious journey through hours and hours of so-called debate and three floor votes, it's unclear whether a new abortion proposal would even be considered.

But there are indications that there might be an effort.

* * *

This has been a legislative session unlike any other at least in modern times.

It's the year of the eternal filibuster and that is going to trigger substantial changes in the legislative rules for the 2024 session.

Freshman senators who have been questioning their colleagues about what they have gotten into, with some of them raising doubts as to whether they want to stay, are being assured by some of the veterans that this will be one and done.

There's a rules battle looming over the horizon.

* * *

* Carson Vaughan, who grew up in the Sandhills and graduated from UNL, has crafted a wondrously written tribute to Mari Sandoz with a focus on Lincoln, published in The New York Times.

* Frank Daley Jr. is retiring as executive director of the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission in August. He has been director since 1999.

* How did we get here? $350 million for a new state prison coupled with hold-the-line budgeting for the University of Nebraska.

* Dramatic changes in Lincoln's skyline are in the works with what would be an even more impressive view opening up as motorists prepare to enter the city after leaving Interstate 80 west. The entry already features Memorial Stadium, Haymarket Park and Pinnacle Bank Arena, all gradually emerging into view on both sides of the highway.

* Sen. Megan Hunt's switch from registered Democrat to registered non-partisan won't change the way she votes or her advocacy on legislative issues, but it's a fit for both her independent nature and Nebraska's unique non-partisan Legislature.

* Nebraska ranked fourth among the states in a U.S. News and World Report survey of state performance on fundamental issues like health care and education, the state's economy, public safety and fiscal stability of state government.

* Baseball's new rules have rescued MLB from some of the tyranny of analytics; this fan was reluctant, but all is good.

Reach the writer at 402-473-7248 or dwalton@journalstar.com.

On Twitter @LJSdon

Get local news delivered to your inbox!

Read the original post:
Don Walton: Lincoln mayor's reelection a rare win for Nebraska ... - Lincoln Journal Star

A Black Woman To Lead South Carolina Democratic Party For The First Time – Yahoo News

For the first time in the states history, the South Carolina Democratic Party will be led by a Black woman. Christale Spain, a longtime Democratic Party leader and organizer and an ally of longtime SC Rep. Jim Clyburn, takes over leadership of the party in South Carolina just as the state becomes more prominent than ever in the presidential election cycle.

Spain was elected as Chairperson of the South Carolina Democratic Party on Saturday as part of the partys state convention, winning a commanding victory against two opponents. Spain won with the support of prominent Democrats such as Clyburn, in whose office she worked for two years. She has also worked to mobilize Black voters in the state through a variety of outreach initiatives. Spain is additionally connected to other influential figures in Washington. She served as the South Carolina state director for Bernie Sanders 2016 presidential campaign, and played the same role for Cory Bookers presidential campaign in 2020. One of Bookers top aides recently called Spain one of the most talented political operatives in the country.

Spain is becoming the leader of the South Carolina Democrats just as the state continues to play a huge role in the partys presidential race. During the primary season for the 2020 presidential race, Joe Biden stakes his fortunes on winning South Carolina, then the fourth Democratic primary contest, after being defeated by Bernie Sanders in the New Hampshire primary as well as the Iowa and Nevada caucuses. Biden, who also fell behind candidates like progressive Senator Elizabeth Warren and Millennial Pete Buttigieg, counted on the older, largely Black Democratic electorate in South Carolina to vote for him as a more establishment candidate; Clyburn backed this move, and Biden easily won South Carolina. Spain is largely backed by this same establishment, which her opponent Brandon Upson, unsuccessfully tried to use against her by arguing that the state needed new blood leading its Democratic Party. After Spain won, however, Upson urged unity in the party and for SC Democrats to focus on defeating Republicans.

As President, Biden has supported moving up the South Carolina Democratic primary, which will now be the first Democratic presidential race beginning in 2024. This solidifies the states importance in Democratic politics. Additionally, Spains new position puts her amongst several SC politicians who have gained growing importance in recent years. SC Democrat Jaime Harrison, a former party chairperson in the state, ran a strong campaign against incumbent Senator Lindsey Graham in 2020, and Harrison was later appointed chairperson of the Democratic National Committee. On the other side of the aisle, two South Carolina Republicans will likely compete to win the GOP presidential nomination: former Governor Nikki Haley, who launched her campaign earlier this year, and Tim Scott, the only Black Republican in the US Senate, who is expected to announce a presidential campaign later this year.

With South Carolinas new place as the first Democratic contest of 2024 and its role as home to several key players in the upcoming election, the state will be an extremely important part of the presidential race for both parties. Spain therefore has her work cut out for her guiding her states Democratic Party during thse important times, but her connections and support suggest she will hit the ground running in her new role.

Link:
A Black Woman To Lead South Carolina Democratic Party For The First Time - Yahoo News

Manchin’s ‘playing with fire’ and some Democrats are tired of the … – POLITICO

That surprises me that he wants to repeal it. I think its one of his greatest accomplishments, said Sen. Angus King (I-Maine), a close colleague of Manchins on the Energy Committee, in an interview.

The IRA is far less of a political bright spot for Manchin, whose potential reelection hopes are clouded by growing disapproval ratings in his home state, partly driven by his support for the law. Manchin has yet to announce whether hes running, but a formidable challenger entered the West Virginia Senate race last week GOP Gov. Jim Justice.

Manchins fellow Democrats understand that his reelection could determine whether they retain their slim 51-seat Senate majority in 2024. But they are also growing weary of his attacks against their marquee climate law even if theyve come to expect it and know theres little they can do to change his mind. And his votes against Democratic policies and Biden nominees have already complicated his partys agenda in the 51-49 Senate.

Some Democrats fear that Manchins criticisms will do real damage by confusing the public about one of the laws most debated-provisions: its $7,500 tax credits for electric vehicles. He has accused the Treasury Department of violating the law by flouting strict provisions he wrote designed to force electric vehicles to be made in the U.S. with American-made parts.

When youre Joe Manchin it never hurts to be seen butting heads with the administration, but I think this is genuine umbrage over the fact Congressional intent seems pretty clear, even if the statutory construction left room for Treasury to maneuver, said Liam Donovan, a lobbyist with the firm Bracewell who previously worked for the National Republican Senatorial Committee. And given that he would not have been on board for the bill at all had this been the understanding, it reads as a personal betrayal.

Democrats counter that the administration has been doing its best to balance the IRAs competing goals of lowering the cost of electric vehicles while promoting U.S. manufacturing and jobs.

Fifty of us agree that [boosting electric vehicle deployment] is a priority, Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) said in an interview. The law is what it is. If he doesnt like implementation he can run for president.

Manchin in recent weeks has also joined Republicans in supporting resolutions theyve brought up for a vote disapproving of the administrations energy and environmental policies, most recently on Wednesday when he was the only Democrat to vote with Republicans in overturning an EPA regulation on emissions from heavy-duty trucks.

Manchin also co-sponsored Sen. Rick Scotts (R-Fla.) resolution to undo Bidens suspension of solar power tariffs, which could come up for a vote this week after passing the House on a bipartisan basis Friday.

And Manchin, chair of the Senate Energy Committee, has also expressed his ire with the administration by torpedoing a series of Bidens nominees, including Richard Glick to chair the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Laura Daniel-Davis, Bidens pick for assistant Interior secretary for land and minerals management, and Gigi Sohn as a commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission.

The White House has supported fossil fuel projects that Manchin has backed angering environmentalists including the Willow oil and Alaska LNG projects, as well as the Mountain Valley Pipeline that would deliver natural gas produced in West Virginia.

Manchin did not comment for this article, but his spokesperson Sam Runyon said his objections were because the administration had strayed from the intent of the bill.

President Biden, then-Speaker Pelosi and Majority Leader Schumer were in full agreement with Sen. Manchin that the IRA was an energy security bill and the legislative language is crystal clear, she said. The Administration continues to blatantly violate the law in an effort to replace Congressional intent with their own radical climate agenda that simply didnt, and wouldnt have, passed.

Some Republicans have expressed sympathy for Manchins position.

Is it playing with fire? Sure. Does Joe care? I dont think so, said Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), Manchins frequent legislative partner when she chaired the Energy Committee. Good for him for calling the administration out.

Murkowski noted that the climate law had been seemingly dead for most of last year until Manchins support allowed Democrats to pass it on a party-line vote. The law includes $369 billion in incentives for clean energy and electric vehicles, as well as health measures such as a cap on insulin costs for Medicare recipients.

They made a deal with him, Murkowski said. And it was a hard deal and they wanted his vote, and they got it at some political cost to him and he would admit that. And now [the Biden administration is] trying to rewrite the bill, or interpret in the way they wished they had been able to get it passed. Thats their problem.

Manchin has repeatedly denounced Bidens electric vehicle policies in recent weeks, including by announcing he would support Republican efforts in Congress to overturn EPA auto pollution rules designed to speed up EV adoption. He accused the administration of lying to Americans with false claims about how their manipulation of the market to boost EVs will help American energy security.

He repeated that theme in remarks to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce April 18, saying, I never wanted to give the electric vehicles 75-cents credit let alone $7,500.

Yall broke the law, Manchin later told Bidens Energy secretary, Jennifer Granholm, at a hearing April 20, accusing the administration of liberalizing its rollout of the tax subsidy to stimulate sales of electric vehicles and warning that that approach could send money and jobs to China.

Republicans are eager to pounce on Democratic dissension over how the administration is executing the climate law. GOP lawmakers, who unanimously opposed the law, argue that it spends too much money and say its twin goals quickly weaning the U.S. economy off fossil fuels while reducing reliance on China for clean energy technologies are incoherent.

Maybe hes looked at it [the IRA] more deeply and realized its not what he thought it was, Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, Manchins GOP counterpart from West Virginia, said in an interview. I cant believe he would be that nave. But who knows?

But other Democrats say the administration is carrying out the law that Congress passed.

Almost all of us who voted for this legislation and contributed to it wanted to supercharge EV sales, said Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) in an interview. Clearly Sen. Manchin did not. He thought he was maybe sabotaging the EV industry. And its driving him nuts that its not working out that way.

Negotiations over the EV tax credit were fraught from the start.

After Manchin rejected Democrats climate and social spending agenda last July when it was packaged as Build Back Better Manchin and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer quietly resumed negotiations. The electric vehicle tax credits were among the last items they haggled over.

During the preceding months, Manchin repeatedly criticized Democrats interest in subsidizing electric vehicle sales, calling the idea ludicrous.

Manchin, whose state is home to a non-unionized Toyota manufacturing facility, also derided Democrats original proposal to offer an extra incentive for electric vehicles made by union workers. He called the proposal not American. The version that became law dropped it.

Manchin, Schumer and their staffs finally forged a compromise on electric vehicles in secret talks, unveiling the renamed Inflation Reduction Act on July 27. It offered a credit of up to $7,500 for electric vehicles, but only for those meeting a thicket of stringent requirements on what countries their battery minerals and components come from. Those requirements have since sparked a major trade feud with European governments whose companies are blocked from the incentives.

He [Manchin] does not support the credit at all. And really when he wrote it, he hoped nobody could use it. And so hes disappointed there are a few vehicles that can use it, said Sen. Debbie Stabenow, a Democrat from auto-industry-heavy Michigan.

Heinrich said a clash with Manchin over implementation was inevitable given the different ways Manchin and the White House characterized the end product, which Manchin sees as an energy security measure designed to shore up energy production of all types. Biden is using the law to push a rapid transition away from fossil fuels in the name of combating climate change.

Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), chair of the House Progressive Caucus, downplayed the idea of a rift within the Democratic Party.

The majority of [the IRA] we are all together on, Jayapal said. I do think he [Manchin] believes we should have a renewable energy transition. We probably have different ideas for what the transition looks like and how we get there.

But the law didnt leave the Biden administration much wiggle room in developing regulations to fit its complex domestic content restrictions, energy experts say. Manchin contends the administration is abusing the leeway it got. Hes especially taken umbrage at the Treasurys initial three-month delay in issuing rules, which until mid-April allowed electric vehicles to qualify for the tax credit without meeting any domestic sourcing requirements.

When Treasury finally announced the guidance in March, it offered some olive branches to automakers worried about the rules being overly restrictive, but still left the majority of EVs on the market ineligible for the credit.

Even so, Manchin cried foul, calling the Treasury rules too loose in allowing foreign suppliers to share in the tax credit bounty.

He took particular aim at the Biden administrations classification of certain foils, powders and other components used in the batteries. By classifying the powders as critical minerals, rather than battery components, Treasury avoided placing even more severe restrictions on vehicles eligible for the tax credit.

Manchin has also criticized Treasury for allowing leased vehicles to qualify for full tax breaks as commercial vehicles, a workaround that skirts some restrictions in the law.

And a crucial piece of guidance is still missing: clarity on which companies vehicles could be barred from receiving the credit because of their connections to China. The Treasury Department says it expects to release that provision later this year.

Manchin very clearly wanted to put deglobalization ahead of decarbonization, said Kevin Book, managing director of ClearView Energy Partners, a research group. He wants this stuff made here and if it slows down the transition so be it. Treasury is leaning toward trying to transition faster.

Most Democrats, though, disagree that Biden has ignored congressional intent. They point to projections showing the IRA has already been a boon to the countrys clean energy jobs: It has prompted at least $243 billion in investments in battery plants, electric vehicles factories and other green energy projects since Biden signed the law in August.

Since Biden became president, there have been at least $95 billion in private-sector investments announced across the U.S. clean vehicle and battery supply chain, according to the Department of Energy, including $45 billion since the IRA passed.

Heinrich said he knows it may be politically expedient for Manchin to argue the IRA is not taking shape as he intended.

But the reality is this legislation is working, and this administration is trying to manage both what we need to do long term, which is make all of this stuff here, but also build the runway to get there, Heinrich said.

CORRECTION: A previous version of this report incorrectly quoted Kevin Book.

More here:
Manchin's 'playing with fire' and some Democrats are tired of the ... - POLITICO