Republicans jammed together
a mess of old, failed and vague schemes and called it a jobs bill. Sen. John
McCain conceded
the reason for the rehash: “Part of it is in response to the president
saying we don’t have a proposal.”
They still don’t. This
despite the fact that they promised voters during their campaign to take
control of the U.S. House one year ago that they’d create jobs. That they’d
focus on jobs. That nothing was more important to them than jobs.
Now, what they’ve offered
instead of actual jobs is a polyglot of GOP talking points. It’s certainly no
vision to move the country forward. It’s a plot to set the country back – to
repeal the health care law that will soon help provide coverage for the nearly
50 million Americans without insurance, to rescind the Wall Street reform law
designed to prevent another financial sector-caused meltdown, and to thwart
regulations, like those that stopped distribution of listeria-infected
cantaloupe that killed 25.
GOP Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio called
the Republican polyglot a “pro-growth proposal to create the
environment for jobs.” It is, in fact, a pro-business proposal to permit
corporations to destroy the environment for humans.
It is another GOP ploy to
appease, accommodate and absolve corporations. It is another GOP ruse to firmly
establish in America an economy designed for, dedicated to and directed by
corporations rather than a just economy controlled by and beneficial to the 99
percent.
Republicans offered up their
“Jobs
Through Growth Act” mishmash after the GOP minority in the Senate wielded
the filibuster again to block a vote on President Obama’s $447 billion American
Jobs Act, a measure that even Republican economists determined would create 1.9
million jobs and reduce the nation’s aching 9.1 percent unemployment by as much
as 1 percent.
The Republican measure, by
contrast, could hurt the economy, according to Gus Faucher, director of
macroeconomics at Moody’s Analytics, an independent firm whose chief economist
advised the McCain presidential campaign. Here
is what Faucher said:
“Should we look at
regulations and make sure they make sense from a cost benefit standpoint?
Certainly. Should we reduce the budget deficit over the long run? Certainly.
But in the short term, demand is weak, businesses aren’t hiring, and consumers
aren’t spending. That’s the cause of the current weakness, and Republican
Senate proposals aren’t going to address that in the short term. In fact, they
could be harmful in the short run if the focus is on cutting spending.”
Of all the Republican
proposals, the most insidious, the most dangerous, the absolutely most
outrageous is their demand to roll back Wall Street reform, to repeal the
Dodd-Frank Act that was passed in an attempt to prevent recurrence of the 2008
financial collapse that destroyed the U.S. economy and caused the highest
levels of foreclosures, unemployment and misery among the 99 percent since the
Great Depression.
Go back, the Republicans are
saying. Go back to 2007 when Wall Street financiers sold worthless
mortgage-backed securities to unsuspecting investors, contending with a
straight face that these were assets. Go back to 2008 when these firms made
hundreds of millions betting those securities would fail. Go back to 2009 when
the banksters, bailed out by taxpayers, awarded billions in bonuses to the
executives who’d gotten the firms and the U.S. economy into so much trouble.
Go back to early 2010, the Republicans are saying, before Obama signed the
Dodd-Frank reform act, and allow Wall Street to do it all over again. Reprise
unfettered, irresponsible Wall Street, the Republicans demand.
For Republicans, it’s all
about enforcing freedom for the few – allowing corporations and millionaires to
do whatever they want. No matter what that means to the freedoms of the 99
percent. The GOP demand for repeal of health care reform is another example of
that. Already, this law has expanded health coverage for a
million young adults because it allows them to remain on their
parents’ plan until age 26. It has also helped 1.2
million senior citizens afford their prescription drugs by beginning
to close the “donut hole” during which they must pay.
Still, Republicans want to
get rid of that law. They want to regress to those free-for-all days when
health insurance corporations could make unlimited profits from illness, deny
coverage to those with chronic illnesses and terminate coverage when policy
holders got sick. They want those young adults dropped. They want senior
citizens to pay more for their prescriptions again. For Republicans, it’s all
about enforcing freedom for the few – allowing health insurance corporations to
do whatever they want. No matter what that means to the freedoms of the 99
percent.
The Republican rebuke of any
attempt to control the 1 percent is highlighted in their “jobs bill” by its
call for a regulation moratorium. No new rules! The country is in the midst of
the deadliest
outbreak of foodborne illness in 25 years. Twenty-five people are dead. A
total of 125 people in 26 states have been sickened by listeria-poisoned
cantaloupe from Jensen Farms in Holly, Colo. One sickened woman suffered a
miscarriage. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) says more illnesses
and deaths may occur over the next several weeks.
If the Republicans got their
way, the FDA would be unable to write new regulations to prevent another such
incident. It’s fine with the GOP that Jensen had hired its own inspector, a
firm that certified the Jensen packing plant fine and dandy just before
listeria-tainted cantaloupes killed 25 and just before the FDA found numerous,
obvious violations.
That’s because the
Republican precept is: an economy just for the 1 percent.
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