Archive for the ‘Republicans’ Category

Republicans sign letter urging Trump not to cut AmeriCorps funding – Politico

Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour is among the signatories of the letter sent to Trump, dated Tuesday, making a case for continued support for AmeriCorps and other such programs.

A group of Republican donors and former elected officials is urging President Donald Trump not to cut funding for the Corporation for National and Community Service, which administers AmeriCorps, the public service work program for young people.

Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour is among the signatories of the letter sent to Trump, dated Tuesday, making a case for continued support for AmeriCorps and other such programs.

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Noting media reports that the administration is considering cutting them from the budget, the letter argues that the programs save taxpayers money through their use of public-private partnerships. They also provide key services like disaster relief and support for veterans and military families, the signatories noted, while breed[ing] strong citizens and a strong homeland.

As Republicans, we support the critical goal of eliminating government waste, the authors wrote. But as conservatives who believe in the unifying, patriotic values of national service, we urge you to support the Corporation for National and Community Service.

The other signatories of the letter, signed on Voices for National Service letterhead, include Ron Kaufman, a former White House political director under George H.W. Bush and an adviser to Mitt Romneys 2012 presidential campaign, and former Rep. Chris Gibson of New York.

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Republicans sign letter urging Trump not to cut AmeriCorps funding - Politico

This is why the Republicans struggle over Obamacare – Washington Post

House Republican leaders on Monday night unveiled a bill to repeal and replace parts of the Affordable Care Act. By Tuesday night, despite President Trumps support, critics on the leftandright, on and off Capitol Hill, had skewered the bill. Even if House GOP leaderseventually pull together a majority to pass a measure, the sledding could be even tougher in the Senate.

Analysts have amply examined keypolicy and political fault lines triggered by the GOP bill asRepublicans try to make goodon their promiseto repeal the ACA.

[GOP health care plan: Influential hospitals, doctor groups come out against House proposal]

But Republicans control both Congress and the White House, and theyve deployedreconciliation a special type of budget billthatallows GOP legislators to move swiftly and protect the bill from a Senate filibuster.

Republicans are now floundering, suggesting that reconciliation is a double-edged sword. Divided majorities coupled withintricatebudget rules are ironically enough impeding, not facilitating, swift action.

Live by the calendar, die by the calendar

Given the opposition to the House bill, some Senate Republicans have advised Trump and the House GOP toslow the reconciliation train, rather than rushing to complete action before the April recess. Republicans, however, do not have the luxury of time.

Republicans put on a legislative straitjacket by committing themselves tousing reconciliation, not once but twice this calendar year. After their party unexpectedly won the White House in November, Hill Republicans hatched a plan to adopta pared-down budget resolution that would cover the fiscal year that began in October. Adopting a budget in January (after failingto agree to one last year) allowed the GOP to pursue an ACA-related reconciliation bill by majority vote, precludingthe need for Democrats support.

But Republicans also intend to adopt a budget resolution this spring for the coming fiscal year. Doing so would allow them to writea second reconciliation bill, this time to carrytax reform.

Whats the catch? There is only one track leaving the station, and only one reconciliation train fits on it at a time. Most of those who watch the Senate closely think the health-care reconciliation bill would lose its procedural protections from a filibuster once Congress adopted itssecond budget resolution.

Delaying health-care reconciliation thus puts tax reform at risk.ButRepublicans have been banking onrepealing Obamacare taxes to help pay for theirtax bill. The two bills are intricately connected, and the health-care bills clumsy rollout complicates that relationship. The slow-moving Senate will also have other must-pass businesson its spring plate, including filling the Supreme Court vacancy and funding the government when money dries up this spring.

Far from speeding up legislative action, reconciliation might derail it.

Divided majorities are hard to reconcile

So whats been clumsy about the rollout? All the opposition, for one. First to declare their hostility were members of the House Freedom Caucus, buoyed by three conservative senators happy to join.Because there is no need to seek Democratic votes in either chamber under reconciliation rules, factions in both chambers have been emboldened, particularly on the far right. And with slim margins in both chambers barely two dozen in the House and just three in the Senate leaders cannot afford to lose many votes.

The ideological map of the current House lets us see the barriers to passage.

The Freedom Caucus is an ideologically coherent faction (as measured by UCLA Voteviews 2017 data). Its stance insistingon a more conservative bill that repeals the existing ACA, and nothing else is unlikely to be accommodated without the loss of moderate colleagues who might not want to maketheir constituents worse off by repealing or further weakening the ACA.

Granted, Republicans in districtswon by Hillary Clinton (some of whom may be especially reluctant to vote for the bill) are ideologically diverse, but any defectionsspell trouble in a world of slim majorities. Moreover, as shown in the figure below, these cross-pressured Republicanswill bedecidedly weaker than their GOP colleagues in2018. On average, GOP members from districts that went for Clinton won with only 56 percent of the 2016 vote some 10 points worse than their fellow partisans.

The graph also plots 2016 enrollment in ACA marketplaces by congressionaldistricts. Marginal GOP House members do not represent areas that disproportionately rely on insurance secured through the ACA although the data do not count individuals whose insurance is secured through the ACAs Medicaid expansion. But these Republican House members do represent some of the most highly ACA-dependent (Florida) districts.

To be sure, Democrats wouldnt support the Ryan bill even if it were considered in the normal process, outside of reconciliation. But the expectation that Republicans will provide all of the votes has heightened media attention on House factions, a spotlight the Freedom Caucus and supportive organized interests have been pleased to fill.

The Byrd Rule

Reconciliation is even more complicated in the Senate. Although the procedure empowers the majority party in an otherwise super-majoritarian Senate, such power is costly.

First, reconciliation bills are subject to the Byrd Rule, which blocks provisions that raise the deficit beyond the life of the bill orthat do not directly change governmentrevenue or outlays. It takes 60 votes to waive the Byrd Rule. The Senateparliamentarian calls balls and strikes on the Byrd Rule in the form of advice to the Senate, advice that can be challenged only if 60 senators want to overlook the rule (votes Democrats are unlikely to provide).

By limiting what can be included in the GOP bill, the Byrd Rule exacerbates already toughtrade-offs necessaryin crafting legislation. For example, the bill cannot eliminate the mandate that individuals buy health insurance, because the mandate does not directly raise government revenue or reduce spending. The bill can, however, eliminate various ACA taxes, so long as the revenue lost to the government by eliminating the taxes is made up by other provisions in the bill. Otherwise, the bill could increase the deficit triggering a Byrd Rule challenge.

Second, by requiring only a simple majority for passage, reconciliation makes every Republican senators vote potentially pivotal. Rather than seeking and failing to secure 60 votes for passage and then blaming Democrats forthe loss reconciliation focuses attention on GOP divisions, just as in the House. Had Republicans needed 60 votes, they wouldhave beenback on the more familiar terrain of a partisan and polarized Senate, with the parties pointing fingers at each other. Instead, GOP civil war is brewing in several dimensions, with conservatives pursuing repeal only,moderates trying to protect Medicaid, andsenators in between keeping a wary eye on the rising popularity of the ACA.

Be careful what you wishfor

The decision to use reconciliation is not the only reason Republicans are struggling to find a way to repeal and replace Obamacare as promised. Other complications include shifting public attitudes, a lack of health-policy expertise among Republicans, and Democrats historic ownership of health issues.But the downsides of reconciliation interacting with a divided majority party have made the road ahead for Republicans particularly rocky.

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This is why the Republicans struggle over Obamacare - Washington Post

Gutting Dodd-Frank Is Hard, So Republicans Turn to Easier Things – Bloomberg

Heres the latest indication Wall Street regulations wont be gutted anytime soon: Republicans who write financial laws are starting to focus on other things.

The Senate Banking Committee, led by Mike Crapo, on Thursday is scheduled to consider a measure about publishing research on exchange-traded funds, and a collection of other narrow bills with bipartisan support.

In the House, the Financial Services Committee will hold a hearing about flood insurance, further stalling the rollout of Chairman Jeb Hensarlings plan to eliminate laws enacted in response to the financial crisis of 2008.

Reality is setting in on Capitol Hill that rolling back the Dodd-Frank banking law wont be quick or easy -- even though its a priority for Republican President Donald Trump, who says the measure is hurting the economy. Bank stocks have rallied partly because investors expect change.

Congress is bogged down by high-profile fights over replacing Obamacare and rewriting tax laws, leaving little capacity for a battle over Wall Street. Republicans, who control both chambers of Congress, dont have a plan for rewriting financial rules that would be likely to attract support from Democrats, something thats needed to advance most major bills in the Senate. Democrats say the existing laws are needed to prevent another financial meltdown and protect investors.

I do not think they will get any substantial legislative change through the Congress," saidBarney Frank, a former Democratic lawmaker who served as chairman of the Financial Services Committee, in an interview with Bloomberg Television. Except areas where there might be some agreement -- give a little relief to mid-size banks and smaller banks in ways that dont in any way undermine the regulatory framework."

Read more: A Q&A on Trumps efforts to defang Dodd-Frank

Thats not good news for big U.S. banks like JPMorgan Chase & Co., whose executives have called for legislation easing the Volcker Rules ban on proprietary trading. Crapo, a key power broker in the Senate who will be crucial to advancing any banking measures, has said there are limits to changes hell be able to negotiate with Democrats.

Crapos need to generate goodwill with Democrats could help explain why hes moving forward with a handful of bipartisan, noncontroversial bills that could give a political boost to a handful of lawmakers on the panel, including Democrats, who are facing tough re-elections next year.

I do want to have the committee to start working and be effective," Crapo, of Idaho, said in an interview. I want the committee to start finding those areas of common ground."

One of the bills that Crapos panel will debate on Thursday allows broker-dealers to publish research on exchange traded funds, securities that track an index or basket of assets. Another bill would allow more investors to qualify to buy into funds that finance start-ups and other private companies.

Also on the agenda: a measure encouraging businesses to give employees bigger stakes in their private companies by reducing paperwork disclosure requirements. And another telling the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that it must repay excess fees it charges to stock exchanges, in the event the agency overcharges.

Republican Dean Heller, who sponsored several of the bills, is up for re-election next year in Nevada, a state that Hillary Clinton won in November. Other co-sponsors include moderate Democrats such as Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, and Joe Donnelly of Indiana, who are also under pressure to demonstrate achievements in Washington as they gear up for tough re-elections next year in states that voted for Trump.

Hensarlings committee is also debating companion legislation on issues which have received bipartisan support in the past, a rarity in the Republican-controlled House.

Trump, who has called Dodd-Frank a "disaster," signed an executive order last month instructing regulators to examine financial rules and file a report on their findings. The administrations efforts to attack financial rules will take shape as Trump fills vacancies at key federal agencies,like the Federal Reserve, said Mark Calabria, Vice President Mike Pences chief economist, at a conference in Washington on Tuesday.

Hensarling introduced his Financial Choice Act last year, which takes a red pen to most of the post-crisis rules, including eliminating the Volcker Rules ban on certain investments, the Financial Stability Oversight Councils ability to label firms that pose risks to the wider financial system, and regulators ability to intervene when banks fail.

Hensarling has promised that overhauling Dodd-Frank is a "this year priority" for the White House and Congress. But he hasnt introduced an updated version of his plan, even though other lawmakers on the committee have said they expected it would be released last month. Crapo has not unveiled a plan either, but has said that his top priorities include easing rules for community banks and freeing regional banks from some of the most stringent requirements applied to lenders with more than $50 billion in assets.

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Anticipating opposition by Democrats, some Republicans are already talking about going it alone when it comes to major Dodd-Frank changes, and trying to shoehorn them into a budget reconciliation bill that would require a simple majority to pass. Theres not much room on the Senate calendar for debate about Wall Street given other priorities, including the confirmation of Trumps nominees for government positions.

Changes to the Dodd-Frank Act are second-tier agenda items and are unlikely to pass Congress in the near term," said Brian Gardner, an analyst at Keefe, Bruyette and Woods, who expects more activity to happen at the banking agencies. Improvement in the regulatory regime is likely to be subtle and not seen by the public."

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Gutting Dodd-Frank Is Hard, So Republicans Turn to Easier Things - Bloomberg

Republicans are tone deaf on health care – Washington Post (blog)

House Speaker Paul Ryan said his proposed replacement for the Affordable Care Act is what Republicans have "been dreaming of doing," during a news conference on March 8 at the Capitol. (Reuters)

One can imagine a bizarre contest among Republicans as to who can say the most insulting, unhelpful remarks about health-care reform, sure to reinforce the stereotype that Republicans are the party of the rich.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) piped up that for those claiming health-care insurance is not affordable maybe rather than getting that new iPhone . . . maybe they should invest it in their own health care. (An iPhone 7 retail costs nearly $800; health-care insurance varies by state but in many parts of the country can cost more than $3,000 for a single, young person. As for families, The costs of providing health care to an average American family surpassed $25,000 for the first time in 2016 even as the rate of health cost increases slowed to a record low, according to an analysisCNBC reported on last year. The $25,826 in health-care costs for a typical family of four covered by an employer-sponsored preferred provider plan is $1,155 higher than last year, and triple what it cost to provide health care for the same family in 2001, the first year that Milliman Medical Index analysis was done.

[The House Republicans health-care bill is a thicket of bad incentives]

Then House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) blithely declared that coverage didnt matter. What matters is that were the lowering costs of health care and giving people access to affordable health care plans. The government will always win the war on government-run plans, saying, if we mandate everybody buys what we say they have to buy, then the government will always estimate that theyll buy it.I just think thats bogus, that entire premise of that comparison doesnt work. Actually coverage matters a lot to those who are losing it, or those whose access will cost more for less coverage than it did under the Affordable Care Act. Dismissing the concern that 10 million to 20million will lose coverage is politically daft.

And when Ryan says only cost matters, hes asking for trouble. Many people will pay more out of pocket under the GOP plan while the rich (over $200,000 for an individual) get a huge tax cut by rolling back the ACAs Medicare surcharge on net investment income (3.8 percent) and on wages above the threshold (0.9 percent). Moreover, insurers and actuaries point out that as long as you keep the ACA provision that bans annual or lifetime limits, health-care providers have an incentive to charge more for service.

And to top it off, the Office of Management and Budget director Rick Mulvaney opines that insurance is not the end goal here, is it? Unfortunately, for tens of millions it is. He asserts actual care will be more accessible, but for virtually everyone access is only possible with insurance.

[The Republican health-care bill is all about shortchanging the poor]

Its hard to tell how the GOP intended to sell this plan to the public. Right now their game plans consist of the following: Declare Obamacare is dead or dying; underplay principled conservative resistance; dismiss concerns about tens of millions losing coverage; and dont tell people how much it costs, who benefits and who loses coverage. No wonder they are trying to rush this through. Nevertheless, the plan is so obviously flawed, both politically and substantively, that opposition formed almost instantaneously. (Joining AARP, the American Medical Association and the American Hospital Association have come out against the bill. Fortune reports, Plenty of other, smaller or specialty trade associations have also expressed deep concerns with the bill, including the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Psychiatric Association, and the Federation of American Hospitals.)

This firestorm explains why Republicans from Sen. Tom Cotton (Ark.) to Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) have urged the House to slow down. Thats fine advice, but what the House really needs is an about face.

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Republicans are tone deaf on health care - Washington Post (blog)

In Republicans’ views of a border wall, proximity to Mexico matters – Pew Research Center

Republicans overwhelmingly favor the construction of a wall along the U.S.-Mexican border. But Republicans who live closer to the border are less likely to support the wall than are those who live farther away.

A survey last month by Pew Research Center found that 35% of the public favored building a wall along the entire U.S-Mexican border, while 62% were opposed. Nearly three-quarters of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents (74%) supported building the wall, compared with just 8% of Democrats and Democratic leaners.

A new analysis of this data finds that 63% of Republicans who live less than 350 miles from the border support building the wall, compared with 34% who oppose the wall. Those who live at least 350 miles away from the border, by contrast, are more supportive of the wall (76% favor, 21% oppose).

This difference in the level of support for the wall is most pronounced among those who live 200 miles or less from the border, based on a further analysis of data from multiple surveys conducted over the course of 2016 and 2017. (The sample sizes in a single survey are not large enough to look at distances of less than 350 miles from the border.)

Democratic opposition to the wall is overwhelming, both among Democrats who live less than 350 miles away from the U.S.-Mexico border (83% oppose) and those who live farther away (90% oppose).

Republicans and Republican leaners who live closer are less supportive of constructing a wall than those who live farther away, even when controlling for demographic differences that may be associated with distance from the border (age, sex, race and ethnicity, and education).

This analysis of geographic support for the construction of a border wall uses respondents self-reported ZIP codes, as well as ZIP code data from the U.S. Census Bureau. It uses the geographic center of the ZIP code to determine respondents distance from the Mexico border.

Topics: Mexico, North America, Political Issue Priorities, Population Geography, U.S. Political Parties

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In Republicans' views of a border wall, proximity to Mexico matters - Pew Research Center