mykeystrokes.com

"Do or Do not. There is no try."

“War On Contraception”: GOP Lawmakers Seek To Deny Coverage To Others That They Enjoy

Republican congressional leaders are entering the fray over the Obama administration’s weeks-old decision to require employer-provided health insurance to cover contraception, including for some religious organizations that don’t employ a majority of people of that faith. The decision has been a hot topic on the campaign trail in recent days, but today, Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) took the House floor to slam it, calling it an “unambiguous attack on religious freedom in our country” and vowed to repeal the regulation. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) had a similarly sharp indictmentyesterday. Watch it:

But missed in this debate is the fact Boehner and McConnell’s own health insurance plans covers contraception, something they now want to deny to others.

Since 1998, every insurer participating in the Federal Employees Health Benefit Program (FEHBP) — including members of Congress — has had access to comprehensive contraceptive coverage, including emergency contraception, such as the morning after pill. Republican lawmakers now want to prevent access to the coverage they enjoy to employees of religious organizations who may not be of that religion or who disagree with anti-contraception doctrine (89 percent of Catholics say contraception decision should be theirs, not the church’s).

 

By: Alex Seitz-Wald, Think Progress, February 8, 2012

February 9, 2012 Posted by | Women's Health | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

“The World We Live In”: Yes, Tax Cuts Increase The Deficit

On Thursday, House Republicans unanimously rejected a resolution from Rep. Gary Peters stating, among other things, that the Bush tax cuts added to the deficit. If you read the text  they were voting on, it’s pretty clear that it wasn’t built for bipartisanship: It’s phrased to suggest that Bush was a liar and Republican governance was a fraud. That kind of thing doesn’t pick up  votes across the aisle.

But there’s a more important economic debate here. Republicans  occasionally flirt with the idea that tax cuts don’t increase deficits.  Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell has said this directly. Speaker John Boehner has decreed  that tax cuts don’t need to be offset, but spending proposals do. But there’s a very easy way to see that Republicans don’t really mean this: They believe that tax cuts cause deficits when Democrats are behind them.

The ongoing debate over the payroll tax is a good example. When  Republicans proposed a payroll tax cut as stimulus in 2009, it wasn’t  offset. When they agreed to it in the 2010 tax deal, it wasn’t offset.  But since it has become the White House’s favored policy, House  Republicans — the same House Republicans who passed the CUTGO rules  stating that spending proposals had to be paid for but tax cuts didn’t — are  insisting the payroll tax cut be offset.

Then there’s the Bush tax cuts. When Republicans tally up Obama’s  deficits over the last few years, they’re adding $620 billion for the  two-year extension of the Bush tax cuts. When they project his deficits  for the next five years, they’re assuming the extension of the Bush tax  cuts. And they’re doing so explicitly. Earlier in the week, I worked  with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities on a column  summing up the projected budgetary impact of every single piece of  legislation Obama had signed into law. In the end, my numbers showed,  Obama has passed policies adding about a trillion dollars to the  deficit. But Keith Hennessey, who directed the National Economic Council  under George W. Bush, responded  that I had ignored the trillions of dollars in deficits “from policies  President Obama proposes to enact in the future (like extending most but  not all tax cuts rates beyond 2012)”.

And Hennessey is right. Not about my analysis, which was restricted  to actual policies, not proposed policies (should I also have subtracted  $4 trillion from the deficit because Obama favors a deficit deal of  that size?). But about the Bush tax cuts, which will add trillions of  dollars to the deficit if Obama extends all or most of them in 2012.

Finally, there is a particularly odd claim you occasionally hear  about the Bush tax cuts: Revenue increased in their aftermath. Dan  Holler, the communications director for the Heritage Action, tweeted  as much at me yesterday. “revenues increased between 2003 and  2007…how does @ezraklein argue Bush policies ‘pushed revenues’ down?”

This relies on mixing up the effects of inflation, economic growth,  and taxes. The normal way to measure how much revenues a given tax  regime is pulling in is to look at taxes as a percentage of GDP. In  2001, taxes revenues were 19.5 percent of GDP. In 2002, they fell to  17.6 percent of GDP. In 2003, 16.2 percent of GDP. In 2004, 16.1 percent  of GDP. Some of that is the 2001 recession. But at no point in Bush’s  presidency, and at no point since, have taxes returned to 19 percent of  GDP.

Or, to put it slightly differently, if tax cuts actually increased  revenues, then it would have been absurd for George W. Bush to propose  tax cuts as a way of paying down the surplus. In that world, tax cuts  would have made the surplus larger, and given the government even more  of the people’s money. We would end up in a fiscal paradox, with the  government constantly trying to give back its surplus, but ending up  with an even larger surplus as a result. But that’s not the world we  live in.

 

By: Ezra Klein, The Washington Post, February 3, 2012

February 5, 2012 Posted by | Deficits | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Why Mitch McConnell Should Avoid Discussing The Debt

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) was asked about an extension of the payroll tax break yesterday, but instead of answering the question, the Republican changed the subject. The subject on McConnell’s mind was the debt.

“We have this problem at the risk of being repetitious, because we spend way too much. We now have a debt the size of our economy. We look a lot like Greece. We’re heading toward western Europe. If you want to see what happens, just look across the Atlantic. That’s the direction we’re headed in.

“Under this administration, we’ve run the national debt up 43 percent in just three years.”

McConnell first started equating the U.S. and Greece last summer, and the argument is not improving with age.

In every meaningful way, the comparison is just silly. The U.S. has extremely low interest rates and foreign investors are happy to loan us money; Greece has extremely high interest rates and no one is eager to loan the country money. The U.S. has its own currency; Greece has the euro. We have a manageable debt; Greece has a debt crisis. We’re a large country with an enormous economy; Greece is a small country with a small economy. We have one of the world’s most stable systems of government (at least for now); Greece’s government structure is suspect.

For a leading senator to tell a national television audience that the United States looks “a lot like Greece” is a clear reminder: McConnell is not to be taken seriously on these issues.

Incidentally, there’s also the matter of McConnell’s credibility on fiscal issues, or in his case, the lack thereof. The Republican leader voted for the Bush tax cuts, and added the costs to the national debt. He voted to finance the war in Afghanistan by adding the costs to the national debt. McConnell voted to put the costs of the war in Iraq onto the national debt. He supported a massive expansion of the government’s role in health care (Medicare Part D) and voted to pile all of its costs right onto the national debt. The GOP leader even backed the Wall Street bailout and added the bill to the national debt.

Perhaps Mitch McConnell should choose something else to complain about.

 

By: Steve Benen, The Maddow Blog, January 30, 2012

January 31, 2012 Posted by | Debt Crisis, Deficits | , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

“GOP Globetrotting”: It Sure Looks Like A Recess

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee had a little fun at the GOP leadership’s expense this week, mocking the Speaker and Majority Leader for their recent globetrotting. As Dems see it, these guys have more pressing matters at hand.

With House Speaker John Boehner and Majority Leader Eric Cantor on separate overseas trips, Democrats are taking shots in their absence.

A new DCCC website — http://www.whereintheoworldisjohnboehner.com — pounces on the GOP leaders for their globetrotting during congressional recess, when Democrats say they ought be at work tax cut plan. Of course, globetrotting during congressional recess is a time-honored, bipartisan tradition, so the dig does lose some of its punch.

The House is scheduled to return next week and is expected to pick up where it left off — fighting over how to pay for a yearlong extension of the payroll tax break.

Boehner has been traveling in Latin America, with stops in Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico, while Cantor visited the Middle East, by way of Paris. (The image the Dems posted shows Cantor with a photoshopped beret in front of the Eiffel Tower.)

With Fox News and other Republicans raising a fuss last month over President Obama’s trip to Hawaii, I suppose it stands to reason that Dems are going to try to return the favor.

But I had a slightly different question: if the Speaker and Majority Leader are gallivanting around the world, doesn’t that mean Congress is in recess? Indeed, the L.A. Times report defended their travels by saying “globetrotting during congressional recess is a time-honored, bipartisan tradition.”

But I thought Republicans said Congress isn’t in recess?

For that matter, Eric Cantor’s own website told visitors this week that Congress “is not in session.”

It’s probably a tidbit to keep in mind during the debate over recess appointments.

 

By: Steve Benen, Contributing Writer, Washington Monthly Politica Animal, January 14, 2012

January 16, 2012 Posted by | Congress | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

A “Wholly Legal Decision”: The Senate Cannot Take Away President Obama’s Recess Appointment Power By Pretending To Work

As ThinkProgress predicted yesterday, congressional Republicans did not wait long to whine that President Obama’s wholly legal decision to recess appoint Richard Cordray is unconstitutional. According to a blog post written by Speaker John Boehner’s staff, the Cordray appointment is unconstitutional because Obama defied an imaginary time-limit on his recess power and failed to respect the Senate’s decision to pretend that it’s actually doing something:

President Obama today made an unprecedented “recess” appointment even though the Senate is not in recess – “a sharp departure from a long-standing precedent that has limited the President to recess appointments only when the Senate is in a recess of 10 days or longer,” according to Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY).

It turns out that the action not only contradicts long-standing practice, but also the view of the administration itself. In 2010, Deputy Solicitor General Neal Katyal explained to the Supreme Court the Obama administration’s view that recess appointments are only permissible when Congress is in recess for more than three days.

First of all, Boehner needs to learn to count. For constitutional purposes, the Senate has been in recess since December 23. Although a single senator has opened a pretend session that lasts about half a minute — what is known as a “pro forma” session — every three days since then, these pro forma sessions have no impact whatsoever on the president’s recess appointment’s power. As Steven Bradbury and John Elwood, two key constitutional advisors during the Bush Administration, explained in 2010:

Historically, the recess appointments clause has been given a practical interpretation. As Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist No. 67, the clause enables the president to keep the government fully staffed when the Senate is not “in session for the appointment of officers.” . . .  [A 1905 Senate report] cautioned that a “recess” means “something actual, not something fictitious.” The executive branch has long taken the same common-sense view. In 1921, citing opinions of his predecessors dating back to the Monroe administration, Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty argued that the question “is whether in a practical sense the Senate is in session so that its advice and consent can be obtained. To give the word ‘recess’ a technical and not a practical construction, is to disregard substance for form.”

The Senate, of course, does not meet as a body during a pro forma session. By the terms of the recess order, no business can be conducted, and the Senate is not capable of acting on the president’s nominations. That means the Senate remains in “recess” for purposes of the recess appointment power, despite the empty formalities of the individual senators who wield the gavel in pro forma sessions.

Moreover, even if the Senate could stave off a recess by convening in the Neighborhood of Make Believe, it is simply not true that three days must pass before the president’s recess power kicks in. Though it’s true that Katyal once said that “I think our office has opined the recess has to be longer than 3 days,” an off-the-cuff comment by the Deputy Solicitor General does not have the power to change what the Constitution actually says. As the highest court to consider issue explained, “[t]he Constitution, on its face, does not establish a minimum time that an authorized break in the Senate must last to give legal force to the President’s appointment power under the Recess Appointments Clause.”

 

By: Ian Millhiser, Think Progress, January 4, 2011

January 5, 2012 Posted by | Constitution | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment