Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?
#12041
Posted 2019-February-05, 20:19
https://www.realclea...1130.html#polls
it is said that in 2010, 51.4% of the pubic opposed the ACA and 39.9% of the public approved of it.
I have no knowledge of how well these figures stand up to scrutiny. For example I would like to see the actual question that was asked before I make much of this. Something such as "Do you (a) hope that the ACA bill passes and becomes law or (b) do you hope that the bill fails to become law or ( c ) do you not give a hoot or (d) do you have no idea of what I am talking about ?". That would be a good question to have asked. Maybe they did.
I am recording the State of the Union address. I am hoping that I do not really have to watch it. We bought some wine to help us through it but we have already finished it off. I try to be a good citizen but some things are just too much to ask of me.
#12042
Posted 2019-February-05, 20:22
Chas_P, on 2019-February-05, 19:44, said:
Whoever sold you the narrative you are repeating is wrong.
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#12043
Posted 2019-February-05, 21:51
Winstonm, on 2019-February-05, 20:22, said:
The numbers apparently jumped around a bit..
Here is something from March 9 of 2010
https://news.gallup....hcare-Plan.aspx
I couldn't get your link to come up directly but probably it was to the Mar 23 story:
https://news.gallup....ll-passage.aspx
Mar 23 was the day Obama signed it. So it might well be correct that more opposed it than supported it before the vote, but after it was passed the numbers switched.
#12044
Posted 2019-February-05, 22:44
kenberg, on 2019-February-05, 21:51, said:
Here is something from March 9 of 2010
https://news.gallup....hcare-Plan.aspx
I couldn't get your link to come up directly but probably it was to the Mar 23 story:
https://news.gallup....ll-passage.aspx
Mar 23 was the day Obama signed it. So it might well be correct that more opposed it than supported it before the vote, but after it was passed the numbers switched.
I had the same problem - now the link isn't working. But from your link:
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That hardly supports the narrative that before the bill passed a majority was against it.
I found it again.
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MARCH 23, 2010
By Slim Margin, Americans Support Healthcare Bill's Passage
Independents evenly split in their basic reactions, but more are "angry" than "enthusiastic"
BY LYDIA SAAD
PRINCETON, NJ -- Nearly half of Americans give a thumbs-up to Congress' passage of a healthcare reform bill last weekend, with 49% calling it "a good thing." Republicans and Democrats have polar opposite reactions, with independents evenly split.
The findings, from a March 22 USA Today/Gallup poll conducted one day after the bill received a majority of votes in the U.S. House of Representatives, represent immediate reactions to the vote.
Americans' emotional responses to the bill's passage are more positive than negative -- with 50% enthusiastic or pleased versus 42% angry or disappointed -- and are similar to their general reactions.
Although much of the public debate over healthcare reform has been heated, barely a third of rank-and-file citizens express either enthusiasm (15%) or anger (19%) about the bill's passage. However, only Democrats show greater enthusiasm than anger. Independents are twice as likely to be angry as enthusiastic, and Republicans 10 times as likely.
#12045
Posted 2019-February-06, 01:00
#12046
Posted 2019-February-06, 08:15
Winstonm, on 2019-February-05, 22:44, said:
That hardly supports the narrative that before the bill passed a majority was against it.
True enough, but "a high point of 51% in October" doesn't show great entusiasm either, and some of the low points were considerably lower.
Athttps://news.gallup.com/poll/125030/Healthcare-Bill-Support-Ticks-Up-Public-Divided.aspx?utm_source=link_newsv9&utm_campaign=item_126521&utm_medium=copy
they have a graph covering the last several months before the bill was past. At times there are more in favor than aganist, at times it's the other way around. Probably we should be restrained in claiming either majority support or majority opposition in early 2010. Now, as indicated by the Kaiser report that PassedOut cites, there seems to be a majority that support it. A close look at details could be warranted.
Some people are much more affected than others. As near as I can tell, the ACA has had no influence at all on either the cost or the effectiveness of my coverage. Not yet anyway, although there is something in the works, I'll skip the detains, that might affect things, perhaps a little adversely. So I am not so sure that my opinion counts for much. I want a good program for the sake of those who need it, of course, but directly for me it doesn't seem to matter.
Somewhere along the way, the argument from Ds seems to have shifted from "Fix the ACA, but keep it don't repeal it" to "Let's go with Medicare for all". I suppose that I will have to understand this well enough to have an opinion. Sort of like filing taxes. Not pleasant, but it needs to be done.
#12047
Posted 2019-February-06, 10:15
kenberg, on 2019-February-06, 08:15, said:
Why does anyone actually care how well the ACA polls?
1. Looking at polls in isolation is meaningless. As a rule, medical care in the US polls extremely extremely unpopularly, especially amongst anyone who needs to use it who has anything but a Cadillac plan. People hate what they have, people hate any viable option, and they only thing that the average voter actually likes is "Give me everything for free and make sure to screw over the blacks"
2. I would think that recent experiences with, say, Brexit or the election of Trump show the perils of putting to great faith in voice of the hoi poloi.
Obsessing over small shifts in polls over time seems like an exercise in frustration...
#12048
Posted 2019-February-06, 11:06
kenberg, on 2019-February-05, 20:19, said:
Sin boldly. You will be forgiven.
#12049
Posted 2019-February-06, 11:11
hrothgar, on 2019-February-06, 10:15, said:
1. Looking at polls in isolation is meaningless. As a rule, medical care in the US polls extremely extremely unpopularly, especially amongst anyone who needs to use it who has anything but a Cadillac plan. People hate what they have, people hate any viable option, and they only thing that the average voter actually likes is "Give me everything for free and make sure to screw over the blacks"
2. I would think that recent experiences with, say, Brexit or the election of Trump show the perils of putting to great faith in voice of the hoi poloi.
Obsessing over small shifts in polls over time seems like an exercise in frustration...
I upvoted, but I want to also be explicit about my agreement on the limitation of polls, practically any polls. I mentioned earlier I would want to see the exact question, but even if the question is very well phrased there is still only a limited amount we can get out of polls. Part of the problem is that when we are not directly affected we often do not look closely. This is not just understandable, it is inevitable. I can look closely at some issues, but there are a lot of issues. I can find Venezuela on a map, I know the capital is Caracas. already this puts me ahead of many people, but if you want a through analysis of the issues there, ask someone else. It sounds like a mess. I hope whoever is making choices knows more than I do.
And health issues? I know people who are directly affected by the ACA but do I know them well enough to have a through discussion with them about how this has worked out? Not really.
And so on.
If a pollster asks if I favor having a health system that gives decent medical care to people of modest means, I know the answer. Yes. Beyond that, it gets tricky.
#12050
Posted 2019-February-06, 11:38
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The other significant message in Mr Trump’s speech was an attack on socialism. Cold War presidents would routinely warn against the Soviet version. It is hard to recollect a US president worrying about socialism at home. Yet Mr Trump’s bromide was borne of a shrewd political calculus. Many of the unapplauding Democrats in front of him today happily flaunt a word that was until recently taboo in US politics. The brewing Democratic presidential primaries are turning into a social democratic beauty contest. Mr Trump knows he could profit from that. “Today we renew our resolve that America will never be a socialist country,” he said to thunderous applause from half the chamber.
As for the traditional laundry list of presidential to-do items, most Americans will struggle to name a single one 48 hours from now. The speech was remarkably light on specifics, even by Mr Trump’s standards.
There was a content-free reference to infrastructure — no mention of cost, mechanism or rationale. He talked a little about lowering prescription drug prices and funding a cure for childhood cancer. These were the most tired passages in the speech. It was clear Mr Trump neither expected, nor particularly wanted, to make bipartisan hay with the Democrats. The feeling was clearly mutual. The 2020 election is already under way.
Two things are clear. The first is that Mr Trump will bill the election as a battle between him and a socialist. “We were born free and we will stay free,” he said on Tuesday. The second is that it will take place against the backdrop of a missing wall.
#12051
Posted 2019-February-06, 16:37
https://twitter.com/...276217095139331
Curious what Drews and Chas and the like think of this...
#12052
Posted 2019-February-07, 08:23
Setser is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and an expert on international trade and money flows.
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“For too long, our tax code has incentivized companies to leave our country in search of lower tax rates,” he said, pitching voters in the fall of 2017. “My administration rejects the offshoring model, and we have embraced a brand-new model. It’s called the American model.”
The White House argued they wanted a system that “encourages companies to stay in America, grow in America, spend in America, and hire in America.” Yet the bill he signed into law includes a sweetheart deal that allows companies that shift their profits abroad to pay tax at a rate well below the already-reduced corporate income tax — an incentive shift that completely contradicts his stated goal.
Why would any multinational corporation pay America’s 21 percent tax rate when it could pay the new “global minimum” rate of 10.5 percent on profits shifted to tax havens, particularly when there are few restrictions on how money can be moved around a company and its foreign subsidiaries?
These wonky concerns were largely brushed aside amid the political brawl. But now that a full year has passed since the tax bill became law, we have hard numbers we can evaluate.
For starters, the law’s repatriation deal did prompt a brief surge in offshore profits returning to the United States. But the total sum returned so far is well below the trillions many proponents predicted, and a large chunk of the returned funds have been used for record-breaking stock buybacks, which don’t help workers and generate little real economic activity.
And despite Mr. Trump’s proud rhetoric regarding tax reform during his State of the Union address, there is no wide pattern of companies bringing back jobs or profits from abroad. The global distribution of corporations’ offshore profits — our best measure of their tax avoidance gymnastics — hasn’t budged from the prevailing trend.
Well over half the profits that American companies report earning abroad are still booked in only a few low-tax nations — places that, of course, are not actually home to the customers, workers and taxpayers facilitating most of their business. A multinational corporation can route its global sales through Ireland, pay royalties to its Dutch subsidiary and then funnel income to its Bermudian subsidiary — taking advantage of Bermuda’s corporate tax rate of zero.
No major technology company has jettisoned the finely tuned tax structures that allow a large share of its global profits to be booked offshore. Nor have major pharmaceutical companies stopped producing many of their most profitable drugs in Ireland. And Pepsi, to name just one major manufacturer, still makes the concentrate for its soda in Singapore, also a haven.
Eliminating the complex series of loopholes that encourage offshoring was a major talking point in the run-up to the 2017 tax bill, but most of them are still in place. The craftiest and largest corporations can still legally whittle down their effective tax rate into the single digits. (In fact, the new law encourages firms to move “tangible assets” — like factories — offshore).
Overall, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act amounted to a technocratic sleight of hand — a scheme set to shift an even greater share of the federal tax burden onto the shoulders of American families. According to the Treasury Department’s tally for fiscal year 2018, corporate income tax receipts fell by 31 percent, an unprecedented year-over-year drop in a time of economic growth (presumably a time when profits and government revenue should rise in tandem).
These damning results, to be sure, don’t make for a good defense of what came before the new law. In theory under the old system, American-based firms still owed the government a cut of their global profits. In practice, large firms could indefinitely defer paying this tax until the funds could be repatriated — usually when granted a tax holiday by a friendly administration.
Over a generation, this political dance was paired with rules that made it relatively easy for firms to transfer their most prized intellectual property — say, the rights to popular software or the particular mix of ingredients for a hot new drug — to their offshore subsidiaries. Taken together, they created a tax nirvana of sorts for multinational corporations, particularly in intellectual-property-intensive industries like tech and pharmaceuticals. But it wasn’t enough.
For their next trick, the companies worked with their political allies to favorably frame the 2017 tax debate. When he was the House speaker, Paul Ryan was fond of talking about $3 trillion in “trapped” profits abroad. But those profits weren’t actually, physically, sitting in a few tax havens.
They were largely invested in United States bank accounts, securities and bonds issued by the Treasury or other companies headquartered in the States. As Adam Looney — a Brookings Institution fellow and former Treasury Department official — has explained, companies that needed to finance a new domestic investment could simply issue a bond effectively backed by its offshore cash. (For instance, Apple could bring its “trapped” funds onshore by selling a bond to Pfizer’s offshore account, or vice versa.)
Put plainly, they got the best of both worlds: Uncle Sam could tax only a small slice of their books while they traded with one another based on the size of the entire pie.
The scale of the tax shifting has become so immense that some economists believe curbing it could raise reported G.D.P. by well over a percentage point — something Mr. Trump, who’s been absorbed by opportunities to brag about the economy, should notionally welcome.
President Trump’s economic advisers and the key architects of the bill on Capitol Hill must have known their reform wasn’t going to end business incentives that hurt American workers. Honest reform would have meant closing corporate loopholes — a move they originally promised to make.
Should the opportunity present itself, perhaps to the next president, there are a couple of viable options for a fundamental tax overhaul that wouldn’t require reinstating the 35 percent corporate tax rate.
One of several possibilities is to return to a system of global taxation without the deferrals that enabled empty repatriations. That would mean profits sneakily booked tax-free in Bermuda would be taxed every year at 21 percent. Profits booked in Ireland — or other low-tax nations — would be taxed at the difference between Ireland’s rate and America’s rate.
It’s an approach that would protect small and midsize American companies while cracking down on bad corporate actors with enough fancy accountants and lawyers to rig the game to their advantage. And it would be far better than the fake tax reform passed a year ago.
#12055
Posted 2019-February-07, 13:34
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On Thursday, Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) introduced a Green New Deal resolution that lays out the goals, aspirations, and specifics of the program in a more definitive way. This is as close as there is to an “official” Green New Deal — at last, something to argue about.
There will be lots to say in the days to come about the politics of all this. (In the meantime, read Ella Nilsen’s piece.) For instance, it is interesting that Markey, a living symbol of 2008-era Democratic thinking on climate change (and the leader of the old climate committee), is lending his imprimatur to this more urgent and radical iteration.
But for now, I just want to share a few initial impressions after reading through the short document a few times.
It’s worth noting just what a high-wire act the authors of this resolution are attempting. It has to offer enough specifics to give it real shape and ambition, without overprescribing solutions or prejudging differences over secondary questions. It has to please a diverse range of interest groups, from environmental justice to labor to climate, without alienating any of them. It has to stand up to intense scrutiny (much of it sure to be bad faith), with lots of people gunning for it from both the right and center.
And, of course, it eventually has to give birth to real legislation.
Given all those demands, the resolution does a remarkably good job of threading the needle. It is bold and unmistakably progressive, matched to the problem as defined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, while avoiding a few needless fights and leaving room for plenty of debate over priorities and policy tools.
The resolution consists of a preamble, five goals, 14 projects, and 15 requirements. The preamble establishes that there are two crises, a climate crisis and an economic crisis of wage stagnation and growing inequality, and that the GND can address both.
The goals — achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions, creating jobs, providing for a just transition, securing clean air and water — are broadly popular. The projects — things like decarbonizing electricity, transportation, and industry, restoring ecosystems, upgrading buildings and electricity grids — are necessary and sensible (if also extremely ambitious).
There are a few items down in the requirements that might raise red flags (more on those later), but given the long road ahead, there will be plenty of time to sort them out. Overall, this is about as strong an opening bid as anyone could have asked for.
Now let’s take a closer look.
#12056
Posted 2019-February-07, 14:55
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#12057
Posted 2019-February-07, 16:47
I would have scheduled the speech for something like the later of February 19 or the week after the appropriations bills are passed if and only if there is no additional government shutdown. If Dennison shuts down government again, I would have postponed the State of the Union speech until 2020.
I haven't seen the rationale for giving up one of the biggest bargaining chips to prevent a government shutdown.
#12058
Posted 2019-February-07, 18:35
y66, on 2019-February-07, 13:34, said:
How can one not love this plan?
Ocasio-Cortez's Green New Deal offers 'economic security' for those 'unwilling to work'
Genius.
Before internet age you had a suspicion there are lots of "not-so-smart" people on the planet. Now you even know their names.
#12059
Posted 2019-February-07, 18:44
johnu, on 2019-January-18, 21:03, said:
John, reality strikes hard.
johnu, on 2019-February-07, 16:47, said:
I would have scheduled the speech for something like the later of February 19 or the week after the appropriations bills are passed if and only if there is no additional government shutdown. If Dennison shuts down government again, I would have postponed the State of the Union speech until 2020.
I haven't seen the rationale for giving up one of the biggest bargaining chips to prevent a government shutdown.
So who scored the knockdown?
Nancy better get to her flight quick, she might not be allowed to board a week from now.
Before internet age you had a suspicion there are lots of "not-so-smart" people on the planet. Now you even know their names.
#12060
Posted 2019-February-07, 18:48
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Regardless, trying to provide a better economic environment for everyone is a worthy goal, is it not?
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