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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: The showdown on tax cuts for the rich Editor: Updated: Today Topic: Taxes Tuesday, Nov 30, 2010 16:48 ET The showdown on tax cuts for the rich This is the first test of the president's resolve with the new Congress -- and he should be tough as nails By Robert Reich * The showdown on tax cuts for the rich Reuters/Jason Reed President Obama speaks to the press after meeting with bipartisan congressional leadership at the White House on Tuesday. This originally appeared at Robert Reich's blog The President met with Republican leaders at the White House this morning to talk about whether the Bush tax cuts should be extended to top taxpayers, as Republicans want. No decision has been reached, but this is the first test of the Presidents resolve with the new Congress -- and he should be tough as nails. The economics and politics both dictate it. Taxpayers in the top 1 percent dont need it (they are now getting almost a quarter of all national income, the highest percent since 1928). They dont deserve it (they got the lions share of the benefits of the 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts, and have had no reason to expect a continuation of their windfall). They wont spend it to stimulate the economy (top earners save a much higher proportion of their income than the middle class). And giving it to them blows a giant hole in the budget (the Joint Tax Committee estimates the cost of extending the Bush tax cuts for the top 1 percent to be $61 billion in 2011 alone.) In political terms, a strong stand enables the President to clearly demonstrate whos side hes on (the working and middle class thats still bearing the brunt of this lousy economy) and whos side the Republicans are on (the powerful and privileged who brought much of this on, and who are now doing just fine). The only compromise he should be prepared to make is to extend the Bush tax cuts to the bottom 99 percent (rather than the bottom 98 percent), and for two years rather than ten. The top 1 percent begins at around $500,000 rather than $250,000. This would allow the President to even more sharply illustrate the extraordinary concentration of income at the top, while robbing Republicans of their debating point about small business (just about all small business owners with payrolls earn under $500,000).
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#10. To: tom007 (#0)
Also the Republicans are holding unemployment benefits hostage against the tax cuts. Despite all their whining they are playing Class Warfare. "Either you give us out tax cuts" or we'll cut the throats of the unemployed.
It is really sickening. As bad as the dems are the Pubs take the cake for being anti american.
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