Q: Are we in the End Stage of the NeoCON Master Plan, to "starve the beast" by bankrupting our government so that it will be powerless, except for the military?Q: Why did the Wall Street financial mess, which had been lying dormant for at least a year, suddenly appear as a crisis only a month before the 2008 Elections? Was the plan to elect Obama, then blame him for everything NeoCONs did to take control of America?
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Q: Of the Senators and Representatives who voted FOR the Bailout, how many had previously accepted campaign contributions from the same Wall Street Bankers who are being "rescued"?
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Q: With Healthcare Reform underway, how may of these same Congress Critters own Stock in -- or are already owned by -- the Healthcare Industry?
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WARNING: Healthcare Reform being purchased in Congress by the Healthcare Industry will be hazardous to your health!
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| Name | Expires | State | ZipCode 20510 | AC 202- PHONE | AC 202- FAX | Health Sector | Health Insurance | Pharma |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kerry, John | 2014 | MA-D | 218 Russell | 224-2742 | 224-8525 | $8,344,060 | $687,434 | $887,043 |
| Baucus, Max * | 2014 | MT-D | 511 Hart | 224-2651 | 224-9412 | $3,902,881 | $675,349 | $1,099,605 |
| Hatch, Orrin G | 2012 | UT-R | 104 Hart | 224-5251 | 224-6331 | $3,051,635 | $393,380 | $1,613,113 |
| Grassley, Chuck ** | 2010 | IA-R | 135 Hart | 224-3744 | 224-6020 | $2,722,746 | $493,149 | $617,280 |
| Kyl, Jon | 2012 | AZ-R | 730 Hart | 224-4521 | 224-2207 | $2,339,968 | $360,968 | $452,635 |
| Lincoln, Blanche | 2010 | AR-D | 355 Dirksen | 224-4843 | 228-1371 | $2,123,458 | $231,050 | $419,674 |
| Cornyn, John | 2014 | TX-R | 517 Hart | 224-2934 | 228-2856 | $2,122,353 | $128,675 | $315,265 |
| Ensign, John | 2012 | NV-R | 119 Russell | 224-6244 | 228-2193 | $2,084,249 | $487,815 | $395,730 |
| Schumer, Charles E | 2010 | NY-D | 313 Hart | 224-6542 | 224-6542 | $1,840,508 | $316,200 | $319,900 |
| Rockefeller, Jay | 2014 | WV-D | 531 Hart | 224-6472 | 224-7665 | $1,710,629 | $147,824 | $179,850 |
| Conrad, Kent | 2012 | ND-D | 530 Hart | 224-2043 | 224-7776 | $1,596,763 | $340,580 | $290,350 |
| Wyden, Ron | 2010 | OR-D | 223 Dirksen | 224-5244 | 228-2717 | $1,540,963 | $158,250 | $162,100 |
| Menendez, Robert | 2012 | NJ-D | 317 Hart | 224-4744 | 228-2197 | $1,480,001 | $206,725 | $486,207 |
| Stabenow, Debbie | 2012 | MI-D | 133 Hart | 224-4822 | 228-0325 | $1,410,276 | $200,050 | $126,852 |
| Nelson, Bill | 2012 | FL-D | 716 Hart | 224-5274 | 228-2183 | $1,262,160 | $140,462 | $136,449 |
| Bunning, Jim | 2010 | KY-R | 316 Hart | 224-4343 | 228-1373 | $1,136,387 | $254,437 | $149,900 |
| Roberts, Pat | 2014 | KS-R | 109 Hart | 224-4774 | 224-3514 | $1,039,937 | $126,600 | $261,527 |
| Crapo, Mike | 2010 | ID-R | 239 Dirksen | 224-6142 | 228-1375 | $908,241 | $206,450 | $310,530 |
| Bingaman, Jeff | 2012 | NM-D | 703 Hart | 224-5521 | 224-2852 | $867,841 | $72,207 | $144,498 |
| Enzi, Mike | 2014 | WY-R | 379A Russell | 224-3424 | 228-0359 | $846,427 | $243,250 | $443,250 |
| Snowe, Olympia J | 2012 | ME-R | 154 Russell | 224-5344 | 224-1946 | $755,640 | $134,486 | $101,976 |
| Carper, Tom | 2010 | DE-D | 513 Hart | 224-2441 | 228-2190 | $702,240 | $239,680 | $359,114 |
| Cantwell, Maria | 2012 | WA-D | 511 Dirksen | 224-3441 | 228-0514 | $565,826 | $34,925 | $70,850 |
*chair of committee **ranking member of committee
boldface: Republican Senators who voted against ALL Healthcare Public Options.
blue boldface: Democratic Party Defectors who voted against Senator Rockefeller's robust Healthcare Public Option.
NOTE: All dollars are based on Federal Election Commission data available electronically on Sunday, August 23, 2009.
Feel free to distribute or cite this material, but please credit the Center for Responsive Politics.
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A Promising Health Care Surtax on the Rich The push to overhaul the system that takes care of America’s health may be on the verge of morphing into something even grander, a promising new offensive against the unhealthy concentration of America’s wealth. The entire House Democratic leadership now stands united behind health care reform legislation that hikes taxes on America’s richest well beyond the levels that pundits, over recent years, have deemed “politically feasible.” At the heart of this legislation: a 5.4 percent surtax on income over $1 million. Taxpayers who make over $1 million, under the bill now moving through House committees, would pay $88,582 more to Uncle Sam in 2011, the year the bill would kick in. Taxpayers who make over $2.4 million — America’s most affluent 0.1 percent — would see their tax bills go up by an average $280,000. Overall, if the House surtax ever became law, 2011 would likely see the largest single-year tax hike on America’s rich since 1935. That’s because the George W. Bush tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 — a bonanza for the awesomely affluent — all expire at the end of 2010. President Obama has pledged repeatedly that he won’t let any of these tax cuts for the rich be extended. If the President sticks to that promise, the tax rate on the nation’s top income bracket — currently 35 percent — would revert back to 39.6 percent, the rate in effect when Bill Clinton left the White House. The House health care surtax would bring that top rate, on income over $1 million, to 45 percent. The United States hasn’t seen a tax rate on the rich that high since 1986. The health reform surtax would actually take a bigger bite out of rich people’s income than these numbers suggest, Citizens for Tax Justice points out, for two reasons. The first: The surtax would apply to “adjusted gross income,” the IRS label for income before taxpayers subtract deductions and exemptions. Rich people do far more subtracting than average taxpayers. They’ve lobbied hard, over the years, to fill the tax code with loopholes, and they aggressively exploit these loopholes to lower their “taxable” income. Rich people, under the House health care reform, wouldn’t be able to do this exploiting on the surtax. They'd have to pay surtax on what they actually make. And none of the income the rich make, in the House surtax plan, would get preferential tax treatment. Under current law, income from dividends and capital gains gets preference aplenty. The dollars the rich pocket buying and selling assets get taxed at only 15 percent. This preferential rate adds up to an enormous tax break for America’s wealthiest. Taxpayers making over $10 million, according to the most recent IRS stats, take in just under 60 percent of their income from tax-advantaged capital gains and dividends. What’s this tax break mean for the richest of the rich? In 2006, the nation’s top 400 taxpayers averaged $263.3 million in income. They paid, thanks largely to the capital gains discount, only 17.2 percent of that income in federal tax. These rich would get no such break on the surtax. The 5.4 percent surtax would apply equally to all income over $1 million, capital gains and dividends included. Over a decade’s time, the congressional Joint Tax Committee estimates, the House health care reform surtax would raise $540 million from wealthy Americans, over half the cost of ensuring all Americans affordable health care. The surtax would start at $350,000 for couples filing jointly. Incomes between that level and $500,000 would be subject to a 1 percent tax. The charge would rise to 1.5 percent on incomes between $500,000 and $1 million. In the end, a mere 1.2 percent of the nation’s households would pay any surtax whatsoever under the House Democratic plan. For many of these households, the surtax would be modest. Families making $500,000, for instance, would pay $1,500 in surtax, just 0.3 percent of their total annual income. These families would, in fact, likely come out financially ahead if the House health care reform became law. They would pay modestly more in tax, but they would also pay less for health care insurance premiums — maybe much less — after the reforms in the House bill start impacting the health care system. But even far wealthier families ought to count themselves fortunate. In 2011, if the House health care reform legislation became law, they’d face at most a 45 percent top federal income tax rate. Fifty years ago, under Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower, America’s richest faced a top tax rate at 91 percent. ________________________________ Too Much is published by the Council on International and Public Affairs, a nonprofit research and education group founded in 1954. Office: Suite 3C, 777 United Nations Plaza, New York, NY 10017. E-mail: editor@toomuchonline.org. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ [BAILOUT] 007: Protect yourself! Your government will not. (revised 12/26/08) ©2008-9 Gene Messick
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Their plan is simple: oppose Healthcare Reform as a political ploy to weaken the President and defeat his entire Agenda of Change. If we follow the Republican "Party of No" and do nothing, we'll saddle our children and grandchildren with a growing burden of exploding costs and declining care that they may never overcome.