Home | Subscribe To The Final Call | Books & Tapes e-Store| Letters/Contact Us | TV & Radio  

Last Updated: May 21st, 2008 

Front Page 
 
  Minister Louis Farrakhan
 
  National News
 
  World News
 
  Perspectives
 
  Columns
 
  Business & Money
 
  Entertainment News
 
  Health & Fitness
 
  Modern Technology
 
  Features
 
  Finalcall.com Español




Subscribe to FCN E-List

Enter email address:

Email Delivery Format:
HTML  Plain Text
Manage Your Subscription


The Unmasking
of New Orleans

The Untold Story
of Hurricane Katrina



Exclusive Webcast:
The Havana Cuba
Press Conference

FCN, March 27, 2006

 



Bush's tax cuts cripple the poor
By Askia Muhammad
White House Correspondent
Updated May 28, 2003, 07:10 am

What's your opinion on this article?

Email this article
 Printable page

Rep. Stephanie Tubbs-Jones (D-Ohio), protests Bush dividend tax plan. Photos: Askia Muhammad

Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), discusses Bush dividend tax plan, next to a chart which shows that the Treasury Secretary will receive a $275,000 windfall; the Defense Secretary would receive $184,000; and the Commerce Secretary would receive $181,000 from the repeal of taxes on dividend income.
WASHINGTON (FinalCall.com)—
The dividend portion of President George W. Bush’s massive $726 billion proposed tax cut will provide windfall benefits for top admin-istration officials among the nation’s richest taxpayers who receive dividend income.

Treasury Secretary John Snow, for example, tops the list of Bush officials who would profit. Mr. Snow would get a $275,000 tax break from the dividend tax breaks, while Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld would pocket an extra $184,000 in dividend tax savings, and Commerce Secretary Don Evans would get $181,000.

"Over the past few weeks," Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D-Ohio) complained to reporters, "President Bush and his cabinet have criss-crossed the country in an attempt to promote their irrespon-sible tax cut plan.

"Let me remind you, this is a plan that will pay for tax cuts for the wealthy through cuts in education and health care programs for America’s children and seniors. The centerpiece of the president’s plan is a tax break on dividends that does nothing to help America’s families now, and will create huge deficits in the future."

Ordinary people, on the other hand, are "struggling in the Bush economy," Democrats argue. Neither the dividend tax cut nor the Republican tax-cut "compromise," agreed to on May 8, will create new jobs and the GOP "still ignores the needs of working families," they argue.

"Under the Bush plan, the bottom 50 percent of taxpayers—those individuals making around $29,000 a year—will get an average of $100 in tax benefits," said Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), a chief deputy whip in the House Democratic leadership.

"The Secretary of the Treasury, John Snow, the president’s point man on the economy, will get an annual break of $275,000. Imagine Secretary Snow standing in a room filled with 2,750 people, explaining why it is good for the country that he get a tax break equal to all of theirs combined; a room filled with pre-school teachers, secretaries, waiters, nurse assistants, day care providers, retail and service workers, janitors, security guards," Rep. Schakowsky said.

Rather than create jobs, the Bush plan will ensure cuts to education, job training and health care, Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle said in a statement. During the Bush presidency, the U.S. has lost 2.5 million private sector jobs. More than 8.5 million Americans are currently unemployed.

"The administration’s dividend tax cut won’t create new jobs in the short term," Rep. Tubbs-Jones said, "and it causes the economy to lose another 750,000 jobs over the next decade. It will raid Social Security and Medicare and force programs that help all Americans, including health care and homeland security."

The tax plan does little to help small businesses and state and local governments, say Democrats. The Republican compromise plan includes nothing for small businesses struggling to keep their employees insured, and gives only limited relief for states, which are struggling with the worst fiscal crisis they’ve faced in more than 50 years.

"The President is trying to pass off his tax breaks as a sound plan for economic growth, when the only growth I see is in his millionaire friends’ bank accounts—at a huge cost to working families," said Gerald McEntee, international president of the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME).


 


FCN is a distributor (and not a publisher) of content supplied by third parties. Original content supplied by FCN and FinalCall.com News is Copyright © 2008 FCN Publishing, FinalCall.com. Content supplied by third parties are the property of their respective owners.

Top of Page

National News
Latest Headlines
America’s heartland under water
Americans still not prepared for disasters
Iranian official: Any attack will trigger start of war
Racial beating outside Boston
Evictions, car seizures part of L.A. crackdown
Father Pfleger's return to St. Sabina
Man had son’s wife killed 'because she was Black'
NAACP: Halt youth life sentences in Mississippi
On the high wire of life, love sustains
Activists protest Administration for Child Services
U.S. failures in AIDS battle missing from conference
Muhammad University Alumni Inspires
Muhammad Mosque No. 45 farm continues to grow
Black neighborhoods on lockdown
Push for Bush impeachment going nowhere