TruPolitics Podcast Episode 14: The Fall of Mubarak in Egypt; Obamacare Declared Unconstitutional; State of the Union

The 14th TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 14 covers the fall of Mubarak in Egypt; Obamacare declared unconstitutional in the court system; and the President’s  State of the Union Address.

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 14: The Fall of Mubarak in Egypt; Obamacare Declared Unconstitutional; State of the Union

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TruPolitics Podcast Episode 13: The Debt Ceiling; Presidential Approval Numbers; Healthcare Repeal

The 13th TruPolitics Podcast Episode. Episode 13 covers the coming debate on the debt ceiling, President Obama’s rising approval numbers, and the Republicans’ vote to repeal healthcare. Download it directly through iTunes for the best sound quality.

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 13

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TruPolitics Podcast Episode 12: New Congress; Constitution; Tuscon Shooting; ObamaCare

The 12th TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 12 covers the new Republican Congress, the role of the Constitution, the Tuscon shooting, and new data surrounding ObamaCare.

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 12: New Congress; Constitution; Tuscon Shooting; Healthcare

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TruPolitics Podcast Episode 11: The Tax Deal – Political, Economic, and Philosophical Implications

The eleventh TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 11 discusses the tax deal that recently came out of the White House, including political, economic, and philosphical implications. Download directly and subscribe through iTunes for the best sound quality.

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 11 – The Tax Deal – Political, Economic, and Philosphical Implications

The Roots of the Tax Debate: Why Tax At All?

This post was written by Edward Mahee. Writing under a pen name, Mr. Mahee is a legal analyst and political commentator. This is his 13th posting for the site.

On November 30, President Obama invited leaders of both houses of Congress, including the leadership of the incoming Republican majority, to discuss whether and to what extent current tax rates should be extended beyond December 31, 2010.  Leaving aside the last minute timing of such an important issue, it is surprising that with anemic economic growth, persistently high unemployment, and general malaise, that some would even consider raising taxes. But, when viewed through the prism of a fundamental philosophical divide, the issue becomes clear.

Andrew W. Mellon, Treasury Secretary from 1921-1932, stated unambiguous principles he felt ought to guide tax policy: “The problem of the Government is to fix rates [of taxation] which will bring in a maximum amount of revenue to the Treasury and at the same time bear not too heavily on the taxpayer or on business enterprises. A sound tax policy must take into account three factors.  It must produce sufficient revenue for the Government; it must lessen, so far as possible, the burden of taxation on those least able to bear it; and it must also remove those influences which might retard the continued steady development of business and industry on which, in the last analysis, so much of our prosperity depends.”  The underlying principle, then, is very simple—the purpose of taxation is to raise revenue for the maintenance and operation of the government, but in a manner that does not inhibit personal liberty or private enterprise. 

Mellon’s principle is sound, given that the role of taxation is only to raise essential and necessary revenue for the government.  There are many, however, including the current Administration, that fundamentally disagree with that premise.  Rather than raise revenue for the government, taxation provides a vehicle by which the government can control behavior, payoff special interests, and punish or reward certain constituencies as the political class sees fit.  For proof, look no further than the debate of candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008, featuring then-Senator Barack Obama: When informed that his policy of raising the capital gains tax rate may actually reduce revenue to the federal government, Senator Obama retorted that raising the rate of taxation on capital gains was a question of fairness, not just revenue.

With the United States running more and more into the red, and consequently closer and closer to bankruptcy, the primacy of revenue among the purposes of taxation has reemerged as a lodestar concerning tax policy.  Economist W. Kurt Hauser, a leading thinker on the subject, recently observed that since the end of the Second World War, tax revenues as a percentage of gross domestic product (“GDP”) have averaged fewer than 19% regardless of the top marginal income tax rate.  This is an astonishing observation, since during the period in question the top marginal tax rate on personal income was anywhere between 28% and 92% (currently the top marginal rate is 35%).  How can this be?  According to Mr. Hauser’s November 26 article in the Wall Street Journal:

“Higher taxes discourage the ‘animal spirits’ of entrepreneurship.  When tax rates are raised, taxpayers are encouraged to shift, hide and underreport income.  Taxpayers divert their effort from pro-growth productive investments to seeking tax shelters, tax havens and tax exempt investments.  This behavior tends to dampen economic growth and job creation.  Lower taxes increase the incentives to work, produce, save and invest, thereby encouraging capital formation and jobs.”

Which brings us back to Mr. Mellon’s principle of taxation.  Given that the federal government’s intake of funds from personal taxation is roughly 19% of GDP, shouldn’t its tax policy be aimed at maximizing GDP?  That is, its policy should be able to raise revenue for the government while at the same time not “retard[ing] the continued steady development of business and industry.”  If the government is going to take in 19% of the GDP pie regardless of the top rate, its focus should be on growing the pie, not trying to take a larger slice of a shrinking pie.  Meaning, the government’s tax policies should encourage investment, enterprise and profit. 

Of course, this all hinges on the belief that the goal of the federal government’s tax policy is revenue for the maintenance and operation of itself. Unfortunately, for many on the progressive left, the goal of tax policy is not revenue, but societal control and redistribution.  Which is why, even as it becomes more and more clear that the government is sinking into bankruptcy and the country into malaise, the progressive left will continue to argue that some people “deserve” to have their taxes raised.  If progressives succeed in raising taxes on the “rich”, they can be satisfied that they were able to use the weapon of class warfare successfully.  As more people lose their jobs and capital dwindles, the progressives will look over the decaying world they helped create and console themselves by saying that at least they stuck it to the “rich” man.

-Edward Mahee for TruPolitics.net

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 10: GM Bailout; The Fed; The Deficit Commission

The tenth TruPolitics podcast. Episode 10 discusses the GM Bailout and its recent IPO; The role of the Fed and the impacts of QE2; and The draft proposal of the President’s Deficit Commission. Download and subscribe directly through iTunes for the best sound quality and playback.

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 10: GM Bailout; The Fed; The Deficit Commission

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TruPolitics Podcast Episode 9: 2010 Election in Review; President Obama’s Response; Republicans’ Future

The ninth TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 9 discusses The historic 2010 election; President Obama’s response; and The future of the Republican Party. The best way to listen to the podcast is directly through iTunes. Search “TruPolitics” in iTunes and hit “Subscribe.”

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 9: 2010 Election in Review; President Obama’s Response; Republicans’ Future

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Why November 2nd Matters – Fitzpatrick, Ciervo, and Bucks County

November 2nd is fast approaching.  The nearly two years of the Obama Presidency have been marked by a fierce, nearly unprecedented separation of the Left and the Right, as the President’s “Change” turned from a visionary campaign to legislative reality. As so often happens, the details of Mr. Obama’s vision were obfuscated by the frenetic, sound-bite nature of the campaign, and most Americans (Mr. Obama’s approval reached nearly 65% in January, 2009) rallied behind him. But as reality set in, the separation of the American political landscape began.

Mike Fitzpatrick

The President’s change was quickly cemented: Bailouts of large corporations and select homeowners; the largest spending bill in U.S. history (the $800 billion “stimulus”); $1 trillion landmark healthcare reform; and a desire for more progressive taxation. In under two years, the Obama Administration grew the national debt by over 30%, widened the deficit by nearly 300%, and passed the two largest fiscal budgets in U.S. history (2010 – $3.5 trillion; 2011 – $3.8 trillion). America had charted a clear course to the Left.

As the President pushed forward his national agenda, he became the forbearer of the new progressive, liberal movement. His party rallied behind each of his major initiatives, and liberal pundits praised his legislative maneuvering. Change was now clear: Redistribution of wealth over the right to keep what you earn; central economic planning over free market capitalism; entitlement programs over personal industry; communal bailouts over individual responsibility; leveraged debt over fiscal restraint; collectivism over liberty. The era of Big Government had begun anew.

But the nation recoiled at this drastic move away from its foundation. A country founded on small, Constitutionally-constrained government, forged with a national character of personal industry, hard work, and individual responsibility, America had long been the City on a Hill bearing liberty and freedom. The American Dream was the pursuit, not the government provision of happiness. It was in our blood. The country would not stand idly by and watch its Republic move toward old-world European socialism.

The tidal wave began in 2009, with landmark GOP victories in the Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial races (states which Obama carried 53% – 46% and 57% – 42%, respectively), and culminated with Scott Brown’s improbable victory in Massachusetts. It continued in early 2010, as the Tea Party became a powerful force, winning GOP primaries and organizing around conservative candidates. Polls show it will continue through the mid-terms. As voters head to the polls, they will not simply be voting for individual candidates, they will be voting for a movement—November 2nd is a referendum on the course of the nation.

Rob Ciervo

Never before has this been so true as in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. In Pennsylvania’s 8th District, Republican Mike Fitzpatrick faces incumbent Democrat Patrick Murphy. Comprised of approximately 209,000 Democrats, 189,000 Republicans and 66,000 independents, it is a bellwether for the nation. Patrick Murphy represents the core of the progressive movement: He was one of the first federal officials to endorse Barack Obama, and voted with Nancy Pelosi 97% of the time, including on the stimulus, bailouts, government-run healthcare, cap-and-trade, and union “card check.” By contrast, Mike Fitzpatrick has publicly opposed all of these initiatives, and has a proven conservative record as a County Commissioner and Congressman.

Similarly, the state house race for Pennsylvania’s 31st District pits Democrat incumbent Steve Santarsiero against Republican challenger Rob Ciervo. Santarsiero falls squarely in line with the liberal left, voting for state budgets that would have widened spending by $2 billion, working to increase state debt by $600 million to fund pork-barrel projects like the Arlen Specter Library and the John Murtha Policy Center, and raising taxes 47% as a township Supervisor. For his efforts, Santarsiero recently received an F- from The Liberty Index, an independent organization that grades how well or poorly House members have advanced or restrained individual liberty. Rob Ciervo has cut both spending and taxes as a township supervisor, and has a plan to eliminate state debt and drastically shrink the size of Pennsylvania government.

President Obama is not up for re-election until 2012, but his political philosophy, both at the state and national level, will be decided upon November 2nd. In Bucks County, it is time for Change.

-Matt Benchener is Vice-Chairman of the Newtown Township Board of Supervisors and Founder of TruPolitics.net

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 8: Bush Tax Cuts; Healthcare Waivers; 2010 Campaign

The eighth TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 8 discusses the Bush era tax cuts; healthcare waivers for 30 companies; and the 2010 campaign. The best way to listen to the podcast is directly through iTunes. Search “TruPolitics” in iTunes and hit “Subscribe.”

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 8: Bush Tax Cuts; Healthcare Waivers; 2010 Campaign

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TruPolitics Podcast Episode 7: Republican Pledge; Christine O’Donnell; 2010 Election

The seventh TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 7 discusses the Republican Pledge to America; Christine O’Donnell’s Primary Victory; and the 2010 Election. The best way to listen to the podcast is directly through iTunes. Search “TruPolitics” in iTunes and hit “Subscribe.”

 TruPolitics Podcast Episode 7: Republican Pledge; Christine O’Donnell; 2010 Election

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