GOP Senator: Extend Bush Tax Cuts For Wealthy Even If They Add To Deficit

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Once again the republican fallacy of caring about the deficit exposed!

sourcre: Huffington Post

Top GOP Senator: Extend Bush Tax Cuts For Wealthy Even If They Add To Deficit, But Not Jobless Benefits


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Top Senate Republican Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) insisted on Sunday that Congress should extend the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans regardless of their impact on the deficit, even as he and other Republicans are blocking unemployment insurance extensions over deficit concerns.

"[Y]ou should never raise taxes in order to cut taxes," said the Arizona Senator during an appearance on Fox News Sunday. "Surely Congress has the authority, and it would be right to -- if we decide we want to cut taxes to spur the economy, not to have to raise taxes in order to offset those costs. You do need to offset the cost of increased spending, and that's what Republicans object to. But you should never have to offset cost of a deliberate decision to reduce tax rates on Americans."

White House aides immediately seized on the comments. Press Secretary Robert Gibbs wrote on Twitter, "Kyl says wealthy need big Bush tax cuts while middle class families are on their own to fend for themselves as a result of Bush economy."

In private, administration officials say that the framing of the argument couldn't be more advantageous: "It's cutting taxes for the wealthy and letting the unemployed to fend for themselves," said one White House ally.

"If all of this has a familiar ring to it, it's because unpaid for tax cuts for the rich at the expense of working people is the same backward policy Republicans used to put the nation in this hole, and it's the same policy they promise to return to if put in a position of power again," added Hari Sevugan, press secretary for the Democratic National Committee.

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Asked to expand on his tweets, Gibbs declined comment, save to clarify that "the question [host Chris] Wallace specifically asked Kyl was [about] the upper end of the Bush tax cuts (above $250,000)."

But the politics already are fairly obvious. For the past few months, congressional Republicans have demanded that any additional spending be offset by budget cuts or revenue increases elsewhere. Also on Sunday, White House senior adviser David Axelrod blamed deficit concerns for the difficulty in finding a 60th vote in the Senate for unemployment benefits even though, as of Friday, 2.1 million people have not received checks that they were expecting in June.

And yet, Kyl is now suggesting that the same budget rules shouldn't apply with respect to tax cuts for the wealthy, which are set to expire unless Congress acts to renew them. As Steve Benen at the Washington Monthly notes:
<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffebcd">It's quite a message to Americans: Republicans believe $30 billion for unemployment benefits don't even deserve a vote because the money would be added to the deficit, but Republicans also believe that adding the cost of $678 billion in tax cuts for the wealthy to the deficit is just fine.

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Kyl is one of the most prominent members of Congress to advance the argument that jobless benefits make people not want to look for work, a position disputed by economists across the political spectrum. Unemployment insurance "doesn't create new jobs. In fact, if anything, continuing to pay people unemployment compensation is a disincentive for them to seek new work," Kyl said last March on the Senate floor.

The chart below shows the deficit impact of the Bush tax cuts over the next decade.

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How do Republicans say this dumb sh*t? It’s Spending cuts Kyl, We need spending cuts so the tax cuts can have the desired results. Really, it’s not that hard
 
they can say blatant sheit like that, cause at the end of the day, all they're gonna do is ask non-wealthy republicans and tea baggers "do you really want that nig.ger in office"?

and that's how they keep those gop voters going to the polls to vote for their party
 
Come on ya'll. Do you think it's smart to take more money out of the economy during a recession? Yes, the national debt is hugely important BUT we happen to be in a stifling predicament. Right now, taking money out of the economy would be very harmful to all of us.

Secondly, people need to stop talking about "tax cuts for the wealthy." Don't you realize that's just a political catch phrase to get your votes and secure power for some other group of politicians and interest groups? Even with the tax cuts the so-called wealthy have been given, they still supply an overwhelming majority of the tax money paid in this country while millions of others don't pay a dime in personal income tax.

People need to have a better understanding of basic economics. People w/ money help the economy through their spending, investment, and in the case of business owners, hiring people to work. But there's people out there that want to take much more of their money away?
 
During the summer you turn on the heater and during the winter you turn on the air conditioner?

When unemployment was low they should have been attacking the deficit, building up a cushion in case of war or depression. The tax cuts for the rich didn't work, nor compensate for loss in tax revenue from mythical increase in economic activity.

The middle class started most of the major companies, source of jobs and business activity. If they are flat on their back, nothing new will be created.


:dance::dance:
 
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Come on ya'll. Do you think it's smart to take more money out of the economy during a recession? Yes, the national debt is hugely important BUT we happen to be in a stifling predicament. Right now, taking money out of the economy would be very harmful to all of us.

Secondly, people need to stop talking about "tax cuts for the wealthy." Don't you realize that's just a political catch phrase to get your votes and secure power for some other group of politicians and interest groups? Even with the tax cuts the so-called wealthy have been given, they still supply an overwhelming majority of the tax money paid in this country while millions of others don't pay a dime in personal income tax.

People need to have a better understanding of basic economics. People w/ money help the economy through their spending, investment, and in the case of business owners, hiring people to work. But there's people out there that want to take much more of their money away?

The wealthy save money, the poor spend money. You also discount the fact that the wealth redistribution that has been occurring for about 30 years. Meaning the rich are earning more and the middle and lower class are earning less. Do you realize that many of the people that don't pay taxes have an income below $50,000.

Do you dispute that the poor do not make enough money to save and even if they did, they would spend it, thus keeping money in the economy. Check out the saving habits of the rich and the poor. If the tax cuts were so beneficial, where are the long term benefits? Are we to believe that because there is a chance that we could become wealthy someday that the tax expiration will somehow affect the middle class or lower class? Should we blame the lower and middle class for being in the lower and middle class? If you think the current income tax rates are bad, check out the tax rates during the post WWII period.
 
How do Republicans say this dumb sh*t? It’s Spending cuts Kyl, We need spending cuts so the tax cuts can have the desired results. Really, it’s not that hard

:yes:

The wealthy save money, the poor spend money. You also discount the fact that the wealth redistribution that has been occurring for about 30 years. Meaning the rich are earning more and the middle and lower class are earning less. Do you realize that many of the people that don't pay taxes have an income below $50,000.

Do you dispute that the poor do not make enough money to save and even if they did, they would spend it, thus keeping money in the economy. Check out the saving habits of the rich and the poor. If the tax cuts were so beneficial, where are the long term benefits? Are we to believe that because there is a chance that we could become wealthy someday that the tax expiration will somehow affect the middle class or lower class? Should we blame the lower and middle class for being in the lower and middle class? If you think the current income tax rates are bad, check out the tax rates during the post WWII period.


Perfect rebuttal.
 
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