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November 19, 2013
For Democrats, a Tax-the-Rich Road to Victory
Richard Eskow
As we enter into yet another round of budget discussions, the Democratic Party is confronted with an opportunity and a challenge. Theres an opportunity to shift the budget debate to an area where they hold the high ground. But it will be a challenge for some Democrats to take the initiative on a subject they seem reluctant to discuss.
The subject is taxes.
Tax increases are a subject people seem reluctant to mention in the nations capital. Republicans have convinced everyone inside the Beltway that new tax revenues are politically impossible. The talk on the Hill is that the White House is urging Senate and House Dems to accept a cuts-only budget deal for the next go-round. It seems that the conventional wisdom says tax increases are best left unmentioned.
But the conventional wisdom is wrong.
New polling by Hart Research Associates, conducted for Americans for Tax Fairness, confirms and amplifies findings from earlier studies showing that Americans strongly support higher taxes for the wealthy and corporations. And when we say strongly, we mean very strongly.
As that covert recording of Mitt Romney showed last year, some of the 1 percent think other Americans arent pulling their own weight in this economy. As this new polling confirms, the feelings mutual. By a seventeen point margin (56 percent to 39 percent), the American people want the next budget agreement to include new tax revenues from corporations and the wealthy.
And despite the conventional wisdom which suggests that moderates reject tax hikes, the Hart polling shows that moderates actually want these tax hikes by an overwhelming forty-two point margin. Registered independents, often thought of as the Holy Grail of electioneering, back them by a nineteen point margin.
The conclusion is inescapable: if Democrats make this budget battle a fight over who has the smartest spending cuts, theyre fighting on the Republicans turf. That will weaken them as they enter the 2014 campaigns. But if they make this a fight over taxes and jobs, thats a fight they can win.
(snip)
http://ourfuture.org/20131117/for-democrats-a-tax-the-rich-road-to-victory?utm_source=signon&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=eskowgo
For Democrats, a Tax-the-Rich Road to Victory
For Democrats, a Tax-the-Rich Road to Victory
Richard Eskow
As we enter into yet another round of budget discussions, the Democratic Party is confronted with an opportunity and a challenge. Theres an opportunity to shift the budget debate to an area where they hold the high ground. But it will be a challenge for some Democrats to take the initiative on a subject they seem reluctant to discuss.
The subject is taxes.
Tax increases are a subject people seem reluctant to mention in the nations capital. Republicans have convinced everyone inside the Beltway that new tax revenues are politically impossible. The talk on the Hill is that the White House is urging Senate and House Dems to accept a cuts-only budget deal for the next go-round. It seems that the conventional wisdom says tax increases are best left unmentioned.
But the conventional wisdom is wrong.
New polling by Hart Research Associates, conducted for Americans for Tax Fairness, confirms and amplifies findings from earlier studies showing that Americans strongly support higher taxes for the wealthy and corporations. And when we say strongly, we mean very strongly.
As that covert recording of Mitt Romney showed last year, some of the 1 percent think other Americans arent pulling their own weight in this economy. As this new polling confirms, the feelings mutual. By a seventeen point margin (56 percent to 39 percent), the American people want the next budget agreement to include new tax revenues from corporations and the wealthy.
And despite the conventional wisdom which suggests that moderates reject tax hikes, the Hart polling shows that moderates actually want these tax hikes by an overwhelming forty-two point margin. Registered independents, often thought of as the Holy Grail of electioneering, back them by a nineteen point margin.
The conclusion is inescapable: if Democrats make this budget battle a fight over who has the smartest spending cuts, theyre fighting on the Republicans turf. That will weaken them as they enter the 2014 campaigns. But if they make this a fight over taxes and jobs, thats a fight they can win.
(snip)
http://ourfuture.org/20131117/for-democrats-a-tax-the-rich-road-to-victory?utm_source=signon&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=eskowgo