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Democrats divided over how to deal with rising inflation | TheHill – The Hill

Democrats efforts to combat inflation are stuck in limbo because of internal divisions over a range of proposals aimed at lowering the cost of gas, health care and child care.

The latest idea that some Democrats are rallying around is a proposed tax on the windfall profits of major oil companies that would raise an estimated $45 billion to be returned to consumers in the form of energy rebates.

Senate Majority Leader Charles SchumerChuck SchumerA movement is underway to ban lawmakers from trading stocks in office Biden signs .5 trillion government funding bill with Ukraine aid Bottom line MORE (D-N.Y.) highlighted oil companies profits on the Senate floor Thursday and announced that oil and gas company executives will be called to testify about why they are buying back stocks instead of keeping prices lower for average Americans.

It is nothing short of repugnant for oil companies to be touting what are truly dizzying profit margins, while soaking American families with these exorbitant prices, Schumer said.

But Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee Chairman Joe ManchinJoe ManchinEnergy & Environment Ruling blocking climate accounting metric halted GOP pushes to add Russian oil ban into trade bill The Hill's Morning Report - Presented by Facebook - What now after Zelensky's speech? MORE (W.Va.), the biggest swing vote in the Democratic caucus, isnt yet sold on the idea, and Republicans say they think theres little chance hed vote "yes."

Manchin told The Hill Thursday that he wants to have a hearing on the idea to find out the facts.

Other key Democrats, such as Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chairman Tom CarperThomas (Tom) Richard CarperLobbying world Democrats divided over proposal to suspend federal gas tax Graham signals he's a likely 'no' on Biden SCOTUS pick MORE (Del.) and Senate Commerce Committee Chairwoman Maria CantwellMaria Elaine CantwellTech advocates criticize FCC nomination delays Democrats hit limits with Lujn's absence Hillicon Valley Presented by Cisco Media industry divided over Big Tech bill MORE (Wash.), havent taken a position on the proposal either.

Even if the measure, which is sponsored by Sen. Sheldon WhitehouseSheldon WhitehouseGas prices lead to tensions within Democratic Party Senate unanimously approves making daylight saving time permanent Carole King to discuss forest fires before Oversight subcommittee MORE (D-R.I.), got the support of all 50 members of the Democratic caucus, it has no chance of getting 10 Republicans to overcome a filibuster, and theres been no serious talk of putting it in a budget reconciliation package to circumvent GOP opposition.

Sen. Lisa MurkowskiLisa Ann MurkowskiSenate panel advances Biden Fed nominees to confirmation votes Biden signs reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act The Hill's Morning Report - Presented by Facebook - All eyes on Zelensky today MORE (Alaska), the ranking Republican on the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, predicted not a single Republican would vote for the move and questioned whether even Manchin would back it.

I cant see any Republican supporting it. I dont see that it gets any traction and for lots of good reasons. If you want to send a positive signal to producers that they might want to be doing more, the worst thing you can do is threaten them with a windfall tax, she said.

Manchin told The Hill that hes more interested in spurring oil producers to bring more product to market.

I just want people to produce the products we need to get us through this crisis, he said.

Another proposal to soften the impact of rising gas prices suspending the 18.4 cent per gallon federal gas tax until next January has also divided Democratic senators.

The idea is spearheaded by two vulnerable Democrats facing tough reelection races, Sens. Mark KellyMark KellyMark Kelly says White House should characterize Putin as a war criminal Senate votes to nix mask mandate for public transportation Bipartisan group of senators press Mayorkas on US readiness for Russian cyberthreat MORE (Ariz.) and Maggie HassanMargaret (Maggie) HassanSenate votes to nix mask mandate for public transportation Democrats divided over proposal to suspend federal gas tax Equilibrium/Sustainability Biden presses ahead, bans energy imports MORE (N.H.), but its getting pushback from colleagues who are worried about cutting off a key source of revenue for the Highway Trust Fund.

We have for as long as I can remember ... embraced the principle that those who use roads, highways and bridges have an opportunity to help pay for them. We are not even coming close to paying for the roads, highways and bridges that we need, Carper told The Hill last week.

Other members of the Democratic caucus such as Sen. Angus KingAngus KingBipartisan group of senators press Mayorkas on US readiness for Russian cyberthreat Democrats divided over proposal to suspend federal gas tax Live coverage - Zelensky thinks Russia will talk; 6,000 Russian troops dead MORE (I-Maine) havent taken a position yet on the gas tax holiday but wonder aloud how to replace lost revenue to fund highways and bridges after Congress passed a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure package last year.

Democrats also remain divided over the core elements of President BidenJoe BidenRepublican senators introduce bill to ban Russian uranium imports Energy & Environment Ruling blocking climate accounting metric halted Fauci says officials need more than .5B for COVID-19 response MOREs Build Back Better agenda, which the White House argues would help fight inflation by lowering families costs.

Biden told lawmakers during his first State of the Union address: I have a better plan to fight inflation. Lower your costs, not your wages.

The president called on Congress to make permanent the subsidies for health care premiums Congress enacted last year through the American Rescue Plan and enact proposals to fight climate change that he said would cut energy costs for families by an average of $500 a year.

He also called for federal subsidies to cut the cost of child care and access to pre-kindergarten for every 3- and 4-year-old.

All of these will lower costs, Biden declared.

But Manchin walked away from the speech unconvinced.

Ive never found out that you can lower costs by spending more, he said.

The following day, Manchin sketched out a proposal to build a package around tax reform, prescription drug reform and a group of measures to combat climate change. He left out expanded child care, home health care for seniors and the disabled, the child tax credit and other social spending initiatives.

Manchin also proposed setting aside half the revenue raised from tax reform and prescription drug reform to reduce the deficit and fight inflation.

More liberal Democrats would be happy to spend that money to fight inflation if it means spending it on programs to reduce families costs, but theres not much appetite for paying down the debt when they have a list of higher social spending priorities.

Senate Democrats acknowledge their internal divisions over how to combat inflation, but they argue that at least theyre putting forward ideas and criticize Republicans for just complaining about rising prices from the sidelines.

While many on the other side of the aisle have spent a lot of time giving floor speeches and presenting floor charts about rising costs, where are their actual proposals? We dont hear what they do to solve the problems, Schumer said last month.

Republicans should step up and say what their plan is to fight inflation, not just pointing fingers, he added.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellGOP talking point could turn to Biden's 'underwhelming' Russia response The Hill's Morning Report - Presented by Facebook - What now after Zelensky's speech? Capito to make Senate GOP leadership bid MORE (R-Ky.) has told colleagues he wont release a legislative agenda before the midterm elections outlining what Republicans would do if they won back control of the Senate.

Republicans have since responded by calling for more access to oil and gas drilling on public lands, reauthorizing the Keystone XL pipeline and other proposals to spur domestic energy production and reduce fuel costs.

Were producing 1.4 million barrels [of oil] less a day than we were right before the pandemic, Sen. John BarrassoJohn Anthony BarrassoRepublican senators introduce bill to ban Russian uranium imports Capito to make Senate GOP leadership bid Manchin delays vote on Interior nominee, citing energy crisis MORE (R-Wyo.) told reporters Tuesday.

One inflation-fighting idea that Democrats are completely unified behind is the proposal negotiated last year to reduce the cost of many prescription drugs. The deal would cap out-of-pocket drug expenses for seniors at $2,000 and set a cap on the price of insulin at $35 a month.

It would also give the government limited authority under Medicare to negotiate lower prices for the 10 most expensive drugs.

Democrats, however, havent decided whether they will stick with that deal or try to craft something more expansive to give the federal government more power to drive down drug costs.

Manchin this month proposed modeling Medicare and Medicaid prescription drug programs on the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The organization that does the best job is the VA, the veterans administration gets some of the lowest prices. Maybe we should look at them, he told reporters after Bidens speech.

The prescription drug proposal remains stalled as Democrats debate whether it should be broadened and the strategy for passing it.

At last weeks Senate Democratic retreat, members discussed moving the proposal under regular order in an attempt to secure 10 Republican votes to get past a filibuster.

The other option would be to move it under the special budget reconciliation rules, which allow the majority party to pass major legislation with 51 votes. But the problem with this path is theres no consensus among Democrats about what else to include in the reconciliation package.

Progressives such as Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chairwoman Patty MurrayPatricia (Patty) Lynn MurrayOvernight Health Care White House steps up COVID money warnings Senate panel advances pandemic preparedness bill on bipartisan vote Five COVID-19 challenges on the two-year anniversary of the pandemic MORE (D-Wash.) say they're not giving up on including legislation to expand access to child care in the reconciliation bill.

I still think that child care is one of the most critical things we can do to help people lower their costs and take a barrier away so they can go back to work and help our economy, she said.

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Democrats divided over how to deal with rising inflation | TheHill - The Hill

How Democrats alienated the woman who helped them win the House – POLITICO

Today, Playbook co-author Rachael Bade sits down with Murphy to talk about how the Democratic House leaderships insistence on absolute party unity is fracturing the Dems and putting their congressional majority at risk. A transcribed excerpt from that conversation is below, edited for length and readability.

Rachael Bade: You shocked everyone in Washington, including John Mica, when you ousted him. The DCCC after that started to look to you and what you did in this race, talking about national security, about pocketbook issues, as a sort of playbook to replicate in 2018 when they were trying to flip the House. They ended up recruiting a lot of women who had a very similar mold. You worked at the Pentagon. People like Reps. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.), Abigail Spanberger (D-Va.), folks who were in the CIA, who served in the military, mothers who went onto defeat Republicans in long-held Republican districts, flipped the House by 40 seats. Again, not talking about former President Donald Trump at all, so it was definitely something that rocked Washington.

One thing I thought was interesting about you in particular is you got here, right away. You were seeing results with sort of what you tried to do. Even as a member in the minority in 2017 and 2018 when Republicans controlled everything, you found a way to get a major accomplishment, which is the repeal of the Dickey Amendment. Talk to us a little bit about what that was, how you made a personal appeal to Trump at the time, and that was sort of what got it over the line.

Rep. Stephanie Murphy: Because I had decided to run for Congress, motivated by the desire to change gun safety laws in this country, I thought to myself, What is the most impactful but least likely to receive resistance thing we could move forward? I decided that lifting the 22-year ban on gun safety research was something that we could probably all get around. I mean, everybody has the right to have different political policy approaches to addressing the issue, but lets all have the same set of facts. And so after the Parkland shooting, the president invited members of the Senate and the House to the White House. This was the beginning of his televised meetings, which

Bade: [Laughs] I remember those.

Murphy: Right?

Bade: Televised negotiations. A first for Washington.

Murphy: Exactly. We were all sort of surprised when the media didnt leave and the cameras kept rolling. I was the most junior person sitting at this table and so I was the last to speak. I made my pitch to him, you know, that this is an easy thing to do. We just had to strike a few words and it was something that among all the ideas, this was something I thought we could get done. And it would be important because people want to see us getting something done.

And then after the meeting, my staff had printed out one of these little cards with really simple language, a couple bullet points explaining the proposal I had. They were like, See if you can get him to tweet about it. So I wait until everybody left and I walked up to the president and I handed him the card. I said, You know, if you support this idea, itd be great if you would tweet about it, because remember this was when we were legislating by tweet.

Bade: Yes.

Murphy: And he took the card from me and I saw that he had another card from a senator that had just pictures on it. I thought, Gosh, she outdid me. And then on my way out of that meeting, I stopped and spoke to Vice President Mike Pence. Pence said to me, Of all the ideas that were discussed today, I think we could live with yours.

Bade: So you had success initially doing something that a lot of people in the minority cannot do or are not able to do when the other party controls Washington, which is to get something repealed, a priority of yours. You eventually found a seat on the Ways and Means Committee, which is a huge deal. Obviously, one of the most powerful committees in Congress.

What were some initial frustrations that you ran into when you came here? Was there something in particular that was a rude awakening for you about whether [it was] things being controlled at the top, or enforcing party discipline? What did you see that started to frustrate you?

Murphy: I think in Washington, instead of having substantive policy conversations and negotiations, oftentimes, when theres disagreement, people go immediately to maligning your motivations. So Ill take, for example, Kates Law, which was a bill that would have stricter enforcement rules for people who were multiple offenders of violating immigration rules. Anyways, when it came to Kates Law, I believe in immigration and comprehensive immigration reform and the ability for people to immigrate to the United States in a legal way. But I also believe in law and order and ensuring that we hold people who commit crimes accountable.

I was one of a few Democrats who voted for Kates Law, including my local former sheriff, Rep. Val Demings (D-Fla.). She also voted for it. I think it was a bill that people saw as a law and order kind of bill. And the immigrant groups immediately went to Youre anti-immigrant. But look at me. Im a refugee. Im an immigrant. Im not anti-immigrant. I found that they were maligning my motivations as opposed to trying to seek to understand my intentions and to understand the policy concerns I had. We had one meeting that got so heated and passionate that the nun who was there had to stand up and ask everybody to settle down, calm down the hostilities. I mean, thank God for that.

Bade: Did these groups end up coming after you and spending against you? Or was it more just out there, them saying things about, Stephanie Murphy is against immigrants or immigration? How else did it manifest itself beyond just these groups coming at you, angry about that vote?

Murphy: Well, it wasnt just that vote. It became what I discovered to be a trend, that a lot of these outside groups that purport to represent a specific interest are just an extension of leadership. Instead of purely focusing on their issue area, they bleed into just advocating for whatever Democratic leadership wants. And its true on the Republican side, too.

For example, the labor unions. The infrastructure bill was one of the most historic job-creating bills for labor. And instead of [being] focused on the bill that would create jobs today for their members, they were focused on carrying out the Democratic leaderships approach to the two bills. I think thats a real tragedy because my dad used to belong in a union and I would imagine that if he didnt see his union leadership advocating for a job today, hed wonder why he should reup his card.

Bade: Youre specifically referring to this fight that happened last year about tying the Build Back Better with the infrastructure bill? Labor groups who you say would have 100 percent been on board with infrastructure, saying, Lets not pass this now until this other bill is passed, which is something the leadership wanted at the time. So you believe, a lot of these outside groups, that this stuff is sanctioned by the higher-ups here in Congress?

Murphy: I think so.

Bade: What makes you think that?

Murphy: Because labor didnt start whipping the infrastructure bill until three months after it had passed the Senate. Until the very last minute, they were waiting. I think there are smoke signals that go up at some point and then when they start whipping, then you know leadership is serious about putting a bill on the floor and having it pass.

I can give you another example. Lets take the environmental groups and their role in this. The infrastructure bill had historic investments in climate. Its the reason why when it passed, we got $1.1 billion for the Everglades. So it had significant investments in climate. We had environmental groups that were calling us before the legislation text for the Build Back Better Act had been put out, calling us saying, If you dont support that, we are going to delist you. We wont support you. We wont endorse you. And when you ask them back, Well, whats in the Build Back Better Act that you are so supportive of, they couldnt define it specifically because nobody had seen the text. But we had the text for the infrastructure bill and not a peep out of them advocating for that.

So I think some of these groups have lost their orientation to the issues that their members are supporting them for. If I give money to an environmental group, I hope that they would advocate to get environmental provisions done as opposed to engaging in the power play of Democratic leadership strategy on how they think they can get these two bills across the finish line.

Bade: I want to go more into this sort of Build Back Better bipartisan infrastructure bill connection and your role in that. But just before that, it seems like Democrats, for a long time, sort of boasted about having a big tent and wanting to have voices from all different sides of the spectrum, whether you were progressive or moderate.

Obviously, you being leader of the Blue Dogs, coming from a more centrist background and advocating for your district, which is more centrist, do you feel like that was sort of acceptable for a time when you were here in Washington and just got progressively worse recently? Or was it always bad from the beginning and sort of a shock to the system?

Murphy: So my first term, I was front line and we had flipped so few seats in 16. I think we flipped six seats in 2016. We were in the minority so it mattered less to leadership whether I voted my district or voted party. So there was a lot more tolerance for, Do what you need to do to hold your seat and come back because were trying to build towards majority.

I think in this term and the last two terms with us being in the majority, that tolerance eroded a bit. Its unfortunate because I think in order for us as Democrats to hold the majority, you have to be able to win in seats like mine and in redder seats. That means you have to cut your members a little bit of leeway to vote their district. This march toward party unity is going to be detrimental to our ability to lead the agenda for this country. And the alternative is really not great. The Republican Party is starting to feel more like a cult of personality than it is a political party. Where are the Reagan conservatives? I dont want to hand this country and the agenda over to a party thats trying to dismantle democracy. But I also dont want to hand my party over to the faction that wants to dismantle capitalism. I think both of those forces are dangerous and detrimental to this country.

Bade: Its almost like by leaning more further to the left, and sort of purging members like you or pushing you guys out or making you feel like you need to retire, that it makes more likely that Republicans will be the ones who win and that the ultimate Democratic agenda long-term suffers. Is that what you say?

Murphy: Yeah. In this term with the fight over infrastructure and BBBA, we had Democratic groups spending millions of dollars against moderate members. I told those groups, For every dollar that you spend against me, its going to take ten to repair that. If you look at some of the other moderates, last year, in an off year, they had kind of on-year October types of spending done against them, both from the Republican and the Democratic side. Why as Democrats we would take money that we need to reserve for the on year to help win and grow the majority, why we would spend that money against our own members is really baffling.

Bade: Lets go more into that BBB and BIF connection because you were really from the beginning out front in terms of saying, Weve got to be realistic about how we are going to pay for this. What do the pay-fors look like? What are we going to prioritize? We have to pass the same bill through the House and the Senate.

Talk a little bit about your role in that. Specifically, there was a moment where you had to tell President Joe Biden no when he asked you to vote for something, specifically the budget to get this process started. That was, I believe, a tense conversation and it didnt go the way the White House expected. Usually when the president leans on a member, they expect the member to flip. And the next day, you release an op-ed saying you are not voting for this. Tell us about that moment and what was going through your head, how that exchange went, and what you were trying to do.

Murphy: You have to understand that my North Star for my entire time in Congress is how to get a bill across the finish line and signed into law. When we were going into this process with the infrastructure bill being passed out of the Senate, it felt like a historic opportunity for us to do just what the administration had promised America, which is to govern in a competent, bipartisan way and get results.

I had always felt that when the Senate passed that infrastructure bill, the House should have taken it up immediately and passed it. So I was really dismayed when the bill was connected to the Build Back Better Act, which had not yet been written. And you remember, it was a stutter step. It was connected and then it wasnt connected, and it was connected and then it wasnt. Then finally, they settled on connecting the two things. And I always believe you vote on a bill on its merits. And if you have to tie one bill to another, then you have to wonder about whats in that bill that you cant pass on a standalone.

I felt from the start that was a failed strategy. I also felt like you cant promise rainbows and unicorns when you know that you dont have the votes for it. Because the difference between rainbows and unicorns and political reality is going to be disappointment and anger. And thats what we saw.

So I began expressing my concern. I always try to give leadership plenty of advance notice, even if Im going to disagree. I had written that op-ed but I was sitting on it because I was hopeful that I could have these conversations not in public, that we could have these conversations privately, and we could adjust course. When I realized that they had chosen this strategy that I just really didnt think we had the votes to get there, I put out the op-ed, kind of laying out where I stood on this issue publicly.

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How Democrats alienated the woman who helped them win the House - POLITICO

Nine House Democrats Test Positive for Covid After Late-Night Voting and Retreat – The New York Times

WASHINGTON At least nine House Democrats have announced in the last five days that they tested positive for the coronavirus, with more than half of those cases emerging after lawmakers attended a party retreat last week in Philadelphia.

It is unclear what drove the wave of cases or where the representatives had been infected. But members of the House spent hours on the floor without masks for votes that stretched late into the night last Wednesday before Democrats boarded buses to travel to their gathering.

The infections offered a jarring reminder that, even as top officials seek to pivot away from strict restrictions and encourage Americans to learn to live with the coronavirus, the pandemic rages on. The White House announced on Tuesday that Doug Emhoff, the husband of Vice President Kamala Harris, had tested positive for the virus.

The uptick was all the more striking given that Democrats, including members of Congress and President Bidens team, have generally been far more supportive of strict precautions against the virus, while Republicans have been vocal opponents of mask mandates and other measures, arguing that they are excessive and an encroachment on personal freedom.

Still, even as reports of the infections circulated in Washington and cases continued to spike globally, there was little indication that officials at the White House or in Congress would reimpose a series of precautions that they have just begun to roll back. It reflects decisions across the country, where leaders are dropping pandemic-era restrictions and mandates.

The White House announced on Tuesday that public tours would resume in April, after being suspended at the start of the pandemic. At the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue, senior lawmakers and officials on Capitol Hill are discussing plans to reopen the building to tourists, according to aides briefed on the discussions, after House Democrats moved this month to lift a mask mandate in their chamber.

Fully vaccinated lawmakers will not be required to wear a mask on Wednesday, as members of the House and the Senate gather in a joint session for a virtual address by President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine. (Unvaccinated lawmakers will have to wear a mask, though it is unclear how rigorously that will be enforced.)

Representatives Jared Golden of Maine, Joe Neguse of Colorado and Andy Kim of New Jersey announced within about an hour of one another on Tuesday morning that they had tested positive for the coronavirus. Mr. Neguse attended the retreat along with four others who reported testing positive in recent days: Representatives Madeleine Dean of Pennsylvania, Zoe Lofgren of California, Kim Schrier of Washington and Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut.

Two other House Democrats, Representatives Gerald E. Connolly of Virginia and Peter Welch of Vermont, also said they tested positive on Friday and Monday, respectively. They were not present at the retreat, according to a person in attendance who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss attendance at the private gathering.

Representatives, their staff members and their families were required to take P.C.R. or rapid antigen tests before the event, and attendees were required to take rapid tests in their hotel rooms on Thursday and Friday.

Mr. Biden delivered an in-person speech at the retreat on Friday. The White House press secretary, Jen Psaki, said on Tuesday that because all representatives at the retreat were vaccinated, a change in the presidents behavior would not be warranted according to C.D.C. guidelines. She reiterated that Mr. Biden received a negative test result on Sunday.

Many members of the House were also together on the floor late Wednesday night to pass a major spending bill before they departed for Philadelphia, though it is unclear which members were physically present because remote voting was allowed. Most of the Democrats who tested positive emphasized that they were vaccinated, and said it was a reminder that the pandemic was not yet over.

I caught COVID on 2yr anniversary of pandemic, Mr. Kim wrote on Twitter. Yes I feel miserable. Woke up in middle of night with fever, but Im not scared like I would have been year or 2 ago. That doesnt mean Im not worried.

The outbreak among House Democrats comes amid rising concerns about a surge in coronavirus cases in parts of Europe and Asia, as well as warnings from public health experts that the United States could see a summer or fall surge.

The Democrats were joined on Tuesday by a Republican colleague, Representative Fred Upton of Michigan, who said on Twitter that he was experiencing mild symptoms after a routine test came back positive.

Annie Karni contributed reporting.

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Nine House Democrats Test Positive for Covid After Late-Night Voting and Retreat - The New York Times

Biden’s low approval rating and unpopular GOP proposals are in a race to the bottom – The Dallas Morning News

The Democrats face a tough fight to retain their tenuous hold on the U.S. Senate, but theyve gotten some unexpected help in recent weeks from the Republicans.

The unforced GOP errors include one proposal that would raise taxes on half of all Americans and another to resume the Republican fight to scrap the increasingly popular Affordable Care Act.

Still, President Joe Bidens negative approval rating doesnt augur well for his party. The Senate is currently split 50-50 with Vice President Kamala Harris holding the deciding vote.

Republican recapture of the Senate would likely block Bidens efforts to reshape the federal judiciary and would complicate, for the next two years, most congressional battles over government funding and other issues.

Further raising the stakes is the fact that strategists for both parties and independent analysts expect the GOP to regain the House, despite a better-than-expected Democratic showing in the post-census redrawing of congressional district lines.

More than 30 incumbent House Democrats are retiring, weakening the partys prospects for holding several closely divided districts. Republicans need to gain only five seats to win the majority.

But sweeping congressional triumphs havent always produced similar Senate results. In 2018, when the so-called blue wave enabled the Democrats to flip 41 seats and win the House, Republicans gained two Senate seats.

Ironically, this years most damaging GOP misstep came from the man who is masterminding the partys Senate campaign, Florida Sen. Rick Scott, who chairs the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

Flouting the advice of Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell to focus the GOP campaign on the Biden administrations short-comings, Scott issued an 11-point plan to rescue America that detailed dozens of Republican goals.

Americans deserve to know what we will do when given the chance to govern, declared Scott, who is widely believed to harbor 2024 presidential ambitions. His platform was an extensive conservative wish list that included finishing former President Donald Trumps border wall, eliminating federal programs that can be done locally, enacting term limits for Congress and federal bureaucrats, re-funding the police and stopping left-wing efforts to rig elections.

Buried in a vow to stop socialism and shrink the federal workforce by 25% was a proposal that All Americans should pay some income tax to have skin in the game, even if a small amount. Currently over half of Americans pay no income tax.

That last statement is true. The percentage actually rose to 61% during the pandemic. But it is misleading because it only refers to those Americans paying no federal income taxes: mostly lower income Americans but also millionaires using tax shelters.

Federal income taxes do not include payroll taxes, notes the non-partisan Tax Policy Center. It says only 20% paid neither federal income nor payroll taxes and nearly everyone paid some form of property tax, sales tax, or excise tax.

Scotts proposal, which is reminiscent of a controversial 2012 comment by then-GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney, would raise taxes for half of all Americans. That is a non-starter politically, and Democrats promptly jumped on it.

Republicans Rally Around Their Plan To Raise Taxes and Rip Health Care Away From Millions of Americans, headed a typical Democratic National Committee release, citing Scotts platform and Wisconsin GOP Sen. Ron Johnsons call to repeal Obamacare.

Speaking to the right-wing Breitbart News, the Wisconsin senator, who is seeking a third term this year, said if Republicans win back Congress in 2022 and the White House in 2024, they could actually make good on what we established as our priorities like repealing and replacing Obamacare.

In 2017, they tried and failed to scrap Obamacare when they controlled the White House, the House and Senate. The non-profit Kaiser Family Foundations polling shows the health laws approval among all Americans has risen five points in the past two years to 58%.

While Democrats try to wrap Scotts and Johnsons statements around the GOP, other Republican candidates have been having their troubles.

In North Carolina, a verbal duel broke out between two GOP Senate candidates when former Gov. Pat McCrory accused Rep. Ted Budd of being friendly to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Budd, whom Trump endorsed in the race, called Putin a very intelligent actor, though he also said he was evil.

North Carolina is a state where Democrats hope to flip a GOP seat, along with Pennsylvania and Ohio. In the latter, at least five Republicans are vying in the May 3 primary with four of them seeking Trumps backing.

Meanwhile, Democrats have their own problems, starting with Bidens low job approval.

A recent Georgia poll showed likely Republican nominee Herschel Walker, the former University of Georgia football star recruited by Trump, four points ahead of freshman Sen. Raphael Warnock. Bidens Georgia approval is in the mid-30s.

Handicappers rate at least three other Democratic-held Senate seats as toss-ups: Arizona, where former astronaut Mark Kelly is seeking a full term; Nevada, where Catherine Cortez Masto is seeking re-election; and New Hampshire, where Maggie Hassan seeks a second term after winning by just 1,017 votes in 2016.

Historically, the same party tends to win all close Senate races. The current political climate suggests Democrats face an uphill fight to hold their 50 seats, but, in an unpromising year, a little GOP help could prove a big asset.

Carl P. Leubsdorf is the former Washington bureau chief of The Dallas Morning News and a frequent contributor. Email: carl.p.leubsdorf@gmail.com

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Biden's low approval rating and unpopular GOP proposals are in a race to the bottom - The Dallas Morning News