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January 31, 2009

McConnell wants 4 percent mortgages, lower tax rates

Republicans will push to lower mortgage rates to 4 percent and cut the lowest tax rates when the Senate begins consideration of its economic stimulus plan, Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell said Saturday.

              In the party's weekly radio address, McConnell urged bipartisan cooperation.
              "Earlier this week, President Obama came to Capitol Hill to speak with members of my party about his plan for an economic recovery bill," he said. "The President said that a stimulus package is needed to revive the nation’s troubled economy, and to help the millions of Americans who’ve been affected by it.  And Republicans in Congress agree."
              Under the mortgage plan, any "credit-worthy borrower_ could get a government-backed 4 percent loan. Details were not available, but Republicans have talked about having the government guarantee the 30-year loans for a year or two. Thirty-year fixed rates recently have been around 5 percent.
              No cost estimates were available for the McConnell plan. Democrats, who will be crucial to its success since they control 58 Senate seats, have not ruled out backing such a plan, but wanted to see more details. The Senate bill's cost has already gone up to $889 billion, about $70 billion more than the one passed this week by the House, because of changes in tax breaks.
               McConnell estimated Saturday that under his mortgage plan, the average family would see its monthly mortgage payment drop by $466 a month, or $5,600 a year.  Over the life of a 30-year loan, that’s a savings of $167,760.
              His second idea would be to cut income tax rates.
              Currently, according to GOP data, married couples pay a 10 percent tax on income up to $16.700.
              Republicans would cut that rate to 5 percent, meaning a savings of about $500 per couple.
              They would also reduce by 5 percentage points the 15 percent rate now levied on couples earning between $16,700 and $67,900, saving working couples another $1,100, according to Republican estimates. Single filers would get similar reductions either way, everyone who works and pays income tax would see an immediate increase in pay.
              He soundly rejected the House Democratic plan. Democrats rejected the lower tax rate idea, calling it too expensive.
             "Democratic lawmakers in the House of Representatives produced a massive bill that many analysts say is unlikely to create new jobs or boost the economy anytime soon," McConnell said. "Most of the infrastructure projects it includes won’t impact the economy for at least another year.  Permanent spending would be expanded by about $240 billion, an increase that would lock in bigger and bigger deficits every year. And the bill is loaded with wasteful spending:"
              The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that about two-thirds of the bill would pump money into the economy by Sept. 30, 2010.
 

January 30, 2009

Obama guest list for Super Bowl

First cocktails, now the Super Bowl. President Obama will host a handful of members of Congress at the White House Sunday to watch the Super Bowl.

It’s a bipartisan mix, including members from both parties and both of the home states of the Arizona Cardinals and Pitssburgh Steelers.

One notable missing name, however, is the man who wanted to be hosting the party himself:  Sen. John McCain of Arizona.

The guest list:
Senator Bob Casey (D-PA)
Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL)
Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN)
Senator Arlen Specter (R-PA)
Congressman Elijah Cummings (D-MD)
Congressman Artur Davis (D-AL)
Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro (D-CT)
Congressman Charlie Dent (R-PA)
Congressman Mike Doyle (D-PA)
Congressman Trent Franks (R-AZ)
Congressman Raul Grijalva (D-AZ)
Congressman Paul Hodes (D-NH)
Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes-Norton (D-DC)
Congressman Patrick Murphy (D-PA)
Congressman Fred Upton (R-MI)

Strong support for Obama economic plan

No surprise here: People overwhelmingly want Congress to pass President Barack Obama's economic recovery plan.

Greenberg Quinlan Rosner, a Democratic polling firm, surveyed 1, 000 people between Jan. 26 and 29 and found 35 percent strongly favored the proposal, while 27 percent favored it somewhat, for a total of 62 percent.

Only 9 percent were somewhat opposed and 19 percent were strongly opposed, for a total of 28 percent.

The Democratic-authored plan was passed this week by the House on a largely party-line vote _ no Republicans supported it_and is scheduled for Senate debate and votes next week.

The survey also asked if voters would be more or less likley to back their congressman in 2010 if they voted for the plan. Nineteen percent said it was "much more likely" and 14 percent said it was somewhat more likely they would back their representative. Only 20 percent said it was less likely.

Obama got high marks as a leader _ nearly three of four voters saw him as a strong leader, and 71 percent viewed him as honest and trustworthy.

January 29, 2009

Obama on Blago

Statement from President Obama on Rod Blagojevich

 

Today ends a painful episode for Illinois. For months, the state had been crippled by a crisis of leadership. Now that cloud has lifted.  I wish Governor Quinn the best and pledge my full cooperation as he undertakes his new responsibilities.

Neutral party says Senate offering so-so stimulus

Republicans and Democrats are flogging each other over whose plan is more stimulating -- economically speaking that is. Now the neutral Tax Policy Center, a joint venture between the centrist Urban Institute and the center-left Brookings Institution, has weighed in.

 In a report card released Thursday night, the respected center gave the Senate Democratic stimulus plan's tax provisions a barely passing grade. Of the 13 tax provisions it scored, the center gave only two of them a B+. (There were no A's and two D's).

The best grade went to the Making Work Pay tax credit proposed by President Barack Obama, that returns money through a temporary payroll tax holiday. The center said it is quick to reach its target, and the group also applauded increasing the eligibility for the refundable portion of the child credit for doing a good job targeting those most in need.

The center gave a D minus to a plan to extend a temporary fix to the creeping Alternative Minimum Tax, noting it is neither timely nor targeted and is not an economic stimulus. It gave a D to tax incentives to hire more veterans and disconnected youth, saying it is unlikely it will reach the target groups.

Read the report card at  http://www.urban.org/UploadedPDF/411830_senate_stimulus_reportcard.pdf

No Bears in Super Bowl? Then Obama's for Steelers

President Obama likes Cardinals BUT – he’ll be rooting for the Steelers in the Super Bowl.
“You know, I wish the Cardinals the best,” Obama said Thursdday.
“You know, Kurt Warner is a great story, and he's closer to my age than anybody else on the field, but I am a longtime Steelers fan. Mr. Rooney, the owner, was just an extraordinary supporter during the course of the campaign. You know, Franco Harris was campaigning for me in Pittsburgh, so...”
“Coach signed up with you, too,” added Vice Preident Joe Biden.
“Right, Coach Tomlin was a supporter,” said Obama.
“So …I wish the best to the Cardinals. They've been long suffering. It's a great Cinderella story. But other than the Bears, the Steelers are probably the team that's closest to my heart.”

Obama: "This one hung up on me. Twice."

Seems President Obama has a good memory for members of Congress who hang up on him. Meeting this week with House Republicans in a bid to gain support for his economic stimulus package, Obama gave Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen a squeeze on the shoulder and told the assembled, "This one hung up on me. Twice."

The Miami Republican last month twice hung up the phone on the new president, figuring it was a prankster. They finally talked after Rep. Howard Berman, chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, vouched for the president. Among the topics covered, Ros-Lehtinen said she urged the president to put Haiti at the top of his priority list.

Ros-Lehtinen, the top Republican on the foreign affairs committee, said she's also asked Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to make Haiti's recovery a priority. "I'm doing my best to drive this point on Haiti," she said.

Continue reading "Obama: "This one hung up on me. Twice."" »

Guantanamo trial delay hits a snag -- judge won't agree

A military judge in Guantanamo has rejected a request from the Obama administration for a 120-day delay in the arraignment of a detainee there who's been charged in the USS Cole bombing. Such delays have already been granted in other cases, while the Obama administration figures out what to do about the detainees.

The judge said he doesn't understand how an arraignment will hurt Obama's ability to switch signals on the prosecution if he wants and that in any case the military commissions are creations of Congress. The arraignment is set for Feb. 9.

The detainee involved, Abd al-Rahim al Nashiri, is charged with being the mastermind of the 2000 attack on the Cole, which killed 17 U.S. sailors. But he has another claim to fame: He's one of the three Guantanamo detainees that the CIA has acknowledged were waterboarded while in secret custody. (The others are Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged 9/11 mastermind, and Abu Zubaydah, another alleged top-level al Qaida figure).

Nashiri's waterboarding will almost certainly be an issue in any future trial, military or otherwise. During his status review hearing at Guantanamo March 14, 2007, six months after the CIA turned him over to the military, he said he was tortured into confessing his involvemnt in the Cole attack and seven other terrorist incidents. According to the Pentagon transcript of that proceeding "The detainee states that he was tortured into confession and once he made a confession his captors were happy and they stopped torturing him."

Nashiri's cousin was one of the suicide bombers in the 1998 Kenya U.S. embassy bombing.

Liberal groups target GOP senators

A coalition of liberal groups and labor unions is launching TV ads in the home states of five Republican senators, hoping to push them into supporting the proposed $800 billion-plus stimulus plan when it reaches the Senate floor next week.

The ad will air in the homes of Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Charles Grassley of Iowa, Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe of Maine and Judd Gregg of New Hampshire.

Entitled “Factory,” it features pictures of a closed factory and clips of Obama talking about the need for the package to save or create jobs.

It’s part of a $4 million to $5 million campaign being waged by the Campaign for Jobs and Economic Recovery, a coalition of about 30 groups including Americans United for Change, AFSCME, MoveOn.org Political Action, and the SEIU. The campaign also includes local events around the country to rally support, as well as coordinated efforts to get people to phone and email Congress.

January 28, 2009

Obama hosts bipartisan cocktail party

It’s Happy Hour tonight at the world’s most exclusive lounge _ the White House.

President Obama is hosting about a dozen top Democrats and Republicans from the House and Senate for drinks at 7:30 pm, aides say. The soiree, the first for the new president, will be in the Blue, Green and Red rooms on the first floor.

The guest list:
-Rep, John Boehner, R-Ohio
-Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va.
-Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md.
-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.
-Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn.
-Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas.
-Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill.
-Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz.
-Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.
-Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev.
-Sen. John Thune R-SD

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"Planet Washington" covers politics and government. It is written by journalists in McClatchy's Washington Bureau.

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