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Tuesday, February 20, 2007
Herman Cain :: Townhall.com Columnist
Pandering Their Way to Permanent Minority Status
by Herman Cain
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


Last week I discussed the testimony delivered February 8 by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson before the Senate Budget Committee on President Bush's fiscal year 2008 budget proposals. When asked by Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-ND) about proposals to reform entitlement programs, Paulson said, “Let's take the politics out of this . . . without prejudging outcomes, without trying to negotiate this in a public arena.” Senator Conrad responded, “I think that is a very constructive statement.”

This smacks at an attempt to negotiate solutions to the nation’s most imminent fiscal crisis – federal entitlement spending – in the backrooms of the Capitol, out of view of the public and the media. It also smacks at pandering to the Democrats in Congress who have no desire to restructure entitlement programs.

Now Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke is pandering to the Democrats on tax policy and class warfare. Considering Mr. Bernanke’s credentials and professional history, I was surprised by his remarks.

On February 14, Bernanke delivered his Semiannual Monetary Policy Report before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee. According to a Washington Times report of the hearing, “Bernanke urged action...to balance the budget and curb income inequality through better education, saying such goals should take priority over tax cuts.”

In response to a loaded question from Senator Bob Casey (D-PA) on whether Congress should extend tax cuts or increase Head Start funding, Bernanke replied, “I can’t speak to the overall combination of taxes and spending, other than to say that they should be in balance.”

First, the Head Start program received $6.8 billion in the fiscal year 2007 continuing resolution, or less than half of 1 percent of the president’s $2.9 trillion 2008 budget proposal. The 2003 rate cuts on capital gains taxes alone produced $110 billion in federal revenues in 2006. Most Head Start teachers could tell you that the capital gains rate cuts produced enough tax revenue to increase the Head Start budget 16 times over.

Second, addressing the tradeoff between taxation and spending is easy, Mr. Bernanke. If Congress cuts the growth in federal spending and maintains low tax rates, the surge in revenues from low tax rates will balance the budget. The problem is that Congress has never found an excess tax dollar that it could not spend. We have a spending problem, not a tax problem.

Regarding Mr. Bernanke’s comments on the income gap, the Times reported: “Mr. Bernanke said taxes have an ‘important’ role to play in narrowing the widening income gap between rich and poor through income-transfer programs . . . ” Continued...

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About The Author

Herman Cain is the National Chairman of the Media Research Center’s Business & Media Institute. He is the former president and CEO of Godfather’s Pizza, Inc., and currently is CEO and president of T.H.E. New Voice, Inc., a business and leadership consulting company.

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Lestat- Lots to like!: 3 Rs
Lestat writes: Wednesday, February, 21, 2007 2:32 AM
Mountain Rose and Vic
There really isn't much to like about the Republican frontrunners. Does anyone know who plans to run for the Constitution Party?
*************************************

The Three "Rs" in 2008:

* Romney * Rudy * Republican Party *

with so much socialist blather...
....from Hilary to Bernanke it is easy to see how the GOP whould procede. Get back to basics. The Republican nominee will not be a member of the Bush administration and should pound away on spending issues. Herman said it just right. Keep taxes low and cut spending and the budget balances itself. Fact is, taxes are too high right now but this is the best way to get things going tin the right direction. Bush did a few things right. The tax cuts work. He was right to call for Social Security reform (I'd prefer elimination but I am realistic), but he blew it inthe implementation. He was right to take out Saddam but the ongoing mess over there shows again that he can't implement a good idea well. He flat out blew it with prescription drug bill and that and other easy to criticize blunders should be the focus of the GOP. Don't let the Dems steal our core issues.
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