Political This 'n that

28Nov/11Off

Cain aims focus back on tax plan

(CNN) - After a month of battling sexual harassment allegations and getting caught in uncomfortable foreign policy gaffes, Herman Cain is returning to one position he knows well: The 9-9-9 tax plan.

In a four-minute video released Monday, the former Godfather''s Pizza executive and Republican presidential candidate recaps his tax reform plan that would create a 9% national sales tax, a 9% income tax, and a 9% corporate tax.

The animated spot, called "9-9-9 The Movie," presents the current tax code as a large, cumbersome machine.

"The federal tax code is an overgrown monster," the narrator says. "But it''s not even a cool monster, it''s a dorky mechanical monster held together with a bunch of tattered red tape and driven around by squirrelly bureaucrats."

The ad says under Cain''s 9-9-9 plan, the "economy would accelerate faster than Barack Obama on his way out of town."

Various scenarios are presented comparing the current tax code to the proposed plan, all using animated figures and upbeat music.

It concludes: "The 9-9-9 plan is simple enough to vanquish the ineffective bureaucrats that lurk in the dark crannies of complexity, transparent enough to deter cronyism, and fair enough the level the playing field."

The ad notes that they''re using the definition of fair from the dictionary, not the "president''s class warfare definition."

Cain''s aggressive promotion of the 9-9-9 tax plan earlier this fall led to a steep rise in the candidate''s poll numbers, but a series of sexual harassment allegations (which Cain denies) and several blunders on foreign policy have brought those numbers back down.

Cain will sit down for a live interview with CNN''s Wolf Blitzer Monday after attending closed-door meetings in Tyson''s Corner, Virginia. The segment will air during "The Situation Room," starting at 4 p.m. ET.

16Nov/11Off

Citizenship check causes controversy at Perry event

Manchester, New Hampshire (CNN) – Rick Perry''s campaign moved quickly Wednesday to correct an employee''s inaccurate statement that non-United States citizens would not be allowed to attend a town hall the Texas governor held at a plant.

The event was hosted by Granite State Manufacturing, which does defense contracting work. An employee checking in members of the news media at the entrance asked each person for his identification and whether he was a citizen.

When asked what would happen if a person were not a United States citizen, the woman said she would deny them entrance.

The Perry campaign brought Granite State Manufacturing Facilities Manager Shawn O''Hagan to the press area to tell reporters that was not true.

O''Hagan said the woman had been misinformed by another employee. Non-citizens would be allowed to enter, but the company would assign an employee escort to accompany them, which is standard for defense contractors complying with NAFTA rules and applies to anyone entering the building.

Everyone who checked in said he or she was an American citizen, the employee checking in press members said.

At GOP rival Jon Huntsman''s town hall at the same company earlier this year, journalists were asked not to film some areas of the factory that contained proprietary information.

A Perry aide pointed to other political events at defense contracting companies where attendees were subject to similar rules.

11Nov/11Off

Year-end budget busters: $600 billion on the line

By Jeanne Sahadi @CNNMoney November 11, 2011

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Debt reduction may be consuming Capitol Hill these days, but lawmakers have a number of pricey budget decisions to make before the year''s out.

Unless Congress steps in, come January payments to Medicare doctors will be slashed by nearly 30%. Workers'' payroll tax cut will expire. And federal unemployment benefits will end for close to 2 million jobless workers.

Should lawmakers decide to prevent all that from happening, as many would like, there''s the question of how to pay for it with the current budget. The estimated price tag for all three provisions over 10 years would top $600 billion.

Payroll tax cut: A $289 billion decision

In September, President Obama proposed extending and expanding a temporary payroll tax break from last December.

While employees normally pay 6.2% on the first $106,800 of their wages into Social Security, this year they''ve only been paying 4.2%. That tax break, however, is set to expire by Jan. 1.

Obama proposed extending it for another year and cutting the employee share to just 3.1%. He also proposed cutting the employer''s portion -- also 6.2% -- in half on the first $5 million that the company pays in wages.

The payroll tax proposals combined would mean $289 billion less in revenue, according to the Congressional Budget Office. The hit would be taken by the general revenue pool, however, not the Social Security trust fund.

Bill Clinton: How I''d fix the economy

The White House and many Democrats have said if Congress fails to act, that would mean a tax increase on every working American and would harm the economy.

Some Republicans have characterized the payroll tax cut as failed stimulus, but that doesn''t mean the measure is dead. If it''s part of a broader package they like, they may go along.

Doc fix: A $300 billion decision

Under the law, Medicare reimbursements to doctors must be reduced whenever those payments exceed a certain target. Since 2003, that target has been exceeded, but Congress has routinely put in a temporary "doc fix" to prevent the pay cuts.

If that provision is allowed to take hold, however, Medicare doctors'' pay will be slashed by nearly 30% next year and by additional amounts thereafter.

Doctors, who already feel Medicare payment rates are too low, wouldn''t be happy.

"Payments for Medicare physician services have fallen so far below increases in medical practice costs, that there is a 20 percent gap between Medicare payment updates and the cost of caring for seniors," Dr. Peter Carmel, president of the American Medical Association, said in a statement.

But if Congress once again chooses to prevent the scheduled pay cut next year and beyond, it would increase Medicare spending by $300 billion over the next decade, the CBO estimates.

What''s not clear is whether the special Congressional debt panel -- aka the super committee -- will weigh in on this issue. If they opt to make the doc fix permanent, they will have to find a way to pay for it.

Extend unemployment insurance: A $44 billion decision

If Congress doesn''t act by Dec. 31, more than 6 million jobless workers could run out of unemployment benefits next year -- with nearly 2 million of them running out in January alone, according to the National Employment Law Project.

That''s because a temporary extension of federal emergency jobless benefits to help the long-term unemployed is set to expire by year end. Lawmakers first expanded benefits to cover up to 99 weeks of unemployment in 2009, and have since reauthorized that expansion five times.

It''s not clear yet how much support there will be in Congress for another extension. But supporters note that failing to pass it could harm the economic recovery and make life that much harder for the unemployed.

"With economic recovery fragile and long-term unemployment an ongoing crisis for millions of Americans, we simply cannot let the federal unemployment insurance programs expire at the end of this year. It''s a critical lifeline for so many workers and their families," said Christine Owens, NELP''s executive director, in a statement.

Reauthorizing the extension again would cost $44 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

   

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