LOVETT: NY GOP boss warns federal tax cuts needed or Republicans are doomed in elections – New York Daily News

N.Y. GOP boss says tax cuts needed or Republicans are doomed

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Monday, August 21, 2017, 4:00 AM

ALBANY State GOP Chairman Ed Cox called enactment of a tax cut plan by the end of the year make or break for President Trump and the Republicans.

Cox, a vocal Trump supporter, said if Congress cant enact a tax cut plan, it will hurt the GOP heading into the mid-term congressional and state elections next year even more than the failure to deliver on a plan to repeal and replace Obamacare.

President Trump was elected on huge economic unease about good jobs in this country, an issue that upstate New York particularly faces, Cox said. The key to that is good solid tax cuts that make the economy grow.

If it doesnt get done, Cox said, the Republican Party and its President will not do the job that we were elected to do. It will rightfully make it tough for us next year in the general elections.

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Cox said any tax cut plan should offer across-the-board relief, but focus largely on the middle class and small businesses.

He conceded such plans will help balloon the national deficit, but believes the economic growth it will generate will, in large part, help alleviate that.

He also argued that any tax cut deal should be tied to a national infrastructure plan that would include the cutting of regulations. Along with a federal tax cut, Cox also called for a state plan to reduce taxes.

Im calling for pro-growth tax cuts instead of Gov. Cuomos politically-driven corporate welfare using taxpayer funds, he said.

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Cuomo spokesman Richard Azzopardi argued that state taxes under the governor are at their lowest levels in decades.

Ed (Nixon) Cox cant stop the lies, Azzopardi said, referencing the GOPers father-in-law, President Richard Nixon. He knows the governor has held spending to record lows and cut middle class taxes. He supports Trump trickle-down and cutting taxes for millionaires thats anti-New York economic policy to match their anti-New York racial policy.

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A recent meeting between Trump and top conservative donors like hedgefunder Robert Mercer to discuss the White House agenda moving forward has left some New York Democrats salivating.

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The Dems say they will seek to use Mercer who they expect to help pump millions of dollars into the 2018 New York gubernatorial, congressional and state legislative races through personal and Super PAC donations as a bogeymen in heavily blue New York.

The fact that the Mercer family is publicly part of Trumps kitchen cabinet while hes so toxic in New York has us salivating, said one Democratic insider.

Any Republicans who get their support are going to be tarred.

State GOP spokesman Jessica Proud broke into laughter when told of the comments.

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Its truly the dumbest thing Ive ever heard, Proud said. (The Mercers) are not a household name. If thats their strategy, awesome. Theyre using the Mercers, weve got (House Democratic Leader) Nancy Pelosi. Lets see who does better.

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If a reunification of the fractured state Senate Democrats is to happen, mainline Dems must manage expectations by the left of a progressive free-for-all, a pivotal breakaway Democrat says.

All Democrats are not the same, said Sen. Diane Savino of Staten Island. Every district is not the west side of Manhattan.

Savino said the mainline Democrats and their allies on the left need to understand that lesson or be doomed to repeat the failures of 2009-2010 the last time the party had Senate control.

If you want to keep the majority, you cant push suburban legislators too far to the left. Thats how we blew it the first time, she said.

Since Trumps election, progressive groups have upped the pressure on the eight-member Independent Democratic Conference to unify with the mainline Dems in a leadership coalition. A ninth Democrat, Brooklyn Sen. Simcha Felder, actually caucuses with the Republicans.

Senate Democratic spokesman Mike Murphy had no comment.

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State Sen. Ruben Diaz, a Bronx Dem running for City Council, said if he wins, he won't give up his Senate seat until the end of the year.

That could complicate the fight for control of the Senate since that would leave the Democrats heading into the new year one member shy of having the necessary 32 votes to form a majority.

If Diaz were to win on Sept. 12 and immediately resign from the Senate, a special election would be held in November, guaranteeing the seat would be filled at the start of the legislative session in January.

By waiting, Gov. Cuomo would have to call a special election. Even if he immediately called one when the seat became vacant on Jan. 1, the earliest it could be held is early March.

Going into January, the Dems could also be down a second seat if Sen. George Latimer wins his bid for Westchester County executive.

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LOVETT: NY GOP boss warns federal tax cuts needed or Republicans are doomed in elections - New York Daily News

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