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Showing posts with label TAX INCREASES. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TAX INCREASES. Show all posts

Sunday, October 10, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Ken Klippenstein | Kyrsten Sinema Is Literally Teaching a Course on Fundraising

 


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09 October 21

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LIKE IT OR NOT WE HAVE TO FOCUS ON FUNDING - We cannot sit back and allow the organization to become insolvent. We will not do that. Based on the strength of our readership we should have no more difficulty raising our basic budget now than we have ever had before. We do what we must.
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Sen. Kyrsten Sinema. (photo: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
FOCUS: Ken Klippenstein | Kyrsten Sinema Is Literally Teaching a Course on Fundraising
Ken Klippenstein, The Intercept
Klippenstein writes: "All students hope to learn from the top experts in their field. Graduate students at Arizona State University have an unusual opportunity this fall to do just that, where Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., is teaching a course on getting rich people to give you money."

The senator is educating Arizona State University students on her forte: asking for money.

All students hope to learn from the top experts in their field. Graduate students at Arizona State University have an unusual opportunity this fall to do just that, where Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., is teaching a course on getting rich people to give you money.

The course, titled “Developing Grants and Fundraising,” is one of two classes Sinema is teaching this fall at Arizona State University’s School of Social Work. The syllabus, which was obtained by The Intercept, says students will “learn diverse fundraising strategies” for nonprofits as well as “how to cultivate donors,” including “large individual donors,” by leveraging resources like “opportunistic fundraising,” “finding supporters for major fundraising events” — and, well, “asking for money.”

The outline identifies “Key Course Concepts” such as “corporate giving,” “political strategy,” “influence,” and “power” as well as more socially conscious terms like “discrimination,” “oppression,” and “privilege.” One of the required books is “Fundraising for Social Change” — ironic in light of Sinema’s attempts to ensure things like corporate tax rates remain unchanged. A spokesperson for Sinema did not respond to a request for comment.

Fundraising is a subject the Arizona senator knows a thing or two about, having raised eye-popping sums of money from groups opposed to President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better agenda. Sinema has racked up some $920,000 in campaign contributions from said groups, according to an analysis by Accountable.US, a watchdog group that monitors corporate lobbying.

In the past two years, she has received tens of thousands of dollars in maxed-out contributions from private equity partners and investment firm CEOs who stand to lose in the event of a tax hike on corporations or the rich, as The Intercept reported last month. Sinema recently told colleagues that she would not accept any corporate tax or income tax increases, the New York Times reported.

Sinema also threatens to obstruct Democrats’ major drug pricing reforms, which would drive down skyrocketing pharmaceutical prices industrywide by allowing Medicare to negotiate them. Sinema ran on lowering drug prices in 2018, The Daily Poster points out, but changed her tune as the pharmaceutical industry began to court her. Since entering Congress, Sinema has also received more than $6 million in donations from the finance, insurance, and real estate industry.

Sinema’s part-time teaching gig at ASU entered the news cycle this weekend. As Sinema exited a classroom in ASU’s Phoenix campus, activists ambushed her, urging her to support the president’s Build Back Better plan, the multitrillion-dollar reconciliation package that currently lacks support from Sinema and fellow conservative Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia. The activists, one of whom is undocumented, were part of an immigration reform advocacy group, Living United for Change in Arizona, pushing to include immigration reform and a pathway to citizenship in the legislation. When Sinema declined to speak to the activists and walked briskly to the bathroom, the activists followed her in.

The move drew condemnation from many — including some people you wouldn’t think worried much about civility, like former Trump adviser Stephen Miller, the architect of family separation and many other anti-immigration policies during the Trump administration.

“Illegal aliens are unlawfully harassing a U.S. Senator to demand passage of Biden’s ‘budget’ reconciliation bill because it will give them amnesty,” Miller tweeted.

“Yesterday’s behavior was not legitimate protest,” Sinema said in a lengthy statement on Monday. “It is the duty of elected leaders to avoid fostering an environment in which honestly-held policy disagreements serve as the basis for vitriol — raising the temperature in political rhetoric and creating a permission structure for unacceptable behavior.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., declined to sign onto a statement condemning the activists without language reflecting his hope that she will change her position on prescription drug reform and the reconciliation bill. “Those in Sinema’s orbit have privately vented frustration that her fellow Democratic senators and the White House haven’t more forcefully spoken out,” Axios reported.

“I don’t think they’re appropriate tactics, but it happens to everybody,” Biden said, downplaying the event. “The only people it doesn’t happen to are people who have Secret Service standing around them,” he laughed.

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Wednesday, September 29, 2021

RSN: FOCUS | Barack Obama: Tax the Rich, Including Me, to Fund Biden Spending Plan

 

 

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28 September 21

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72 HOURS TO GO, WE ALWAYS HAVE A CHANCE — We have managed over the years to keep our readership high and our budget low, so we always have a chance. The scarecrow fears fire, we fear very, very bad fundraising. Anything north of total financial abandonment will work. The time is now, we need a boost. With urgency.
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Barack Obama. (photo: Pari Dukovic/Guardian UK)
FOCUS | Barack Obama: Tax the Rich, Including Me, to Fund Biden Spending Plan
Martin Pengelly, Guardian UK
Pengelly writes: "Barack Obama says wealthy Americans - including himself - can afford tax increases to help fund Joe Biden's ambitious spending plan."

Former president says billionaires should ‘pay a little bit more in taxes’ to fund healthcare, childcare and the climate crisis fight

Barack Obama says wealthy Americans – including himself – can afford tax increases to help fund Joe Biden’s ambitious spending plan.

“I think they can afford it,” Obama told ABC’s Good Morning America. “We can afford it. I put myself in this category now.”

Obama is reckoned to have a personal fortune of around $70m. Since leaving the White House in 2017 he has released a bestselling memoir as part of a $65m book deal and with his wife, Michelle Obama, signed a Netflix deal thought to be worth more than $100m. He spoke to ABC to mark the start of construction at his presidential library, in Chicago.

Republicans and business groups oppose corporate and personal tax increases in the Biden spending package, which is priced at $3.5tn and aims to improve healthcare, childcare, the fight against climate change and other Democratic priorities.

“You’re talking about us stepping up and spending money on providing childcare tax credits,” Obama said. “Making those permanent to help families, who for a long time, have needed help.

“You’re looking at making our infrastructure function more efficiently ... you’re talking about rebuilding a lot of buildings, roads, bridges, ports so that they are fortified against climate change. And also, that we start investing in the kinds of energy efficiency that’s going to be required to battle climate change.”

The House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, has indicated the price tag of the spending plan will come down, via talks between moderates and progressives also aimed at passing a bipartisan infrastructure bill. Most observers say failure to pass the Build Back Better Act will be disastrous for Biden and his party before midterm elections next year.

The spending plan must pass via reconciliation, which allows budgetary legislation to pass on bare majorities, negating the 60-vote filibuster in the evenly split Senate. Pelosi, the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, and the Biden White House have little room for error.

Amid coverage of such a high-stakes political moment, the CNN commentator Chris Cilizza said Biden, a senator since 1973 and twice a presidential candidate before winning the White House in 2020, was now in “the most important week of his life”.

Biden was vice-president to Obama, who remains broadly popular.

In an intervention perhaps designed to appeal to Democratic loyalties, he told ABC Biden was “asking the wealthiest of Americans, who have benefited incredibly over the last several decades – and even in the midst of a pandemic, saw their wealth and assets rise enormously – to pay a few percentage points more in taxes in order to make sure that we have a economy that’s fair for everybody.

“I think anybody who pretends that it’s a hardship for billionaires to pay a little bit more in taxes so that a single mom gets childcare support or so that we can make sure that our communities aren’t inundated by wildfires and floods and that we’re doing something about climate change for the next generation – you know, that’s an argument that is unsustainable.”

Nonetheless, it is an argument Republicans and corporate groups are prepared to mount. In Congress, Republicans oppose attempts to simultaneously fund the government past Friday and raise the debt ceiling, thereby avoiding a US default.

Democrats have pointed to their votes to raise the ceiling under Donald Trump, and to Republicans’ contribution to the national debt via 2017 tax cuts which disproportionately benefited the wealthy. On Monday House Democrats wrote to Mitch McConnell, the Senate minority leader, urging him to “avert a manufactured crisis”.

Later, the Senate voted on a measure to fund the government and raise the debt ceiling. Republicans blocked it.


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Tuesday, September 14, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Decision day in Boston and beyond

 



 
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BY LISA KASHINSKY

DECISION DAY — Boston voters will whittle their historically diverse mayoral field down to two candidates today, the next step in what's poised to be a barrier-breaking election.

That significance wasn't lost on the candidates as they made their final pitches to voters across the city over the past few days.

City Councilor Annissa Essaibi George spoke wistfully of her late father, a Tunisian immigrant, as she pledged to “fulfill the promise that Boston has made to my family” and others. City Councilor Michelle Wu paid tribute to Chinatown, “the neighborhood that first welcomed and rooted me in Boston,” as she spoke of building a “platform for activism across all our communities.” Acting Mayor Kim Janey and City Councilor Andrea Campbell spoke of the myriad challenges they faced as young Bostonians and vowed to do more to lift up the city.

“I lived almost every inequity you can think about growing up in the city of Boston and that matters. We need more stories and lived experiences that are different in government,” Campbell told supporters at an election-eve rally in the South End. “But I say I'm more than a story. I've done the work.”

In the end, the candidates’ closing arguments focused less on the historic nature of the election and more on the most pressing issues facing the city — affordable housing, a pandemic and other public health crises, and education and economic opportunity gaps.

“I got our city open. We’re investing in small businesses. We’ve got people vaccinated; over 70% of Boston residents have at least one shot in their arm. We’ve got our kids back to school. We’re getting crime down and we’re keeping people in their homes,” Janey said in East Boston on Saturday. “We can’t stop. We’ve got more work to do. We can’t go back to the way things were.”

Wu pledged housing justice and a Boston Green New Deal. Essaibi George pitched herself as a coalition-builder. John Barros, the city’s former economic development chief, leaned into his experience in that arena and “how we can turn that into new results.”

Today will show how well those messages have resonated — particularly among the still-sizable chunk of undecided voters.

Turnout isn’t expected to be heavy. Secretary of State Bill Galvin predicted it will fall between 100,000 and 110,000 — slightly less than the last open-seat preliminary election in 2013. If that holds, roughly 25% of voters have already cast their ballots, more than 5,600 through early voting and more than 20,000 by mail, according to the city.

GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS . I asked, you answered. The matchups Playbook readers believe are most likely to come out of tonight’s preliminary mayoral election are Wu versus Campbell, or Wu versus Essaibi George.

TODAY — Gov. Charlie Baker delivers remarks at a New England Council virtual breakfast at 8 a.m. Galvin casts his vote at 9 a.m. in Brighton. Lawmakers, labor leaders and rideshare drivers host a press conference at 9 a.m. outside the State House in support of legislation that would allow collective bargaining for rideshare drivers. Gretchen Carlson, Julie Roginsky and state Sen. Diana DiZoglio testify at 10:30 a.m. before the Joint Committee on State Administration and Regulatory Oversight in support of banning NDAs from government entities and schools; state Auditor Suzanne Bump testifies on legislation on government accountability.

Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Get in touch: lkashinsky@politico.com.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– “What Boston's Undecided Voters Are Thinking,” by Saraya Wintersmith, GBH News: “Jessica Burke barely recognized the acting mayor when she passed her on an East Boston sidewalk over the weekend. If not for her dog stopping to sniff Kim Janey and her entourage — security, union supporters, translators and press — Burke may have missed the mayor completely. … Burke, 32, is one of the many Boston voters who has been preoccupied with the daily hurdles of life in a pandemic and remains undecided before Tuesday's preliminary election. In Burke's case, a move and a job search kept her from following the race more closely.

– “Massachusetts secretary of state: It’s too late to mail your ballots – vote in person for Boston mayor,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “...there’s not a grace period for ballots to come in after election day — either it’s there by 8 p.m. when polls close or your vote doesn’t count.

– Boston.com’s Nik DeCosta-Klipa has more in his handy voter guide.

– “Boston mayor’s race offers master class in women’s political competition,” by Stephanie Ebbert, Boston Globe: “Boston’s down-to-the-wire preliminary election for mayor features a phenomenon still rare in American politics but eagerly anticipated: A fierce contest among multiple women candidates.

– “Boston’s new mayor will be sworn in mid-November, not January,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “...this race that has been unlike any other also will feature another unusual twist: Whoever emerges from this year’s mayoral race will be sworn in sometime in mid-November, rather than the usual January, according to city officials. … In short, that means whoever is elected as mayor will be sworn in after the election certification process, which is expected to be between 10 days and two weeks after Election Day, officials have said.

– “A more diverse Boston prepares for a true changing of the guard,” by Douglas Moser, Washington Post: “Many community leaders see Boston’s politics finally catching up with its demographics and moving it further beyond other aspects of its past — particularly, in the 1970s and 1980s, the city being the center of some of the country’s nastiest battles over the desegregation of schools and public housing.

– "Ex-BPD chief Gross hits trail, touts super PAC’s ad for Essaibi George," by Gintautas Dumcius, Dorchester Reporter.

– “Boston’s mayoral race was about many things. But here are 3 topics that surprisingly didn’t break through,” by James Pindell, Boston Globe.

– FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: State Rep. Liz Malia has endorsed Angelina “Angie” Camacho for Boston City Council District 7, per her campaign.

 GBH News’ Saraya Wintersmith, POLITICO’s Brakkton Booker and I discuss the dynamics at play in the campaign to be Boston’s first non-white mayor — and the potential fallout for the candidates who don’t nab one of the top two spots — in this afternoon’s edition of POLITICO’s Recast newsletter. Sign up before 1 p.m.


ON THE STUMP

– Janey rolled out a significant endorsement on election eve — Mel King, a former state representative and the first Black person and first person of color to advance to a Boston general mayoral election. As the Boston Herald’s Sean Philip Cotter notes, King has been credited with helping propel former mayor Marty Walsh to victory in 2013. But the last-minute endorsement of Janey, which hit inboxes around 9 p.m. yesterday, might not have the same impact with tens of thousands of people having already voted.

– Polls have shown Wu in prime position heading into the preliminary election, but she’s not taking it for granted. “I just want to remind everyone we’ve seen some nice headlines, but I don’t believe any numbers until the polls close on Tuesday night,” Wu told supporters over the weekend.

– Campbell, who surveys show is locked in a tight race for second place with Janey and Essaibi George, believes the polls are finally capturing the momentum she feels on the ground. “Boston is ready for change. We feel it. We're hearing it on the doors, we're seeing it in the polls and I'm thinking ‘they're finally catching up to something we already knew,’” she told the crowd at her election-eve rally.

– The candidates are fanning out across polling locations today. Here’s where they’ll be when the results come in tonight: Barros is at Restaurante Cesaria in Dorchester, Wu is at Distraction Brewing in Roslindale, Campbell is at Prince Hall Grand Lodge in Grove Hall, Janey is at the SoWa Power Station, and Essaibi George is at Venezia in Dorchester.

THE LOCAL ELECTIONS ROUNDUP

– Preliminary elections are being held in 14 other cities and towns today. Here are a few I’m keeping my eye on:

Somerville — City Councilors Katjana Ballantyne and Will Mbah, Dukakis and Patrick administration alum Mary Cassesso, and William “Billy” Tauro are on the ballot in the first open mayor’s race in nearly 20 years after Mayor Joe Curtatone decided not to seek another term. Somerville could elect its first Black mayor in Mbah, or its second female mayor in Ballantyne or Cassesso, depending on which two candidates make it through preliminary. And a slate of democratic socialist candidates are hoping to advance in the city’s council elections.

Framingham — Yvonne Spicer , the city’s first mayor and the first popularly elected Black female mayor in Massachusetts, hasn’t had the easiest first term between the pandemic and a contentious relationship with some city councilors. She’s being challenged by Charlie Sisitsky, a longtime former selectman and public servant who told MetroWest Daily News last month he’d “create good working relationships” with the council, and Carlos Valadares , CEO and founder of Brazilian Immigrants Family of America.

Lynn — Lynn also has an open-seat mayor’s race after Mayor Thomas McGee opted not to seek reelection. Michael Satterwhite and Jared Nicholson , both members of the school committee, and City Council President Darren Cyr, are vying to replace him. Improving school facilities and creating more affordable housing have emerged as key issues, according to the Lynn Item.

– “After 18 years, Somerville is electing a new mayor — and the choices are distinctly different,” by Nik DeCosta Klipa and Julia Taliesin, Boston.com: “According to [outgoing Mayor Joe] Curtatone, the position of Somerville mayor is no longer just about passing budgets or improving the city’s bond rating. Rather, as the leader of a city where 90 percent of residents voted against Trump last year, he says his successor must continue to be an outspoken voice for progressive values in the Boston area and beyond.

– “Driscoll surges ahead on campaign donations, spending,” by Dustin Luca, Salem News: “Throughout 2021, [Mayor Kim] Driscoll has pulled in nearly five times as much in donations as Ward 7 City Councilor Steve Dibble, who is joined by Frank Perley in a three-way mayoral preliminary election on Tuesday, Sept. 14.

DATELINE BEACON HILL

– The special election to succeed former state Sen. Joe Boncore will stretch into next year. The Senate set Jan. 11, 2022, for the special election, and primaries are set for Dec. 14, according to the secretary of state’s office.

In a surprising turn of events, state Rep. Adrian Madaro won’t be running for the seat after all. “Last week, while on a family trip with limited cell phone reception, I unplugged for the first time in over two months and was holding my son Matteo when it hit me. I hadn't spent any real time with him in the weeks I was considering the run for state senate,” Madaro said in a statement last night. “I was all in for this race, and that meant not being present for my son in the way that I wanted to be.” Thread.

– “Baker: National Guard to assist with school transportation,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Beginning with training on Tuesday, 90 Guard members will prepare for service in Chelsea, Lawrence, Lowell, and Lynn, the governor’s announcement said. … Baker said the state offered services to Boston. ‘Boston said that at this time they didn’t want it now, but they were going to think about it,’ Baker said.

– “Vaccine Status Causing Stir In Mass. House,” by Chris Lisinski, State House News Service (paywall): “Taking aim at an unnamed group of representatives, House Speaker Ronald Mariano aired frustrations Monday about lawmakers who he said have bristled at COVID-19 vaccine requirements and said the resistance complicates decisions about bringing the Legislature back into the State House. … In recent weeks, some lawmakers have signed onto legislation that would effectively prohibit government officials, businesses and other organizations from limiting access to some public and private spaces based on vaccination status.

– “ARPA Spending Bill In Works For The Fall,” by Katie Lannan, State House News Service: “Passing a bill to spend some of the federal funding allocated to Massachusetts through the American Rescue Plan Act before the Thanksgiving holiday is a ‘reasonable’ goal, House Speaker Ronald Mariano said Monday. … [Gov. Charlie] Baker said Monday that he and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito ‘are confident that the Legislature appreciates the urgency associated with this’ and that they respect lawmakers' interest in opening the conversation up to the public. 

BALLOT BATTLES

– “Galvin Opposes Voter ID Initiative Petition,” by Chris Lisinski, State House News Service (paywall): “Questioning claims of fraud and warning that older voters could be disenfranchised, Secretary of State William Galvin is voicing his opposition to a planned ballot question requiring Massachusetts voters to present identification at polling places, describing it as ‘a solution that is in search of a problem.’"

THE LATEST NUMBERS

– “Massachusetts coronavirus cases jump 4,752 over the weekend, hospitalizations climb,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The three-day total of 4,752 cases — a daily average of 1,584 infections — was a higher daily rate than last weekend’s daily average of 1,371 cases.

FROM THE HUB

– “‘The void he leaves behind is unspeakable.’ BU professor killed in fall through rusted staircase near Dorchester T stop,” by Travis Andersen and John R. Ellement, Boston Globe: “A Boston University professor was killed after falling through a large gap in a badly rusted, state-owned staircase in Dorchester that had been closed to pedestrians since last year, officials said Monday, a mysterious death that stunned his family and colleagues and raised questions about how he happened to reach the dangerous area.

– “Boston parking spot listed for $375,000,” by Meghan Ottolini, Boston Herald.

– “Dunkin’ opens first digital-only store in Boston,” by Erin Kuschner, Boston.com.

FROM THE DELEGATION

– “Democrats Hope To Undo Many Trump Tax Cuts To Fund Biden's $3.5 Trillion Budget Plan,” by Kelsey Snell, NPR: “House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal, D-Mass., released details Monday of a plan that includes increasing the top corporate tax rate to 26.5%, up from the current rate of 21%, and restoring the top rate to 39.6% for individuals earning more than $400,000 and married couples earning over $450,000.

– “Springfield rally urges Rep. Neal to 'go big' on climate, care investments in Democrats' $3.5 trillion bill,” by Danny Jin, Berkshire Eagle.

DAY IN COURT

– “Jasiel Correia's defense says good deeds deserve a lighter sentence,” by Dan Medeiros, Herald News: “In a pre-sentencing memo filed Monday, Correia's defense attorneys William Fick and Daniel Marx argue that '36 months is a very substantial period of incarceration for a non-violent first offense, particularly for a man as young as Mr. Correia.'"

– “Varsity Blues college admissions scandal trial gets underway in Boston,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “The first trial in the sweeping college admissions scandal got underway with defense attorneys attempting to portray the two fathers accused of buying their kids’ way into elite universities as victims of an ‘extremely skilled con man.’

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

– “A 2nd lawsuit in works against Vineyard Wind,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “The Responsible Offshore Development Alliance, a coalition of fishing industry associations and companies, signaled on Monday its intent to sue the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management by filing a petition with the First Circuit US Court of Appeals seeking clarification on which court is the most appropriate to hear the challenge.

– “'Greener alternative': Cape businesses support plastic water bottle ban, seek substitutes,” by Jessica Hill, Cape Cod Times: “Ten towns on the Cape have voted to ban single-use plastic water bottles."

FROM THE 413

– “At UMass Amherst, Casey Affleck and PETA protest animal testing that the university says is humane,” by Will Katcher, MassLive.com: “... Casey Affleck — the Oscar-wining, Massachusetts-born actor — and members and supporters of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals told onlooking students that the school they attended performed experiments that mistreated and killed animals. But that is not the case, the university and the lead researcher targeted by PETA say.

– "Springfield Public Schools add permanent virtual school as interest in remote learning continues to increase in Massachusetts amid COVID pandemic," by Heather Morrison, MassLive.com.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “‘Wish he was here’: Lawrence community gathers to remember teenager killed in Merrimack Valley gas explosions,” by Justin Bourke, 7 News: “The series of explosions on Sept. 13, 2018, left more than 130 properties damaged, two dozen people injured, and 18-year-old Leonel Rondon dead. Lucianny Rondon struggled to find the words on the anniversary of her brother’s death as the community gathered to keep his name alive.

– More: “3 Years After Gas Explosions, Many Lawrence Residents Await Settlement Checks,” by Betsy Badell, Telemundo Nueva Inglaterra: “... [Columbia Gas] also settled a class action lawsuit for $143 million. But while 11,000 residents have received checks from that settlement, Telemundo Nueva Inglaterra has learned that many are still waiting for them.

MEDIA MATTERS

– “Boston 25 News cuts staff, cancels newscasts, sources say,” by Don Seiffert, Boston Business Journal: “WFXT Boston 25 laid off more than a dozen news staffers, canceled several weekly newscasts and replaced the general manager in early September, according to multiple insiders at the Dedham-headquartered television station.

TRANSITIONS – Pat Malloy has joined New Balance Athletics as senior counsel for trade and policy.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Ted Gup, Julia Murray and Alex Pratt.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com.

 

HAPPENING WEDNESDAY - POLITICO TECH SUMMIT: Washington and Silicon Valley have been colliding for some time. Has the intersection of tech, innovation, regulation and politics finally reached a tipping point? Join POLITICO for our first-ever Tech Summit to explore the evolving relationship between the power corridors of Washington and the Valley. REGISTER HERE.

 
 


 

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Monday, September 6, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: What Manchin's Op-Ed Lamenting the National Debt Is Really About

 


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05 September 21

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Senator Joe Manchin leaves the U.S. Capitol following a vote on August 3, 2021 in Washington, DC. (photo: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
FOCUS: What Manchin's Op-Ed Lamenting the National Debt Is Really About
Jim Newell, Slate
Newell writes: "West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, the swing vote on the Biden agenda, likes to set a marker when heading into a busy legislative session."

His op-ed about the national debt is not really about the national debt.

West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, the swing vote on the Biden agenda, likes to set a marker when heading into a busy legislative session. Before the June session, when Democrats were hoping to advance some version of the voting rights and election reform-focused For the People Act, Manchin wrote an op-ed saying he wouldn’t support it. That bill, and new iterations of it, now sit in a state of permanent limbo. Now, as Congressional Democrats draft a $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill addressing health care, child care, climate change, and the remainder of their spending agenda, Manchin has written another op-ed arguing the following case: What if, instead of doing that, we didn’t?

Manchin had already said that he had “serious concerns” about a $3.5 trillion bill back in mid-August. But in a Wall Street Journal op-ed published Thursday, and in related remarks to the West Virginia Chamber of Commerce, Manchin called for a “strategic pause” on consideration of the proposal.

“Instead of rushing to spend trillions on new government programs and additional stimulus funding, Congress should hit a strategic pause on the budget-reconciliation legislation,” Manchin wrote in the Journal. “A pause is warranted because it will provide more clarity on the trajectory of the pandemic, and it will allow us to determine whether inflation is transitory or not.”

Democrats understand that Manchin, the most conservative Democrat in the Senate, isn’t keen on passing a $3.5 trillion, party-line bill. What drives them up the wall, though, are the arguments he’s using against it.

Nowhere in his many complaints about the national debt, and how adding an excess $3.5 trillion in debt now could accelerate inflation, is an acknowledgement of the relevant fact that Democrats are not writing a bill that adds $3.5 trillion to the debt. The budget blueprint that Democrats have already passed would only allow them to add about half of that to the debt, if they were so inclined—the rest would be offset with tax increases and other savings found by the Senate Finance Committee. But Democrats, specifically to satisfy Joe Manchin, have also said many times that they would pay for the entire bill anyway. Some of the accounting will be gimmickry, sure, but Manchin didn’t complain about the accounting gimmickry in the bipartisan infrastructure bill, which he adored.

Maybe these are famous last words, but I don’t see Manchin ultimately tanking a reconciliation bill over concerns of this nature. Something is likely to pass, even if the final product is a skeleton of Bernie Sanders’ transformative vision. Instead, his op-ed is the latest step in a coordinated effort from centrist Democrats in both the House and Senate, and their outside peers, to secure leverage over the endgame.

Manchin and those aligned with him needed to do something to regain some influence. The original legislative strategy that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi put together was that the House would not pass the Senate-approved bipartisan infrastructure bill—which centrists desperately want to see signed int o law—until the Senate had also sent over an adequate reconciliation bill. By holding the bipartisan deal hostage, progressives, in theory, could compel centrists’ participation in the reconciliation bill.

Centrists, then, came up with a plan to free the hostage. In August, nine House moderates, led by New Jersey Rep. Josh Gottheimer, threatened not to pass the budget blueprint that would set up the reconciliation process until they got a vote on the bipartisan deal. After some delayed votes and torrid late-night negotiating sessions, the Gott Gang and House Democratic leaders struck a deal: The House would vote on the bipartisan infrastructure bill no later than Sept. 27. The House moderates were egged on in these negotiations by Manchin and Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, as well as by the well-financed centrist group No Labels.

Pelosi said afterwards that she had always intended to hold a vote on the bipartisan infrastructure bill by the end of September, as that’s when the existing highway bill expired. What the moderates secured, then, was a public acknowledgement from Pelosi that her open-ended commitment to hold the Senate bill hostage was untenable.

And so it does not surprise me that, shortly after House moderates put an expiration date (Sept. 27) on whatever leverage progressives had, Joe Manchin would write an op-ed calling for a “strategic pause” to slow the reconciliation process down. There is indeed a considerable amount of strategy in the pause Manchin proposes, but it has little to do with the misleading debt and inflation arguments he makes in his piece. Manchin, and fellow moderates, want to see the bipartisan infrastructure deal passed out of the House so that they have the ability to walk from the reconciliation bill if they want to. That ability would give them the absolute upper hand in negotiations over it.

Progressives do still have another card to play, and they’re talking a big game about playing it: They could vote down the bipartisan infrastructure bill when it comes to the House floor until there is, at least, some shared understanding about the broad contours of the reconciliation bill. But they may not have the numbers, depending on the number of House Republicans who will vote for the bipartisan infrastructure bill. They would also find themselves in a difficult spot, as time went on, holding out against a top piece of Biden-supported legislation while surface transportation authorization has lapsed.

Again, odds are this all gets worked out some way, as both pieces of the Biden agenda have attained a certain too-big-to-fail status. If it all goes south, though, there will have been a bigger problem at play from which all the threats and hostage-taking were merely symptoms: Democrats on opposing wings of the party do not trust each other to hold up their ends of the bargain. If they did, there would not be so much angst and strategic plotting about something as basic as the sequencing of votes.


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