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2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumMust read from the NYT: Group Pushing Deficit Cuts (Fix the Debt) Has Deep Business Ties
Group Pushing Deficit Cuts Has Deep Business Ties
By NICHOLAS CONFESSORE
Published: January 9, 2013
In Washingtons running battles over taxes and spending, Mr. McCrery and his colleagues at Fix the Debt have lent a public-spirited, elder-statesman sheen to the cause of deficit reduction. Leading up to the fiscal negotiations, they set up grass-roots chapters around the country, met with President Obama and his aides, and hosted private breakfasts for lawmakers on Capitol Hill. In recent days, Fix the Debt has redoubled its efforts, starting a new national advertising campaign and calling on Mr. Obama and Congress to revise the tax code and reduce long-term spending on entitlement programs.
But in the weeks ahead, many of the campaigns members will be juggling their private interests with their public goals: they are also lobbyists, board members or executives for corporations that have worked aggressively to shape the contours of federal spending and taxes, including many of the tax breaks that would be at the heart of any broad overhaul. Indeed, while Fix the Debt criticized the recent fiscal deal between Mr. Obama and lawmakers, saying it did not do enough to cut spending or close tax loopholes, companies and industries linked to the organization emerged with significant victories on taxes and other policies.
Some of these folks who are trying to be part of the solution have also been part of the problem, said Jared Bernstein, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal-leaning advocacy group, and a former economic adviser to Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. Theyve often fought hard against the kind of balance that we need on the revenue side. Many of the people were talking about are associated with policies that would make it a lot harder to fix the debt.
By NICHOLAS CONFESSORE
Published: January 9, 2013
In Washingtons running battles over taxes and spending, Mr. McCrery and his colleagues at Fix the Debt have lent a public-spirited, elder-statesman sheen to the cause of deficit reduction. Leading up to the fiscal negotiations, they set up grass-roots chapters around the country, met with President Obama and his aides, and hosted private breakfasts for lawmakers on Capitol Hill. In recent days, Fix the Debt has redoubled its efforts, starting a new national advertising campaign and calling on Mr. Obama and Congress to revise the tax code and reduce long-term spending on entitlement programs.
But in the weeks ahead, many of the campaigns members will be juggling their private interests with their public goals: they are also lobbyists, board members or executives for corporations that have worked aggressively to shape the contours of federal spending and taxes, including many of the tax breaks that would be at the heart of any broad overhaul. Indeed, while Fix the Debt criticized the recent fiscal deal between Mr. Obama and lawmakers, saying it did not do enough to cut spending or close tax loopholes, companies and industries linked to the organization emerged with significant victories on taxes and other policies.
Some of these folks who are trying to be part of the solution have also been part of the problem, said Jared Bernstein, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal-leaning advocacy group, and a former economic adviser to Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. Theyve often fought hard against the kind of balance that we need on the revenue side. Many of the people were talking about are associated with policies that would make it a lot harder to fix the debt.
The fiscal deal preserved the carried interest loophole, eliminated most of a large prospective increase in dividends taxes and preserved a tax break, known as the active financing exception, that allows G.E. and other multinational companies to avoid paying United States taxes on overseas profits.
The deal also forestalled large automatic cuts in military spending, a boon to contractors like Honeywell. The companys chief executive, David M. Cote, is a co-founder of Fix the Debt; the groups core principles, which call for retrenchment in entitlement programs like Social Security, make no mention of military spending, which constitutes about a fifth of the federal budget.
more at link...
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/10/us/politics/behind-debt-campaign-ties-to-corporate-interests.html?hp&_r=0
The deal also forestalled large automatic cuts in military spending, a boon to contractors like Honeywell. The companys chief executive, David M. Cote, is a co-founder of Fix the Debt; the groups core principles, which call for retrenchment in entitlement programs like Social Security, make no mention of military spending, which constitutes about a fifth of the federal budget.
more at link...
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/10/us/politics/behind-debt-campaign-ties-to-corporate-interests.html?hp&_r=0
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Must read from the NYT: Group Pushing Deficit Cuts (Fix the Debt) Has Deep Business Ties (Original Post)
flpoljunkie
Jan 2013
OP
patrice
(47,992 posts)1. K&R !
november3rd
(1,113 posts)2. Worth Reading
It helps to fill in the details on these execs and their companies, and reveals how they are working both sides of the issue--lobbying for government debt solutions that further their own companies' tax code and government spending goals.