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The Bush Tax Cuts and Virginia: Ten Years of Money Down the Drain

by: VirginiaOrganizing

Tue Jun 07, 2011 at 15:15:40 PM EDT


( - promoted by lowkell)

BushTaxCuts ToiletAs debt ceiling debate continues, we are marking the tenth anniversary of the policy that created most of the federal budget gap: the Bush tax cuts. On July 7, 2001, George W. Bush signed into law a $1.35 trillion tax cut that primarily benefited the wealthiest Americans while leaving our country with massive debt.

Virginia Organizing supporters gathered today in front of Rep. Robert Hurt's office in Danville and the Fredericksburg Public Library to bring attention to the terrible effects the Bush tax cuts have had in Virginia. Participants shared their experiences over the past 10 years and what they think the money could have been used for locally instead. Residents also expressed their concerns for Rep. Hurt's, Rep. Rob Wittman's and their colleagues', recent vote in support of Rep. Paul Ryan's controversial budget proposal to end Medicare, as we know it.

Tuesday's events were part of dozens taking place around the country as supporters of Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security protest efforts to cut essential services while giving trillions of dollars in additional tax cuts, exemptions and loopholes to the super-rich and to corporations.

In Fredericksburg, participants like Joe Katz, flushed play money down a toilet, to represent the valuable capital that went to millionaires instead of schools, health care, police and libraries. "I believe there's no excuse for our leaders in Washington to cut our Medicare, Medicaid, or Social Security so that millionaires can have huge tax breaks."

"The working people of Virginia did not fire Americans and send their jobs overseas. We didn't take absurd risks on Wall Street.  We didn't get a bailout from the government or make the housing market implode.  The wealthy corporations and banks did that, and we're not going to give up our Medicare, Social Security, and other lifelines so that the people who ruined our economy can keep avoiding taxes," added Katz.

VirginiaOrganizing :: The Bush Tax Cuts and Virginia: Ten Years of Money Down the Drain
David Harrison of the Virginia Organizing Danville Chapter joined other residents in front of Rep. Hurt's office today in Danville. "I came out today to highlight the fact that our country's descent into debt began in 2001 with a choice, not a crisis. I'm tired of the conservatives in Washington like Rep. Hurt, making the elderly, poor and middle classes pay for tax cuts that the wealthy do not need. How can leaders in Congress claim they are serious about reducing the deficit and continue to give tax breaks to the rich?"
HPIM2261

"We don't necessary have a spending problem, we have a revenue problem. The country needs the top two percent and major corporations to pay their fair share in taxes. By closing corporate loop holes and ending the Bush tax cuts, the country would be able to pay for vital services working Americans need," added Harrison.

The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (the first of a series of Bush-era tax changes) was enacted on June 7, 2001. Ten years later, the Bush tax cuts have exacerbated trends of widening income inequality, accompanied the weakest economic expansion since World War II, and turned budget surpluses into deficits. Ten years, later, it's hard to find any evidence that the Bush tax cuts created the prosperity promised by their proponents. Virginia's official unemployment rate in June 2001 was 3.1 percent. Today the seasonally adjusted rate is almost double that, 6.1 percent. Nationwide, the unemployment rate was 4.7 percent. Today it is hovering around 9 percent.

As detailed in a new Economic Policy Institute policy memorandum, these tax cuts were heavily targeted toward the wealthy at the expense of middle class families, poorly designed as an economic stimulus, and costly-significantly more so than advertised.

According to new figures released by Citizens for Tax Justice, the wealthiest one percent of Virginia residents, who will have an average income of $1.3 million in 2013, would receive an average tax cut of $70,149 in that year.

In contrast, the poorest 60 percent of the state's residents, with an average income of $31,828, would receive a tax cut of just $569 in 2013. To put that number into perspective, the average American household pays $300 a month just to fill their gas tank.

Enough is enough. Our economy is in tatters and the middle class is disappearing. Yet some in Congress are at it again. They want to give even larger tax cuts to corporations and the super-rich while slashing essential services, health care environmental protections and attacking public employees. Congressman Paul Ryan calls this approach a pathway to prosperity. We call it a road to ruin. We must end the Bush Tax Cuts and invest in our future.  

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Bamboozled (4.00 / 1)
When a smirking Dubya signed his tax cut it was explicitly stated that the tax cuts would create jobs, prosperity, and a bright future. Talk about false advertising! So the current (artifically created) clamour for more tax cuts for the "investor class" so they can create jobs with their enlarged pool of capital is absolutely asinine. Been there, done that, no more real-life experiment is needed, period and end of story.

In fact, cutting government spending and firing public sector workers is creating such a drag on the economy, we may well be forced into a double-dip recession, something the Republicans keep talking about, hoping to have made a self-fulfilling prophecy. I would love to know how many of the new unemployment claims (which rose in the most recent report) are actually government employees fired under the stupid austerity program.

While we must get a grip on our deficit, austerity as practiced by conservatives does not work--- how can economic growth, which is supposed to enable us to shrink our debt, occur when we keep firing workers and cutting stimulus spending?


Let me apologize but (0.00 / 0)
I can't help quoting this again as it fits even better here.  John Thomas is a hedge fund trader. I stumbled across his site a couple of months ago.  I now read the free section daily.

Let me give you a simple English lesson here. Spending cuts means job losses. Reducing the deficit means job losses. Balancing the budget means job losses. Austerity means job losses. And lots of job losses means slower economic growth. This reports shows that for every two workers hired by the private sector, one is fired by the government, leaving us with net job growth that is meager at best. Since the jobs recover started 18 months ago, the private sector has added an impressive 2.2 million, while the government has been shoveling jobs away half as fast.

This is a major ingredient of my long term forecast that American GDP growth has permanently downshifted from the 3.9% we saw from 2000-2009 to 2% for this decade.

http://www.madhedgefundtrader....


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