Archive for the ‘Democrats’ Category

Black Voters Aren’t Turning Out For The Post-Obama Democratic Party – FiveThirtyEight


FiveThirtyEight
Black Voters Aren't Turning Out For The Post-Obama Democratic Party
FiveThirtyEight
The special election in Georgia's 6th Congressional District is the first major test of the Democratic resistance to President Trump. In one sense, the results of the first round in April were promising for the party. Thanks to an impressive Democratic ...
Democrats Face Long Odds of Taking the House Back in 2018Breitbart News
The Fusion PartyNational Review
Democrats view veterans as strong candidates in bid to retake HouseThe Providence Journal
Buffalo News -NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS -Chicago Tribune
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Black Voters Aren't Turning Out For The Post-Obama Democratic Party - FiveThirtyEight

Democrats are outspending Republicans in Georgia 6th race – Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)


Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)
Democrats are outspending Republicans in Georgia 6th race
Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)
In special elections in Kansas and Montana, Democratic candidates spent months waiting for reinforcements in races that national leaders worried were unwinnable. In Georgia, though, the cavalry has arrived. In full force. An Atlanta Journal ...
Opinion: Democrats vs. 'deplorables' in Montana, Georgia's 6th DistrictMyAJC (blog)
Democrats' participation trophy approach to Trump-era electionsRare.us

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Democrats are outspending Republicans in Georgia 6th race - Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)

Democrats Should Propose an Actual ‘Middle Class’ Tax Cut – New York Magazine

Plan ahead. Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

President Trump does not want you to know that the goal of his tax cut for the rich is to cut taxes on the rich. The White House insists that it has no interest in protecting plutocrats pocketbooks from Uncle Sams prying hands. On the contrary, the administration says it designed its tax plan with no objective beyond lightening the burden on middle-income families, simplifying the tax code, and accelerating economic growth.

And if the resulting plan just so happens to redistribute trillions of dollars from the governments coffers to Americas wealthiest families, thats a pure accident or else, a mathematical illusion.

At his confirmation hearing, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin promised that there would be no absolute tax cut for the upper class on his watch. Late last month, Mnuchin allowed that he couldnt be certain that the final tax-reform bill would not cut taxes on wealthy households but he insisted that his number one objective was to provide relief to middle-class families. Trump, for his part, predicted that rich people like him would actually end up paying more under his tax plan, because of all the special-interest loopholes that it would eliminate.

Congressional Republicans have been similarly reluctant to forthrightly champion the upward redistribution of wealth. Instead, Paul Ryan has invited voters to consider how neat it would be if all tax forms were printed on very small pieces of paper.

Of course, the number one objective of all Republican tax plans is to relieve the economic anxiety of Americas wealthiest people. Ryans plan illustrates this fact in stark terms the Speakers bill would ultimately deliver 99.6 percent of its tax cuts to the top one percent. Trumps indifference to the deficit allowed him to cut the middle class in on his heist, but his plan still gifts 50.8 percent of its tax relief to the one percent, and very little to those on the middle of the income ladder or below.

Exactly how much Trumps plan would simplify the tax code is unclear, since it is bereft of even the most basic details. But the lions share of its provisions from the repeal of the estate tax, to the abolition of the alternative minimum tax, to the 15 percent rate on pass-through income would deliver massive gains to Mar-a-Lagos customer base, while neither providing significant relief to the middle class nor advancing the prospects of postcard-size tax returns.

Still, the GOP has been rather successful in disguising its true aims. Nearly 75 percent of Americans oppose tax cuts for the rich. But a plurality of voters still trust Republicans over Democrats on issues of taxation.

In most cases, when a political partys donor base and fringe activists force it to adopt a heinously unpopular policy commitment, said party forfeits the upper hand on the issue in question. There are a lot of plausible explanations for how Republicans have avoided that fate with regard to taxes. But one is that the Democratic Party has utterly failed to articulate a clear, comprehensive alternative. As Voxs Dylan Matthews writes:

Democrats have every reason to make taxes one of their signature issues. Voters want the tax code to be simpler and fairer which is to say, they want the middle class to pay less, the rich to pay more, and for everyone to spend less time on government-mandated paperwork.

Republicans cannot deliver these goods because they are beholden to interest groups that oppose them. The libertarian billionaires who shield the GOP from popular rebuke demand tribute. And those billionaires along with tax-services companies have an investment in keeping Americans confused and overwhelmed at tax time.

As Matthews notes in his (excellent) piece, Democrats could offer taxpayers something simpler than postcard-size returns no returns at all.

Matthews goes on to explain that such a proposal would likely drive a wedge between voters and the GOP.

Democrats have no interest in maintaining Americans antipathy for the IRS, or accelerating the growth of income inequality. The party has plenty of internal disagreements on pocketbook issues. But there is a broad consensus on Team Blue that the tax code should be more progressive. It shouldnt be difficult for Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer to unite most elected Democrats around a tax-reform blueprint.

Such a plan could combine return-free filing with a massive increase in the tax credits for earned income and child care, financed by healthy increases in the taxation of high-income individuals and multi-million-dollar estates. The party could also go more ambitious, and offer a detailed plan for overhauling the tax system with an eye toward simplicity and progressivity. Matthewss post offers a grab bag of neat ideas to mix and match.

So long as the White House is arguing against the status quo, its purported desire for a middle-income tax cut will retain a patina of plausibility. Trumps plan really would cut taxes on many middle-income households it would just cut them on the rich by a far larger margin, thereby jeopardizing funding for welfare programs on which the non-affluent depend.

Democrats are making it easy for Trump to say the second part softly. Right now, Steve Mnuchin doesnt need to explain why the presidents tax plan offers less relief to the middle class than Chuck Schumers does; or why shifting the tax burden from working families to the rich is actually bad for the former; or why its more convenient for taxpayers to fill out short tax forms than it is to file no returns at all.

The donkey party should do everything in its power to frame the tax-reform debate around the GOPs actual priorities. And the best way to do that is to put forward a plan for achieving Trumps purported objectives.

The Democratic proposal doesnt have to be fancy or detailed or comprehensive. It just cant boil down to Americas tax system is already great.

Nor is it for his Republican rival in what is already the most expensive House race in U.S. history.

Once considered a valuable U.S. asset, he was removed from power in 1989 and spent the rest of his life in prison.

Representative Matt Rinaldi says he meant hed shoot in self-defense.

Perhaps, unlike the president, he doesnt care for killer graphics in his intel reports.

Pretty much everything Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell are doing.

In a bipartisan step, Illinois is set to join a growing number of states that sign up eligible voters when they do business with state agencies.

In 1960, overwhelming percentages of those demographics lifted him to the presidency. That coalition is broken today.

Trumps speech was appropriate and sometimes eloquent. But sacrifice extends beyond war.

After an overseas trip in which he played a role well beyond his job description, hes returning home to a much dicier situation.

By neglecting to show voters what a real middle-class tax break looks like, Democrats are making it easier for Trump to sell his giveaway to the rich.

He raged on Twitter Sunday morning about it. But he has engaged in the practice for years.

Before he was a murder victim and the subject of politically motivated conspiracy theories, Seth Rich was a real person with a real life.

She thinks Europe must now be prepared to go it alone.

The two men were stabbed to death after trying to stop a white supremacist from confronting two teens, one of whom was a Muslim wearing a hijab.

Americas exit from the agreement wouldnt doom the 195-country pact, but it would increase the danger the world faces from global warming.

Though Trump is unlikely to agree to the restrictions, it seems his scandal-weary staff would appreciate some legal aid.

Conservative media folk do not have to stop being conservatives to get that their own values and interests are at stake.

The smoke around the Trump administration is thicker than ever.

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Democrats Should Propose an Actual 'Middle Class' Tax Cut - New York Magazine

Green Party joins alliance with New Democrats for minority government in British Columbia – The Seattle Times

The alliance may be setting the stage for a leadership battle in the Pacific Coast province between the New Democrats and B.C. Premier Christy Clark, of the Liberal Party.

British Columbias New Democratic and Green parties announced a four-year alliance aimed at forming the Canadian provinces first minority government in more than six decades.

Green leader Andrew Weaver said his party has agreed to support the New Democrats (DNP) which got close to winning half the seats in the provincial parliament this month.

Details will be released Tuesday after the pact is ratified by members of the New Democratic Party, leader John Horgan said at a news conference with Weaver in Victoria.

Were looking to show British Columbians that minority governments can work, Weaver, 55, said, adding the parties have ruled out forming a coalition. Were not looking to have an election any time soon.

The alliance may be setting the stage for a leadership battle in the province between Horgan, a feisty 57-year-old former pulp-mill worker, and B.C. Premier Christy Clark, 51. The premier has indicated she intends to continue governing after her Liberal Party won the most seats in parliament but fell one short of a majority in a fiercely contested election May 9.

The Liberals won 43 seats, the NDP took 41, and the Greens conquered 3 the first time the party has ever had more than one.

As the incumbent government, and the party with the most seats in the legislature, we have a responsibility to carefully consider our next steps, Clark said in a statement. Its vitally important that British Columbians see the specific details of the agreement announced today by the BC NDP and Green Party leaders, which could have far-reaching consequences for our provinces future.

The province that boasts Canadas fastest-growing economy hasnt seen a party govern without a majority of the seats in the legislature since 1952. Even though minority governments arent unusual in Canada and a formal coalition isnt necessary to govern, such a tight outcome is rare.

The NDP-Green alliance would have only a one-seat edge over the Liberals in the legislature, which some political commentators have called unsustainable.

The Green Party and NDP share similar ideas, such as raising carbon taxes and taxing housing speculators, and their alliance is likely to cloud the outlook for the Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion.

The issue of the pipeline expansion played a critical role in the negotiations for a deal and will be reflected in details of the pact Tuesday, Weaver said.

The $7.4 billion (Canadian) project would nearly triple Trans Mountains capacity, which will allow Canada to start exporting oil to Asia, but is vehemently opposed by many in B.C. because of fears of an oil spill.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus national government has already approved the pipeline expansion, and what any government in British Columbia could do about that is not clear. Canadas constitution gives the federal government authority over pipelines that cross over provincial boundaries.

But in an open letter to The Vancouver Sun, several professors of constitutional law, led by David Robitaille of the University of Ottawa, argued that while provinces cannot stop pipelines from crossing their territory, they can impose conditions on interprovincial companies to protect the environment and the safety and health of their communities.

Weaver said a new government has several ways to prevent the pipeline from moving forward, including by conducting a fresh provincial environmental assessment that could thwart the project.

BC could step in and say its clearly flawed, he said.

In any case, legal challenges brought by indigenous groups and others may put the project into limbo, making action by the province unnecessary.

During the campaign, the Greens promised to strengthen environmental regulations, curb log exports, increase a tax on carbon and set an interim target of a 40 percent reduction in greenhouse-gas emissions below 2007 levels by 2030.

The economic importance of the forestry and pulp and paper industries to British Columbia will make it difficult, if not impossible, for either the BC Liberals or New Democrats to adopt any Green Party policy that might limit production in the interests of sustainability and climate-change mitigation.

In 2015, the most recent statistics available, more than 65,000 people worked in the sector, and the forestry industry produced 10 billion Canadian dollars in exports for the province. Many forestry workers are members of labor unions that were part of the initial formation of the New Democrats and that are major donors to the party.

The sectors importance was clear when Clark suggested she might retaliate against the United States after the Commerce Department imposed a new round of duties on Canadian lumber last month in a decades-old trade battle.

In addition to pushing its environmental priorities, the Green Party supports a ban on corporate and union political donations and a revamping of the provinces political system so that parties get legislative seats based on their proportion of the popular vote. The current system, in which seats are awarded to the candidate with the largest number of votes in each electoral district, favors the two large, entrenched parties.

When the Green Party was formed in Canada in 1983, it was the first Green Party in North America. Its fortunes have gone up and down since then, often because of internal political struggles.

The Canadian environmental movements base has long been in British Columbia, whose residents, like Californians, have a higher-than-usual interest in environmental issues.

Elizabeth May, leader of the federal Green Party, was born in the United States, raised on Canadas Atlantic coast and spent most of her adult life in Ontario. But she represents part of British Columbia in Parliament because the electoral district was seen as the most likely in the country to elect a Green candidate.

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Green Party joins alliance with New Democrats for minority government in British Columbia - The Seattle Times

Democrats raise bill from the dead to help taxi industry kill Uber – Las Vegas Review-Journal

CARSON CITY Uber is so popular the taxi industry has turned to a last-minute legislative Hail Mary to try and push rideshare companies out of Nevada.

It was two years ago that state lawmakers approved legislation authorizing transportation network companies, like Uber and Lyft, to operate in Nevada. Taxi industry lobbyists fought aggressively and sought support for rules rideshare companies opposed.

It didnt work, and the competition has Nevada taxi companies feeling the pinch. As the Review-Journals Art Marroquin reported, taxi company revenue declined by over 13 percent in the first 11 months of 2016.

Stan Olsen, chairman of the Nevada Taxicab Authority, blamed the decline on consumers choosing rideshare companies and said he wanted fair and equitable regulations on such drivers.

In government, fair and equitable is usually doublespeak for regulations that hinder competitors. This is exactly what the taxi industry wants to do, and they had enough political juice to raise their hoped-for rules from the dead.

Senate Bill 226 passed the Senate in April, and it would have required transportation network companies to ensure drivers have state business licenses. It went to the Assembly floor last week, where Assemblyman Richard Carrillo, D-Las Vegas, dropped a major amendment. Carrillo wants to increase rideshare insurance requirements to the highest in the country, impose onerous signage requirements and make drivers obtain a permit from the Nevada Transportation Authority.

Per the amendment, the transportation authority would be able to deny a drivers permit if it determines that issuing a license would be detrimental to public health, welfare or safety. That authority is broad enough to deny a rideshare license to Kyle Busch.

We either have to leave the state or Nevada becomes the most difficult regulatory environment in the country, said one lobbyist.

The bill nearly died, as the midnight Friday deadline passed and the bill had received neither an exemption nor a vote on the Assembly floor.

At 12:09 a.m. Saturday, however, Las Vegas Democrat Teresa Benitez-Thompson dug deep into the rules of parliamentary procedure to inform the Assembly that, although it was after midnight, it was still the same legislative day. The clerk then announced that SB226 had received an exemption and new life.

On Monday, Assembly Ways and Means held a hearing on the amendments fiscal note, but chairwoman Maggie Carlton, D-Las Vegas, asked those testifying to avoid discussing policy before the money committee. Which means that Democrats may be looking to push through these regulations without one hearing on the policy merits or lack thereof.

Its exactly what the taxi companies are hoping for.

Contact Victor Joecks at vjoecks@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-4698. Follow @victorjoecks on Twitter.

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Democrats raise bill from the dead to help taxi industry kill Uber - Las Vegas Review-Journal