House Revolts Over Excise Tax, White House Asks Unions to ‘Celebrate’ It
By Art LevineHouse members are continuing their strong opposition to the Senate excise tax on so-called "Cadillac" plans that a growing
number of economists and labor unions say would raise costs for middle-class families and wouldn't "bend the cost curve," as proponents argue.
At the same time, as Huffington Post reported, the White House and some Senators are continuing to push the
now-discredited notion that the by lowering healthcare benefits employers would somehow end up raising wages, thus generating more tax revenue. An earlier Working ITT column dubbed this notion "
voodoo economics for the punditocracy"
It's particularly galling to House Democrats the Obama administration is backing away from campaign attacks on the so-called Cadillac tax and the notion of taxing health care benfits, a stance that drew strong progressive support. As Rep. Joe Courtney (D-Conn.) recounts, he even pressed David Axelrod on the issue at a White House Christmas party: "You of all people should know what the problems are with this, and you went for McCain's throat on this."
"It's not the same approach," Axelrod countered, citing the indirect taxation method in the Senate that taxes corporations providing the costly plans.
"Tell that to a firefighter or a teacher," Courtney answered.
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With the White House seeming to harden their position, Courtney says, "There's definitely potential for a big impasse." He foresees the upcoming meeting between President Obama and unions on Monday as an effort by the President to convince unions to support this historical health care reform. At the same time, knowledgeable sources say, House leaders and the White House may be open to compromise, and the House leadership, at least, is looking for alternative funding sources that could be acceptable to the Senate, such as
raising Medicare taxes on unearned income; the current system essentially exempts wealthy heirs living off of investment income from paying anything towards Medicare revenues.
It's not clear which side (unions and House vs. Senate and White House) will blink in this game of excise tax "chicken," as one labor source dubs it, but the meeting Monday between the unions and President is at least a sign that the White House is concerned about the political toll the tax could take.
http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/5394/house_in_revolt_over_excise_tax_white_house_asks_unions_to_celebrate_it/