Archive for the ‘Republicans’ Category

Republican strategy on healthcare bill in flux ahead of vote – Reuters

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican Senate leaders aim to hold a procedural vote as early as Tuesday to take up legislation to repeal or replace Obamacare, but it remained unclear which version of the bill senators would vote on.

President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans campaigned on a pledge to roll back former President Barack Obama's signature healthcare law, the 2010 Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.

Senator John Thune, a member of the Republican leadership, told "Fox News Sunday" the initial vote was simply a way to open debate on the bill so that senators from both parties could offer amendments.

"The first vote, which will occur sometime this week, will be to proceed to the consideration of that legislation and to at least have a debate where we can have an open amendment process," Thune said.

The Republican-controlled House in May passed its version of a healthcare bill. Senate Republicans have considered two versions of related legislation but have been unable to reach consensus after estimates showed as many as 22 million fewer Americans would be insured if the proposals became law. A plan to repeal Obamacare without replacing it also ran aground.

Republicans control a narrow majority in the Senate, holding 52 of 100 seats. With the Democrats united in opposition to the Republican effort, Senator Majority Leader Mitch McConnell can only afford to lose the votes of two Republican senators.

The fate of any legislation to rewrite Obamacare is uncertain as many Republicans have not yet made clear their positions.

"It appears we'll have a vote on Tuesday but we don't know whether we'll be voting on the House bill, the first version of the Senate bill, the second version of the Senate bill," Republican Senator Susan Collins told CBS' "Face the Nation" on Sunday.

Collins is a moderate Republican who has objected to prior versions of the Senate bill and also to repealing Obamacare without replacing it.

Trump suggested last week that he was fine with letting Obamacare fail, but he then switched course and invited Republican senators to the White House to try to hash out a healthcare deal.

The Republican effort has also been complicated by the absence of Republican Senator John McCain, who has been diagnosed with brain cancer and has been in his home state of Arizona weighing treatment options.

Reporting By Amanda Becker; Editing by Daniel Wallis

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Republican strategy on healthcare bill in flux ahead of vote - Reuters

Trump Tweet: Republicans Aren’t Doing Enough to ‘Protect Their President’ – Heavy.com

Getty

President Donald Trump speaks during the commissioning of the USS Gerald R. Ford CVN 78, on July 22, 2017 in Norfolk, Virginia.

President Donald Trump lashed out at his fellow Republicans on Sunday in a tweet, saying that they do very little to protect their president, calling that very sad.

Its very sad that Republicans, even some that were carried over the line on my back, do very little to protect their President, Trump said Sunday afternoon in his latest tweet.

Trump spent Sunday morning at the Trump National Golf Club in Virginia, returning to the White House about 3 p.m. He sent the tweet about an hour and a half later.

He also tweeted Sunday about the phony Russian Witch Hunt.

As the phony Russian Witch Hunt continues, two groups are laughing at this excuse for a lost election taking hold, Democrats and Russians! the president tweeted.

Trump also tweeted about fellow Republicans on Saturday, saying it is time for the GOP Senators to step up on health care.

The Republican Senators must step up to the plate and, after 7 years, vote to Repeal and Replace. Next, Tax Reform and Infrastructure. WIN! he wrote.

It is not clear which Republicans Trump was referring to in his Sunday tweet. It is also not known exactly what kind of protection he is looking for.

His comments came on the a day after former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, one of Trumps rivals during the GOP primary race last year, called out Republicans and Trump for their handling of the Russian election interference investigation. His comments were made during OZY Fest in New York City on Saturday, and were widely reported Sunday.

If your opponent does things that you, your head explodes on, if Barack Obama did something as its related to Russia, you say this is outrageous, all this stuff, then when your guy does the same thing, have the same passion to be critical, Bush said, according to The Hill.

About Trump, Bush said his presidency has been chaotic, focusing on recent reports that Trump is looking into his pardon powers and attacking independent counsel Robert Mueller.

You get disciplined when your team says, No, Mr. President, lets stay focused on these policy objectives,' Bush said, according to Business Insider. Dont disparage people,dont go after Mueller, dont say youre going to pardon yourself or whatever. Dont do all that. Govern.

He also criticized the way image the president displays to the world.

The president is the prime minister and the king. He or she, eventually, will be the symbol of the country, and also the prime minister responsible for making government work, Bush said, according to Business Insider. And right now, our president doesnt view that job as important. Look at history. History is important. When presidents inspire us, we do better. And thats what we need to get back to.

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Trump Tweet: Republicans Aren't Doing Enough to 'Protect Their President' - Heavy.com

For Republicans, Fear and Loathing is a Winning Message – Common Dreams


Common Dreams
For Republicans, Fear and Loathing is a Winning Message
Common Dreams
It would be too easy to dismiss Donald Trump's Commission on Electoral Integrity as superfluous evidence of the intellectual erosion of the Republican Party. As a Twitter observer who styles himself LOLGOP quipped last week when the commission held its ...

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For Republicans, Fear and Loathing is a Winning Message - Common Dreams

Republicans embrace tax hike targeting Democratic states – WRAL.com

By STEPHEN OHLEMACHER, Associated Press

WASHINGTON Republicans aren't usually big on raising taxes, but they're really eager to eliminate the federal deduction for state and local taxes.

Why? A look at the states that benefit the most from the tax break helps explain it they are all Democratic strongholds. New York, Connecticut, New Jersey and California top the list of states where taxpayers get the biggest deductions. Not a single Republican-leaning state ranks in the top 10.

"Although Republicans usually recoil at any type of tax increase, cutting this tax break would almost be fun for them," said Martin Sullivan, chief economist for Tax Analysts. "It provides massively disproportionate deductions to high-tax states controlled by Democrats."

Proposals by House Republican leaders and President Donald Trump would repeal the tax break as part of their packages to overhaul the American tax code. But they are getting a lot of pushback from Republican lawmakers in Democratic-controlled states.

The standoff illustrates how hard it is for Congress to eliminate any popular tax break, even one that primarily benefits the ruling party's political opponents.

Almost 44 million claimed the deduction in 2014, according to IRS statistics. That's nearly every taxpayer who itemizes deductions, a little less than 30 percent of all taxpayers. Sullivan analyzed which states would be hit hardest by repealing the tax deduction. The Associated Press did a similar analysis and came to the same conclusion.

Nationally, the average deduction is about $11,800, but it is much bigger in many blue states. New York is tops with an average deduction of more than $21,000. Connecticut is next at $18,900, followed by New Jersey at $17,200 and California at $17,100.

These are states with high property values, high costs of living, high incomes and relatively high state and local taxes compared to other states. They are also states President Donald Trump lost in last year's election. Though the president is from New York, he lost the state to Democrat Hillary Clinton by 22 percentage points.

The highest-ranked state won by Trump is Wisconsin, which came in at No. 13, with an average deduction of $11,300.

At the bottom is Alaska, with an average deduction of $4,800. It is followed by Tennessee and Alabama. Among the bottom 10 states, Nevada and New Mexico are the only ones won by Clinton.

The deduction allows taxpayers to write off real estate taxes, and state and local income taxes. If your state doesn't have an income tax, you can deduct sales taxes. The deduction is heavily weighted to families with high incomes. Seventy-five percent of the benefits went to families making more than $100,000.

Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, says eliminating a tax break that helps some people will help lawmakers lower tax rates for everyone.

"We're proposing a much simpler code with lower rates where everyone gets help whether they are paying their state and local taxes or they are putting their kids in college," said Brady, who chairs the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee.

Eliminating the tax break would raise $1.3 trillion over the next decade, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, money that could be used to help pay for lower income tax rates.

The House Republican plan would eliminate most itemized deductions while nearly doubling the standard deduction, to $24,000 for married couples. Notably, the plan would keep the deductions for mortgage interest and charitable contributions.

The White House and congressional Republicans have been privately negotiating their tax package for weeks, with no public sign that they're near a consensus. Democrats have been excluded from the talks.

Some Republicans claim the deduction for state and local taxes encourages states to spend and tax more because the taxes can be deducted at the federal level. Some also complain that the deduction forces low-tax Republican states to subsidize high taxes in Democratic states.

However, many blue-state Republicans don't buy those arguments. They note that most high-cost blue states send more tax dollars to Washington than they receive in federal benefits. And who benefits from those tax dollars? Low-cost red states where incomes are generally lower.

"If we're going to have a discussion about who is subsidizing whom, it must be across the board. It can't be just one provision," said Rep. Leonard Lance, R-N.J.

Lance is teaming up with Rep. Bill Pascrell, Jr., D-N.J., in an effort to maintain the tax break.

"In New Jersey, (the deduction) encourages very strong public schools," Lance said. "I want to maintain strong public schools. For there to be strong public schools, there has to be adequate spending."

Rep. Tom MacArthur, R-N.J., said he brings up the deduction every time he sees Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, one of Trump's top advisers on taxes.

"The minute he walked into the room and saw me he pointed and said, 'I know, state and local tax deduction,'" MacArthur said.

"I know the White House is committed to bringing taxes down for everybody," MacArthur said. "But people in high-tax states under the plan they're proposing would basically be at a break-even while everyone else in the county enjoys tax relief. That's not fair."

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Follow Stephen Ohlemacher on Twitter at http://twitter.com/stephenatap

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Republicans embrace tax hike targeting Democratic states - WRAL.com

Do Republicans lack a soul? – Kankakee Daily Journal

The Republican Party lost its soul a long time ago, and now, the devil gets his due.

Born and raised Republican, I remember as a child feeling guilty about the cruelty of Republican policies. The presumption of the GOP was that people are poor because of their own irresponsible behavior. And racism was not only accepted, but encouraged.

I wanted to scream then, and I want to scream now. Doesn't anyone go to the library to read about Jim Crow, sundown towns, lynchings? Because despite civil rights laws, I recently worked for a small company that refused to hire blacks but got away with it because hiring was done by word of mouth.

And now, voter suppression is back. Pretending to address voter corruption, voter ID requirements make it difficult for the poor to vote because the poor can't afford to drive. But if you've got your gun FOID, you're good to go.

The Evangelicals further take the cake. Our president's behavior during his entire adult life was one of decadence, depravity, deception, downright criminality, vengeance and vicious hatred, but the holy roller hypocrites support him blindly and unequivocally.

It's not likely to improve anytime soon because Republicans are more close-minded than ever. Polls show most Republicans believe colleges, education and science are a bad thing.

But 99 percent of Americans may get smacked on the backside because of Republican policy. Speaker Paul Ryan embodies the Republican philosophy of atheist Ayn Rand who believed the wealthy should be fed caviar while the poor and middle class scramble for crumbs. It explains why Republicans want to gut Medicare, reduce Social Security benefits and give tax cuts to the filthy rich.

That's how Republicans roll. I'm glad I shed that mindset 40 years ago and wish everyone would see the GOP's vicious agenda.

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Do Republicans lack a soul? - Kankakee Daily Journal