SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Those Damned Democrat's -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (1211)6/18/2003 12:01:15 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 1604
 
Democrats Push Issues All Over the Map







Wednesday, June 18, 2003

URL:http://www.siliconinvestor.com/msg_reply.gsp?replytoid=19040826


WASHINGTON — One of the busiest days so far in the Democratic presidential campaign saw several hopeful candidates stake out ground far and wide on the political spectrum.





North Carolina Sen. John Edwards (search), who has been trailing in the polls and is eager for traction and a way to distinguish himself from his eight rivals, became the first Democratic candidate to formally propose and promise middle-class tax cuts.

"I will cut taxes to encourage savings and wealth creation for the middle class and working poor, not take away their tax cuts. I believe ordinary Americans are taxed too much, not too little," Edwards said in a speech Tuesday in Washington, D.C.

Edwards said he would repeal $300 billion worth of Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, put half toward deficit reduction and use $160 billion to cut middle-class taxes over the next decade.

The plan would include:

— Tax credits for first-time homeowners;

— Tax cuts on middle-class capital gains and dividends; and

— Matching funds for retirement savings.

Edwards said he would reverse Bush's income tax cuts for the wealthy — those earning more than $240,000 — and increase capital gains taxes on people earning more than $350,000. The latter action would restore $300 billion over 10 years to government coffers, aides said.

"I know this president wants to make the next election about taxes. That's why I'm going to tell America the whole story: This president is the reason your taxes are going up. I'm going to cut them," Edwards said. "Their economic vision has one goal: To get rid of taxes on unearned income and shift the tax burden onto people who work. This crowd wants a world where the only people who have to pay taxes are the ones who do the work."

While Edwards pounded President Bush, Simon Rosenberg, president of the New Democratic Network (search), said Democrats need to fix their party's agenda to focus on the positive.

"As a party, we need to stop beating up on President Bush, stop beating up on each other and create a positive optimistic vision for this country," he said.

Rosenberg said Democrats must also acknowledge that the GOP has built a superior political machine, and must try to start building their own.

"I think Democrats are in denial about where we are as a party," he said in an interview Monday. "Republicans are in a better position to be the majority party into the future."

He proposed a party agenda that focuses on economic prosperity, global leadership and homeland security. It's a contrast to the issues that Democrats have championed in recent elections, such as protecting Social Security and Medicare.

But that's not the route taken by moderate Democrats, Sens. Joe Lieberman (search) of Connecticut and Bob Graham (search) of Florida, who are trying to counter the liberal assertion that only the left can be true to socially responsible ideals. Both candidates spoke to NDN on Tuesday.

Lieberman, who has been criticized by the left as Republican-light, chose to speak on a favorite liberal issue: fighting poverty.

"As president, it will be my goal, and as Americans, it will be our moral quest to reduce the poverty rate to the lowest it has ever been in our history, within four years, and then to go further to cut the rate of poverty by one-third in 10 years," Lieberman said.

Graham, chairman of the New Democrats in the Senate and former chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, accused the Bush administration of withdrawing from the war on terror and misleading the nation to make war on Iraq.

"This administration has had a pattern of deception and deceit against the American people. In two-and-a-half years, our country has gone from most trusted to most suspect," he said.

On the West Coast, the issue was energy. Rep. Dick Gephardt (search) of Missouri detailed his so-called Apollo Project to wean the United States off Persian Gulf oil in the next 10 years. It's a 10-point plan to make sure 20 percent of U.S. energy comes from renewable sources in 20 years.

Gephardt has missed more than a dozen House votes on energy policy while campaigning, but his plan, while similar to his rivals' proposals, is set apart by one of the toughest attacks on Saudi Arabia from any politician in either party.

"It's time we stopped behaving like the United States of Saudi Arabia, and started working toward total economic freedom from Saudi Arabia, from the oil it exports and from the radical fundamentalism it has visited on the world," Gephardt told the Silicon Valley Manufacturing Group.

Gephardt and former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean have also talked about repealing the president's tax cuts and using the money for broad health care reforms. Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts has offered tax credits to small businesses and their employees to make health insurance more affordable

As the presidential hopefuls laid their plans like breadcrumbs across America's trail, Bush defenders say Democrats don't have a chance.

Democrats are "trying to find an opportunity to break through the clutter. The president is the one who has articulated policy that has become law," said White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card, who met with GOP activists in Concord, N.H., on Tuesday.

President Bush attended his first fund-raiser Tuesday night, which earned $3.5 million. The event launched a multi-week campaign by the president to mount his re-election bid and fight back some of the attacks Democrats have launched in the past several months.

"There are nine Democrats who spend all of their time saying negative things about the president, and that means there's a large resonation, a large reinforcement of a negative message that's coming at the president," White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said of the seven campaign events the president is attending and four to be attended by Vice President Dick Cheney over the next couple weeks.

Rich Bond, a former chairman of the Republican National Committee, said he expects the race will tighten when it comes to the general election. Bond said the nine Democrats, who are fighting amongst themselves to be the voice of the party, are "laying seeds" with their proposals.

"Once all the nonsense boils down to a concrete persona, that candidate will have weathered all kind of campaign adventures, will have potentially united the Democratic Party," Bond said.

Added Al From, founder and chief executive of the Democratic Leadership Council (search), another centrist Democratic group: "There's nothing wrong with a good fight in the primary over who is going to be the nominee. The object of the primary is to declare a winner, not to make everybody get together and make nice."

Still, some Democrats say the party itself needs to focus on specifics.

"Democrats need to get better organized and have some spokespeople who speak for a unified Democratic Party and they need to speak about economic issues above all else," said Roger Hickey, co-director of the liberal Campaign for America's Future (search).

Fox News' Naheda Zayed and The Associated Press contributed to this report.



To: calgal who wrote (1211)6/18/2003 12:34:24 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1604
 
Analysis
Democratic Rivals' Missed Target: Economy











By Dan Balz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 18, 2003; Page A01

President Bush's economic record should present an attractive target for the Democratic presidential candidates. Instead, it has become another source of division, disagreement and, so far at least, a missed opportunity to change public opinion.

Under Bush, the U.S. economy has lost about 3 million private-sector jobs. The unemployment rate has risen from 4.2 percent to 6.1 percent. The Dow Jones industrial average, despite a recent rebound, remains more than 1,100 points below the levels of January 2001. The president's tax cuts and spending increases have turned budget surpluses into record deficits that some experts say amount to a long-term fiscal crisis.

In the face of those figures, Democrats appear stymied. The party's congressional wing, operating in the minority, has neither the votes nor the megaphone to carry an economic message, party strategists acknowledge. The party's presidential candidates speak with nine voices, and they have failed to make the economy a consistent and coherent focus of their messages. Polls show that the public neither blames Bush principally for the state of the economy nor recognizes a Democratic alternative.

"There's a large part of the Democratic Party that wants to wait for the unemployment rate to deliver them the next election," said Jeff Faux of the progressive Economic Policy Institute. "Maybe that will happen, but it's easier for them to do that than to go out there and put together support around some program."

The candidates and the party's congressional leaders say they have tried. House and Senate Democrats offered alternatives to Bush's tax cuts earlier this year, and succeeded in reducing the size of the tax cut that eventually passed -- but the shape of the final package was the president's.

Many of the candidates have given, at some time over the past six months, a major economic speech, and harsh criticism of the president is threaded through their standard speeches along the campaign trail. It has added up to little, in part because no one has a full-blown economic program. Rep. Richard A. Gephardt (D-Mo.) says his proposal to provide near-universal health care coverage amounts to an economic program, but even some Democrats sympathetic to it say it is more a social program than an economic plan. Other candidates have plans still in the making.

Beyond that, Bush has done to the Democrats what former President Bill Clinton did to the Republicans during his second term: used his own economic priorities to box in the opposition.

When balanced budgets were the consensus in the late 1990s, Clinton blocked GOP efforts to cut taxes with the message "Save Social Security first." With Bush's tax cuts now the law of the land, Democrats appear caught between their desire to call for significant -- and costly -- steps to create jobs and their impulse to try to recapture the issue of fiscal responsibility.

No matter which way they decide to go, Democrats would have to repeal some or all of Bush's tax cuts, and the president's political advisers already talk about having set up the Democrats for a debate about whether to raise taxes rather than just about the state of the economy.

"Bush's drumbeat for tax cuts doesn't do much for the economy, but so far it has flummoxed the Democrats," said Bruce Reed of the centrist Democratic Leadership Council. "They need to figure out a way to get off the defensive without walking into Bush's trap."

That is only part of the problem. James K. Galbraith, an economist who teaches at the University of Texas, said the greater problem is the Democrats' reluctance to face the economic issue realistically. "They have got to get serious," he said.

Galbraith said there is no way to return to the economic conditions of the late 1990s, because that boom was fueled partly by a speculative bubble in technology. Nor is it sufficient to blame Bush alone for all the current problems. Liberals and conservatives in the party, he said, must resist temptation.

"The temptation for conservatives is to say the problem is the budget deficit and returning to the Clinton policies of balancing the budget would return to the Clinton-era prosperity. That just isn't true," Galbraith said. "The temptation for liberals is to promote an easy solution through a stimulus program and simply say Bush's tax cuts were mistimed and misdirected. That's partly true, but it doesn't mean all problems would be solved by a tax cut that was front-loaded and aimed at the working class."

Democratic pollster Mark Mellman said Clinton's success in repositioning Democrats as the party of fiscal responsibility has had the unintended consequence of narrowing the discussion of economic policy to the issue of fiscal policy and the state of the deficit.

"In the old days, our economic plan didn't have much to do with balancing the budget," Mellman said. "In the recent period, the health of the economy has been identified almost exclusively with the nation's fiscal situation, and given the state of the fiscal situation, a lot of Democrats feel like they don't have a coherent thing to say other than that in the long term, we've got to get back to economic health."

As with their positions on the war against Iraq, the Democratic presidential candidates are spread out along the political spectrum in their approach to the economy. Some, such as Gephardt or Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich (Ohio), have decided the deficit is Bush's problem, not the Democrats'. Gephardt's program would ensure that the huge deficits projected under Bush's economic program would continue under his health care plan. Only economic growth will reduce the deficit, he has said, and his proposal, which would cost more than $2 trillion over 10 years, will help generate the kind of economic activity that will get the job done.

"Republicans have shown they've got no interest in cutting spending, and they created the biggest deficits ever," said Gephardt aide Steve Elmendorf. "They don't seem to view it as a political issue, so I don't know why we as a Democratic Party should view it as an issue."

Other Democrats, such as Sen. John Edwards (N.C.), former Vermont governor Howard Dean and Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman (Conn.), have said the party must not abandon fiscal responsibility. But none has done the hard work of putting together a comprehensive package to get the economy moving and subjected it to scrutiny to measure its impact on the deficit.

Robert Borosage of the Campaign for America's Future, which brought together progressive Democrats recently for a Take Back America conference, said everyone in the party agrees that long-term deficits matter and that short-term stimulus is required. "Where the disagreements come up are, are you taking back some portion of the tax cuts in order to build schools or create health care, or are you taking them back to balance the budget," he said.

Another area of disagreement is whether to repeal all of Bush's tax cuts, as Dean and Gephardt have proposed, or repeal only those parts that primarily benefit the wealthy and preserve tax cuts for the middle class, something that Lieberman, Edwards and Sen. John F. Kerry (Mass.) have proposed.

Yesterday, Edwards criticized "some in my party" who believe that "we can spend our way out of every problem," saying it has not worked in the past. Instead, Edwards offered several tax cuts aimed at the middle class and used them to argue that Democrats can draw a sharp contrast with the president over values by rewarding work rather than wealth.

Gene Sperling, who served as Clinton's top White House economic adviser and sides with some of the New Democrats on the issue of fiscal responsibility, calls the long-term deficits created under Bush the most serious economic threat facing the country. "When the public realizes this is not a one- or two-year blip but that they [the Bush administration] have dug a hole for decades to come, there will be even less public support" for the president's economic record, he said.

But Sperling also said Bush's approach means a huge political challenge for the Democratic candidates. "While these tax cuts are very harmful to the nation's fiscal future, as a cold political tactic, they unquestionably put Democrats in the position of having to take far more politically risky and even politically courageous positions to put forward a progressive agenda that is also more fiscally responsible."

The DLC's Reed said he remains optimistic that by next year, Democrats will find their voice and a plan for challenging Bush where he is most vulnerable. "My advice to candidates," he said, "would be to remember that the economic debate is about a lot more than spending and taxes. It's about corporate responsibility, it's about empowering citizens with the tools to get ahead, and as long as we let Bush define the terms of the debate, we'll never show the country we have a better way."

© 2003 The Washington Post Company

URL:http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A7156-2003Jun17.html?nav=hptop_tb