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Month: June 2009

Dr Dean’s Diagnosis

by digby

This is an excellent piece from Sam Stein about the Conrad plan which highlight’s Howard Dean’s no-nonsense comments about the co-op band-aid and the politics surrounding it:

Sen. Kent Conrad’s proposal for a cooperative approach to health insurance coverage has created a unique challenge for progressive health care advocates who don’t object to the idea but find it inadequate. Hoping not to seem uncompromising on what is health care reform’s bipartisan flavor for the day, several high-profile figures began a push-back on Monday, insisting that while Conrad’s idea was well intentioned, it simply would not suffice.

“This is a big mistake,” former Gov. Howard Dean told the Huffington Post. “These co-ops will be very weak. Many won’t have the half-million members that most experts think is necessary to influence the market… Insurance companies will be licking their lips.”

“I am very fond of Senator Conrad and think he is a good guy and friend,” Dean added. “But I think the basic problem, as the Senate often does, is that they are worried about the internal Senate politics rather than the type of solution the American people want.”

And that’s because Conrad, for reasons that nobody understands, continues to operate on the assumption that he needs 60 votes when he doesn’t.

Dean, like virtually every expert on the subject, has nothing against co-ops. They are a fine progressive idea and everyone thinks they would be a terrific addition to real reform. But they are inadequate to do the heavy lifting that’s required to fix this system once and for all. The reason for the national public plan option is to try to rein in costs and get some discipline in the marketplace by creating some competition with teeth for the greedy, irresponsible insurance companies who have had years to fix this problem on their own and didn’t bother.

Let’s not kid ourselves about what is happening here.

Jane at FDL has some new information about who’s balking on the public plan in the Senate HELP Committee. Naturally, it’s two “centrist” Dems.

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The Latvia Option

by dday

I’ve been hearing the California crisis, and the Governor’s response, referred to as a kind of shock doctrine, used to transform the state’s social safety net and radically alter the lives of the poor and downtrodden. And that’s entirely true. But not necessarily through the budget cuts, which have met fierce opposition from Democrats and the nascent activist progressive movement. No, the real shock doctrine is happening behind the curtain, with a proposal engineered with bipartisan support, that will really permanently turn the state into an experiment in Chicago Boys free-market fundamentalism, not unlike the conservative “paradises” created in developing nations, all of which are crashing, by the way.

Last year, the Governor and legislative leaders put together the Parsky Commission, a classic blue-ribbon panel led by Gerald Parsky, a right-wing investment fund manager and professional hack who has consistently been put to use by Republicans in Sacramento and Washington to carry out their radical plans. He was George Bush’s California campaign chair in 2000 and 2004. The idea behind this one started from a decent premise – California has a taxation problem, and needs a study group to look into how to reform it so that it’s better equipped to handle boom-and-bust economic cycles. Supposedly, all ideas – including Prop. 13 – would be “on the table” from this commission, which would seek a more stable solution.

Of course, the fix was in from the start. Because this panel respected the 2/3 requirement for raising taxes, it sought revenue-neutral solutions, tinkering and shifting the tax burdens rather than reforming them. So predictably, the end result is a proposal that broadens the tax base while shifting the burden downward onto the lower and middle classes while relieving the wealthy. The Governor’s Chief of Staff tipped her hand about this previously when she said that the problem with California’s tax structure is that it’s too progressive.

Some of the Commission’s proposals, like broadening the sales tax to include services in addition to goods while lowering the rate overall, make a bit of sense. But the rest of it is pure right-wing fantasy:

At the 14-member commission’s penultimate meeting in Los Angeles June 16, its members appeared to narrow its potential recommendations, due July 31, to two proposals.

Both would lower the top income tax levels and, in one case, eliminate the state’s corporate tax and the portion of the sales tax pocketed by the state.

Under one proposal, what the commission refers to as Tax Package 1B, all Californians would pay a 6 percent income tax rate. The state’s wealthiest residents currently pay 9.3 percent with lower percentages as earnings fall.

The effect of the proposal would be to increase the taxes on Californians earning less than $100,000 to broaden the tax base.

The state’s 8.8 percent corporations tax would be eliminated, as would the 5 percent of the sales tax the state retains […]

A new “business net receipts” tax makes up for much of the lost revenue from the sales and corporation tax eliminations.

“Business net receipts” taxes are essentially a value-added tax. And one estimate predicts that it would take in $28 billion dollars annually. But everything must be revenue neutral, so in a time of crisis, the Parsky Commission would go to a FLAT TAX and eliminate the corporate tax rate, as well as possibly cutting the capital gains tax. It’s impossible to see this as anything but a giant wealth transfer from the poor to the rich. Simply impossible.

Useful idiots like the folks at Calbuzz prefer not to actually take sides on an issue when just splitting the difference between left and right automatically provides the best practice every time. Their somewhat illuminating article about all of this betrays a bias toward that wise “sensible centrism” that ends up orienting toward crazed right-wing solutions every time.

The political play is to produce a tax reform bill so clean it can be introduced in both houses with assurances no one will be allowed to bog it down with amendments. Democrats will be able to avoid drastic program cuts and Republicans can claim they’ve cut taxes. The bill breezes through both houses on an up-or-down vote and bada bing it gets signed by Arnold and everybody goes to dinner. No muss, no fuss, no partisan fingerprints […]

Getting a consensus recommendation from the commission, which includes conservatives like former Reagan economic adviser Michael Boskin and liberals like Santa Cruz County Treasurer Fred Keeley is by no means guaranteed. Even if commissioners do agree, their proposal will be fly-specked by lefty groups who will dislike elements that are not progressive, and industry groups, who will push for business-friendly changes.

As a political matter, forcing an up-or-down vote on a package in the Legislature would address what-about-me objections from all quarters, in the same way as the prohibition on amendments to congressional legislation produced by the military base closure commission in the 1990s finally solved that intractable problem. (Or like a Pete Wilson-Willie Brown deal from days of yore in Sacramento.)

After all, the impending bankruptcy of state government should be sufficient to show players at every point of the political spectrum not only that sweeping change is needed, but also that everyone will have to compromise to keep California from sinking into the 9th Circle of Hell.

This is “the midpoint between two points always works best” pop politics masquerading as serious thought, and what else would you expect from a duo who can spin a whole article out of a picture of two politicians smiling. Somehow, “lefty groups” arguing against the literally insane idea of a flat tax has the same moral and intellectual equivalency of business groups trying to wiggle out of a way to pay their taxes. A flat tax would very clearly shift the burden of taxation to the middle class, and practically every taxpayer would actually see their tax burden increase except the few at the top. But because we’re in crisis, and everyone will have to “sacrifice,” surely we should ram through a right-wing fantasy, turning California into Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania, all of whom have flat tax systems. How’s that working out for them?

Over the last decade, Eastern European countries became darlings of the far right by instituting free-market economic policies designed to break convincingly from their Communist past. The so-called Baltic Tigers—Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia—garnered worldwide plaudits for a number of free-market reforms, led by the imposition of a flat-rate income tax, especially from the American right. “The flat tax is making a comeback,” trumpeted the conservative National Review. The three nations are “leading a global tax reform revolution,” said the right-leaning Heritage Foundation […]

Too bad for them that it hasn’t worked out. Latvia, which has a flat tax of 25 percent, and Lithuania and Estonia, which have 21 percent tax rates, are all in deep economic trouble. They all have huge government budget deficits, a sign that they took in too little in tax revenue to cover their costs, primarily state expenditures to provide a generous welfare state. Conservatives might argue that they didn’t slash welfare benefits enough, but there is no dispute that the flat tax didn’t provide the expected revenue.

This is the future that would be put into place – with a no-amendment, up-or-down vote – under the Parsky Commission. Somehow, the elected legislature of the people cannot be trusted with tax law, but an unelected, unaccountable blue-ribbon commission should be empowered to create this radical change in law with no public input. That’s the wise and sensible solution. Because we can’t have all this messy “democracy” mucking up the need to protect the rich and transfer wealth downward more radically than any proposal ever seen in America. California Budget Bites has more.

It’s important to note that this all stems from the revenue-neutral demand embedded in the proposal. Otherwise, it could never pass because it would need a 2/3 vote. So somehow, a flat tax, elimination of corporate income taxes and slashing of capital gains taxes get thrown into the mix, something that nobody outside the fringe far right would ever endorse. The 2/3 rule, AGAIN, prevents a real solution.

If you wonder why I oppose a so-called “bailout” for California, it’s because in addition to everything else, that attacks the wrong problem. We need a major restoration of democracy in the state, and instead we get “solutions” that don’t reflect the desire of the citizenry. That’s why only a local grassroots movement to finally remove the structural barriers, not a one-time cash infusion, will work.

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Michelle Obama On Food, Health, Nutrition

by tristero

Don’t be misled, either by the occasion – an address at the White House to fifth graders – or the charm of the person speaking. Michelle Obama has just launched a major campaign for healthy eating, a campaign that will rile deeply moneyed vested interests.

Great stuff. And considering the detailed content of the speech, those are mighty smart fifth graders!

Private Dancers

by digby

Feel the bipartisan thrill up your leg (and hope like hell it isn’t an aneurysm because your chances of having good health care are diminishing as we speak):

Centrist House lawmakers from both sides of the aisle are working together privately on healthcare reform.

The talks have been so secretive and politically sensitive that some members interviewed by The Hill refused to name other legislators involved in the bipartisan effort.

Members of the centrist GOP “Tuesday Group,” the New Democrat Coalition and the 52-member Blue Dog Coalition have been discussing both the policies and politics of moving their middle-of-the-road ideas in a body of Congress usually dominated by liberal or conservative ideology.

Those centrist factions are wary of the proposals their respective leaders will introduce this month. Blue Dogs are leery of the so-called public option in the healthcare reform bill that is expected to hit the House floor this summer. Meanwhile, GOP centrists opted to release their own healthcare plan a day before House GOP leaders are scheduled to unveil their reform package.

Noting that some members could be retaliated against by their leaders, some lawmakers declined to mention to whom they were talking. Rep. Patrick Tiberi (R-Ohio) said that he wouldn’t “throw [Blue Dogs] under the bus” by revealing the identities of his Democratic colleagues.

They are so proud of their handiwork they are keeping their names secret. What are they afraid of exactly? The House leadership? Since when? I’m assuming they must be worried about the White House, which would really be good news if true.

The Tuesday Group bill contains a number of policies that are similar to those being discussed by Blue Dogs, including the option of forming insurance cooperatives. The coalition’s measure does not contain a government-run public option, an essential healthcare reform ingredient for liberals.

Like the Tuesday Group, Senate Democrats have publicly embraced the so-called co-op option, which calls for the formation of privately operated nonprofit health-insurance groups to administer a new healthcare system.

Castle confirmed that he has had talks with a number of conservative Democrats, including Rep. Ron Kind (Wis.).

Kind said that a number of conservative Democrats are working with Republicans but would name only Rep. Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.) for fear of “getting the other members in trouble with leadership.”

Their goal is to find common ground on a number of the outstanding issues, Kind said, because the likelihood of the Senate passing healthcare reform is low.

Both Castle and Tiberi were part of a small group of Republicans that visited the White House earlier this year to discuss areas of compromise on healthcare reform with President Obama and his chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel.

According to Tiberi, the president and Emanuel said they want bipartisan support and “are open to new ideas.” The centrist GOP members said they told Obama and Emanuel that they have ideas but that Democratic leaders in the House won’t listen.

Boo hoo hoo.

It seems pretty clear that this silly co-op idea that Kent Conrad and the boys just “came up with” while sitting around shooting the shit one night a week or so ago is the latest fad among those who really don’t want to rock the Medical Industry boat. It means they can all pretend to vote for health care reform that forces everyone to buys insurance with the promise that prices will stay down. But, of course, that part of the “reform” won’t work, the insurance companies will get tens of millions of new customers, mostly through taxpayer subsidies, make huge profits and Republicans will run against the health care system saying that the Democrats failed to rein in costs.

I do not think the White House is this stupid. They know that the cost and efficiency element is essential and they know that this co-op kumbaaya, while a worthy idea in and of itself, will not accomplish that goal. This health care sausage is in grave danger of being poisoned with e coli conservatism if they don’t push back hard.

If you haven’t donated a couple of bucks to our campaign to persuade Senator Blanche Lincoln to vote for a quality public plan choice in health care reform, you can do so here. The campaign has been the number one “hot page” on Act Blue for two days now. Keep up the good work.

Update: Also be sure to sign up for Open Left’s innovative crowd sourcing initiative to get our Senator to get off the fence and on the record about what they specifically support in health care reform. And Change Congress got Ben Nelson to sputter and now is hitting Mary Landrieu where it hurts.

The netroots are coming at them from all angles. We’re going to try to keep this train on track…

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No Bailout, No Thanks

by dday

I have about 30 posts I want to write about the developments of the past week and a half here in California, but I want to start by addressing the confusion over that Washington Post article stating that the Obama Administration spurned a request for aid for the state. Outside of Zoe Lofgren, a Congresswoman, nobody is named in this request, nor is the request defined. It refers late in the article to one letter from Bill Lockyer to Tim Geithner that appears to reference federal loan guarantees, which is, again, not a bailout. And the Governor has tried to rule out borrowing to deal with the cash crisis anyway. So I question whether anyone has discussed any kind of dollar transfer from the federal government to California at all. I think this article hangs on an extremely thin reed.

Now, I do think the government should consider offering loan guarantees, to stop the gouging of California going on from Wall Street. But unlike Digby, I do not think that California progressives should WANT a “bailout” in the more traditional sense. It sounds like it would be a nice and tidy solution, and maybe the strings attached could make it easier for the state to get its business done. But that’s very speculative, and so we have to consider who such a solution would actually bail out. Clearly, it would bail out the failed Democratic legislature for refusing to lead and take a long-term view on reforming the state governmental process.

First of all, we know that, with revenues dropping like a rock and and the housing bust continuing without end, in six months the budget projections will fall short again. They have fallen short for about 15 straight months. Which means what, another bailout? That simply isn’t a long-term, sustainable solution. Some may say that it would keep the poor from dying, but it seems to me it would only delay such an outcome. Heck, we know that California last issued IOUs during a budget crisis in 1992, during a MILD recession. The structure of state finances, with Prop. 13, the absurd 2/3 requirement for raising taxes, and all the rest, simply means that we will lurch from crisis to crisis forever without a permanent fix.

We have solutions and we know what they are; there’s really no mystery, other than the fact that legislative Democrats refuse to dare speak their name. A federal band-aid would delay those solutions once again, as they have been delayed for 30 years. We simply will never fix this if we keep deferring the California dream and persuading others to mop up the mess caused by failed leadership.

More generally, if you want to bail out states that didn’t cause the recession and have to go about punishing their citizens for it, argue for a permanent federal fiscal stabilization fund that could be tapped if deficits hit a certain percentage and economic contraction hits a certain level. We have counter-cyclical cuts in the states because they can’t print their own money, and as a result, we actually harm the possibility for a quick economic recovery by cutting public spending at the time it ought to be raised. We need to permanently end the paradox of state budget cuts during an economic downturn, and so if people want the federal government to help, it should be mechanized and durable, and enhance economic recovery by kicking in when recovery is needed.

This may be a contrarian view, but I think a bailout would delay the changes desperately needed, nor would it even help the most vulnerable in society over the long-term or even the short-term. We need to deal with the problem at hand.

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The Unbearable Rightness Of Being Wrong

by tristero

Ever wonder why this country is in the shape it’s in? Wonder no more, dear friends.

Here are excerpts from an LA Times op-ed from March 16, 2003 written by one Jonathan Tepperman:

… the American left has steadfastly — and irresponsibly — refused to admit the need to oust the dictator, end Iraqi suffering and (one hopes) stabilize the region.

Not that it’s been entirely silent. The radical left, at least, has condemned President Bush and rejected military means for resolving the crisis of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction.

I’m rather gobsmacked by that “irresponsibly,” considering that, you know, it was people like Bush and Tepperman whose behavior and enthusiasm directly led to the deaths of some 100,000 plus Iraqis, over 4000 Americans, and exacerbated the chaos, misery, and instability of one of the most politically volatile areas in the world. Not to mention that there weren’t any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq in ’03. Oops.

Tepperman then digs in ever deeper.

Only a few Democrats — former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean and retired Gen. Wesley Clark, most prominently — have articulated a clear case against going to war in Iraq, or highlighted the real problems in the Bush administration’s approach: its clumsy unilateralism, its needlessly bellicose talk about preemption and its uncertain commitment to postwar democratic reconstruction. [Note what’s missing in this list: the fact that Saddam had nothing whatsoever to do with the attacks on 9/11. Later, neatly buried in a subordinate clause, Tepperman will admit that the arguments linking Al Qaeda to Iraq are “unconvincing,” which – to a sensible pundit, would point to a careful examination of why on earth Bush was so hellbent on invading Iraq. Alas, Tepperman shows not an inkling of common sense. ]

The unfortunate effect of this silence on the left is that American liberals have virtually ceded the case for war, and thus the moral high ground, to the administration. This retreat has left progressives sounding like pacifists, hand-wringers or, worst of all, Europeans.

And the all-too-predictable finish, accusing liberals of cynicism by not supporting the war:

if they were truly interested in principle, liberals would overlook Washington’s rhetorical overkill. Americans on the left should recognize that even a war fought for the wrong reasons can still wind up contributing to democracy and reducing suffering. If it does, then whatever the real motivation for it, it’s worth supporting.

To stay silent instead is irresponsible — to the progressive cause, to Americans and, above all, to the Iraqi people. American liberals and the Democratic Party will pay the price for such an ignominious abdication.

So what were the costs to Jonathan Tepperman’s career for being so stupid, so willfully blind to reality, such a toady to the damn fools and scoundrels that wrecked this country in more ways than most of us could ever imagine back in ’03? Why, a regular gig at Newsweek , along with cameo appearances at the New York Times.

This is the caliber of far too many people who are permitted to report the news, and opine, in the mainstream media. Guaranteed, they will be doing so for a long time to come. A very long time.

Any questions how Bush/Iraq happened? How Enron happened? The subprime crisis happened? Madoff? Torture? Warrantless wiretapping? And more generally, the mainstreaming of right extremism?

It is simply sickening that the Teppermans of the world have national access while responsible voices on the blogs are ignored and sneered at.

There’s a discussion going on right now that back in ’02/’03, being for the war was, for many journalists and aspiring journalists, less a matter of conviction and more of a career choice. No shit. I mean, this is news? Most of us in the blogosphere back then – when the term “blogosphere” was used not so much descriptively, as ironically – had that pegged by the time the war began.

[Slightly revised after original posting.]

Hypocrisy, Thy Name Is Republican

by tristero

The issue is not that Republican Senator John Ensign had an extra-marital affair. That’s between he and his wife. It’s that he made a big deal out of the fact he promised not to:

Mr. Ensign, 51, is married and has three children. During college at Colorado State University, he became a born-again Christian and he and his wife, Darlene, were active in the Promise Keepers, an evangelical group.

Again, to be clear: I don’t expect, or even want, politicians to adhere to Puritan moral standards. I truly don’t care who they fuck, or don’t. What matters is whether a politician is honest in his/her work life. Furthermore, it is vitally important that our politicians be sane, something that would go without saying in a different era, one not overrun with rightwing nuts who have a tenuous grasp on consensual reality.

What’s annoying, however, is when politicians flaunt their adherence to Puritanism, as if the unimportant fact that they only fuck their spouse makes them some kind of moral exemplar (see, eg, Nixon, Richard). And what is truly galling is when politicians who claim to be Puritans turn out to be the most cynical of hypocrites. It really is high time this country grew up, stopped expecting its politicians to be paragons of “virtue,” AND stopped holding up the moral code of superstitious witch-hunters as the gold standard for American personal behavior.

Exceptionally Sorry

by digby

It’s tiresome to have to constantly battle back the ridiculous wingnut memes, but there are some worth taking on if for no other reason than that they illuminate certain right wing noise machine tropes that never seem to die.

Over at HuffPo, Howard Rodman discusses one of the biggies: the apology meme, wherein the wingnuts insist that a liberal politician is apologizing for America and making us look weak as a bunch of mewling kittens.

Rodman writes:

Sorry to say, the world can be divided into two kinds of people–those who apologize, and those who don’t. Among the former are David Letterman, a man so sorry he apologized to Sarah Palin twice; and Harry Whittington, above, who made a public mea culpa for placing his face in the path of Dick Cheney’s buckshot and thus detracting from his relaxation.

In the meanwhile, for real men, love means never having to say you’re sorry. As Donald Rumsfeld once said, “Stuff happens.” This is the crowd that delights in referring to other people as apologizers. Confessers. Admitters. Every name in the sorry black book.

Hence Obama’s mid-East trip became “an apology tour.” WSJ says so. American Spectator says so. Mitt Romney says so.

So pervasive is this meme, so viral, that even the good gray New York Times has gotten into the act. Today David Sanger frontpaged, “[1953] was the same year that the C.I.A. organized a coup that deposed Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddeq and installed the Shah — a cold war operation for which Mr. Obama just publicly apologized during his speech at Cairo University last month.”

I apologize in advance for having to disagree with Mr. Sanger–but Obama didn’t apologize for the 1953 coup. Instead, the President simply stated a fact: “In the middle of the Cold War, the United States played a role in the overthrow of a democratically elected Iranian government.”

Now “played a role” is in this context a wild understatement. Still: Obama’s not apologizing for it. He’s acknowledging it.read on

Complaining about liberal apologists (also known as unpatriotic traitors) has long been one of the primary tools of the tools, going all the way back to “who lost China” and the sellout at Yalta. This is nothing new. But at a time when the entire world is waiting with bated breath to see if the US is going to continue to operate like a rogue superpower or calm down and be a semi-sober leader in world affairs, it woulod probably be helpful if they could keep their limp little meme inside their pants.

But it really goes beyond simply lying about the apology. Whatever the Greatest Country The World Has Ever Known Or Ever Will Know does is, by definition, Good and therefore even acknowledging that we could have even played a role in something as distasteful as toppling a democratically elected government is impossible. We are … perfect. To say otherwise is traitorous, (even though it is indisputably factually correct.)

These people really believe that the way to keep America on top is to behave like a crazed, hysterical bully lashing out at every slight and insisting that everyone acknowledge our moral superiority even though it is patently untrue. Exceptionalism means never having to say you’re sorry.

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The Man Who Destroyed California

by digby

Perlstein is deep into researching the 1970s these days and sent me this perfect little tidbit from TIME Magazine May 7, 1973:

During his two terms as Governor of California, Ronald Reagan has never quite lived up to his billing of “Mr. Conservative.” A Democratic-controlled legislature has forced him to compromise. Though he has pared welfare rolls and held down property taxes, he has had to raise income taxes. Since he took office, the state budget has doubled, reaching $9.3 billion for fiscal 1974. But to wind up his governorship with a conservative flourish, Reagan has concocted a scheme that would put a constitutional limit on the percentage of personal income tax that Californians must pay to the state.

His plan would take away much of the legislature’s power to tax. The personal income tax rate would be set at a probable maximum of 8.75%—the average rate that people in the state now pay. Then there would be a rollback: Each year the rate would drop one-tenth of 1% until a ceiling of 7.5% was reached in 1989. That ceiling could be raised only by a two-thirds vote of both houses of the legislature, with the concurrence of the Governor and the approval of the voters at the next election. Reagan estimates that if income taxes increase at their present rate, state revenues will amount to $47 billion in 15 years. Under his plan, revenues would be $27 billion in 15 years, a substantial enough increase, he feels, to meet state needs.

The Governor first took his proposal to the legislature, where it needed a two-thirds vote in both houses to be put on the ballot in November. The bill ran into opposition from Democrats and bogged down in committee. Prepared for that rebuff, Reagan took his proposal to the public. He started a campaign to round up some 521,000 signatures needed to put the proposition on the ballot. To make the plan more palatable, he combined it with a 20% income tax credit designed to refund to the taxpayers $415 million of this fiscal year’s $850 million budget surplus. A citizens’ group called Californians for Lower Taxes sprang up on command. On its first mailing of 120,000 letters, the group received 11,130 contributions, amounting to $140,000. So popular is the scheme that liberal Democrats are reluctant to attack it. As Reagan says with a smile: “If you’re for it, you’ve got a lot going for you. It’s like shooting fish in a barrel.”

Reagan, in fact, has bigger fish to fry. Before his second term expires in 1974, he plans to “hit the mashed potato circuit” and make speeches around the country supporting his plan. “There’s missionary work to be done out there,” he explains. Beyond that, he still wants to be President. He doubtless believes he will be running on the kind of platform that others cannot match: who likes taxes?

In other news, the administration has decided that they just can’t help California. After all, if you start handing out government money to one state, you’ll have to give it to all of them. And they don’t have it. They’ve given it all to the banks and Wall Street fat cats. (And there are promises to wealthy European banks that must be met.) It’s a damned shame.

And down in the seventh circle of hell, Reagan is certainly smiling today. His “missionary” work is paying off in spades.

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