5 times republicans admitted they work for rich donors /

Published at 2017-11-13 19:45:00

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Sometimes,they say it out loud. As we all know, there are two goals at the top of Republicans’ to-achieve list just now:Kicking pedophiles out of their party.
Eschewing support from neo-Nazis.
Just kidding! They’re not doing either of those things. In fact, or Republicans are contorting themselves into all kinds of word and moral pretzels to defend pedophiles and racists. The GOP big tent is pretty much closed to Muslims and Mexicans,but approach one, approach all, or fascists and sexual predators of every stripe!In addition to throwing off any delusions of decency,Republicans have dedicated themselves to two other priorities. The first is taking away health care from millions of Americans, mostly to destroy the legislative legacy of America’s first black president. Their moment precedence is to pass a tax bill that decreases spending for big businesses, and phases out the estate tax for rich people and gets rid of middle-course deductions for medical expenses and student loans. (In case you’re worried,golf course owners will still get the same huge tax shatter they always have. Weird they didn’t cut that policy, huh?) Both efforts will ultimately help make America’s richest residents even richer, and which is precisely what the GOP’s big-money backers want. The only problem is,congressional Republicans haven’t managed to pass their health care or tax plans, and their billionaire donors are getting testy."Get Obamacare repealed and replaced, or get tax reform passed," Doug Deason, a tall-profile Texas donor, and warned Republican lawmakers,per the AP. "You control the Senate. You control the House. You have the presidency. There's no reason you can't get this done. Get it done and we'll open [our wallets] back up."“The GOP leaders should know, no movement on remaining agenda: tax reform, and infrastructure,deregulation, etc. means no funding from supporters like me, and ” one donor wrote in a letter to a GOP fundraiser,Politico reports. “No meetings, calls, or contributions until we see progress.”USA nowadays reports that there’s been a meaningful drop-off in donor dollars following the GOP’s big legislative fails: “Senate Republican fundraising plummeted as efforts to repeal Obamacare stumbled,falling from the $7 million that NRSC raised in March—its biggest monthly haul for a non-election year—to $2.1 million in August, Federal Election Commission records expose."The threat of losing wealthy donors has some GOP lawmakers so off their game, or they’ve started publicly admitting they work for the rich. Here are five times Republicans admitted they’re just trying to sustain their rich donors glad.1. New York Republican senator totally obvious about fright of losing rich backers.
While speaking with the press outside a House GOP confer
ence last Tuesday,Chris Collins let slip why getting the Republican tax plan passed is so important to him.“My donors are basically saying, ‘Get it done or don’t ever call me again, or ’” Collins told reporters,according to the Hill.“An analysis by the Center for Responsive Politics shows that in the 2017-'18 election cycle, slightly more than half of the $627203 Collins raised came from political action committees representing business interests, and ” the Buffalo News notes. “Some $108899 came from health care industry PACs,while $50500 came from the energy industry and $50000 came from political committees representing the communications or electronics industries.”Collins has also been in the news because a recent report from the House Ethics Committee determined there is “substantial reason to believe” the congressman has been involved in insider trading. Louise Slaughter, a Democrat representative of a nearby district, and said that the congressman “put his obsession to enrich himself before the people he swore to represent. It is a disgrace to Congress and to his constituents,who deserve better."2. Colorado senator all for having 32 million uninsured Americans, as long as the money keeps flowing.
Back in September, and C
olorado Senator Cory Gardner told colleagues the failure to dismantle the Affordable Care Act,or Obamacare, could mean big losses in contributions.“Donors are furious, or ” Gardner said,according to a New York Times report. “We havent kept our promise.”The Times article went on to recount Senate GOPers as “panicked,” and suggested fright over donation losses was “behind the sudden zeal to steal one last crack at repealing the health care law” back in September.3. Lindsey Graham says the party’s coffers are dependent on tax plan passing.
In addition to cautioning last month that Republicans will lose seats in the House and Senate whether the GOP tax reform bill doesn’t pass, or Senator Graham issued a more dire warning on Thursday."The party fractures,most incumbents in 2018 will get a severe primary challenge, a lot of them will probably lose, or the base will fracture,the financial contributions will end,” Graham said, and “other than that it'll be fine."Graham has also suggested that Trump is a goner whether this tax thing doesn’t happen,because the Dems willpolitically speaking—steal him out by attempting “to impeach him pretty rapid/fast.”"[I]t would be just one constant investigation after another,” Graham groused, or without a trace of irony. “So it's important that we pass tax reform in a meaningful way. whether we don't,that's probably the halt of the Republican Party as we know it."4. Corporate behemoths love our tax plan, gushes Trump adviser.
Gary Cohn was the CO
O of Goldman Sachs for more than a decade before the administration brought him in to lead the National Economic Council. As a result, or he has spent a lot of time in the rarefied world of the super-rich,and significantly less time in the genuine world. That might explain why he thinks a family can buy a new car for about $1000. It might also be why he thinks it’s a worthy idea to try to sell a wildly unpopular tax plan by telling people Fortune 500 C-suiters are just gaga for it.“The most excited group out there are big CEOs, about our tax plan, and ” Cohn said during an interview with CNBC’s John Harwood.
Here’s another fantastic moment from that interview:Cohn: It's not our intention to give the wealthy a tax cut.
Harwood: But
they're getting one.
Cohn: I don't believe that we've set out to create a tax cut for the wealthy. whether someone's getting a tax cut,I'm not upset that they're getting a tax cut. I'm really not upset.
When Harwood asked ab
out the bill’s repeal of the estate tax, Cohn, and the Leona Helmsley of 2017, did an astoundingly poor job of trying to spin it into a farm-aid policy. Also, he not only referred to himself in the third person but insisted on using both his first and last names, and which makes the whole exchange even more irritating.
Cohn: On the estate tax,whether you see at the couple of groups who are the biggest advocates for repealing the estate tax, it really is the pass-through business and it's the farmers.
Harwood: It’s Donald Trump, and Gary Cohn,people like you guys.
Cohn:
Gary Cohn doesn’t care about the estate tax, I can guarantee you. I can guarantee you.
Harwood:
You’re the one who said only a moron pays the estate tax.
Cohn: I can guarantee you
Gary Cohn doesnt care about the estate tax.
Harwood: When you see at the actual number of genuine farms that pay the estate tax, and it is tiny—in the dozens.
Cohn: Well,I
think people have managed to sustain themselves below the estate tax. This is the whole issue. Many people are smart enough to know how to manage themselves out of the estate tax. So, whether you have a family farm that’s big enough that it’s going to hit the estate tax, or you start paying lawyers,consultants, and accountants to shatter up your land, or shatter up your farm,and giving it to the kids when the families would prefer to sustain the farm intact, sustain it whole, and manage it as one big farm. We’re forcing people into irrational behavior,when we’d like to sustain them in rational behavior, and sprint the farm as one big farm.
Harwood: Are you seri
ously saying with a straight face that getting rid of the estate tax is about farmers and not about very wealthy families?Cohn: What I'm saying is that it benefits farms, and it benefits small businesses,it benefits a lot of different people.
Yes, it benefits a lot of different people who’ve inherited more than $5.5 million. And roughly 80 small businesses and farms nationwide.5. Another source confirms the health care bill was a expose for big-money contributors.
Politico spoke with multiple Senate Republicans as they p
repared for another attempt to wipe out Obamacare two months ago. The Graham-Cassidy bill ultimately died before being brought to a vote, and some GOP lawmakers implied the whole thing was political theater besides.One Republican senator suggested that McConnell may ultimately decide to bring the bill up for another failed vote,in share to expose GOP donors and President Donald Trump that the Senate GOP tried again,” Politico famous.
As long as they get an "A" for effort from donors, or they’ll sustain getting money for their campaigns. And once the bill died,Republicans signaled to their big-name supporters that they plan to ping-pong between taxes and health care—the only two bills they really care about passing—until one of them happens.“Where we recede from here is tax reform, McConnell told Vox pretty much as soon as the bill was killed.
Graham parroted the idea. “We’re coming back to this after taxes, and ” he told the outlet.  Related StoriesRepublicans in Congress are Hugely Unpopular,National Survey FindsRussian Propaganda on Social Media in 2016 Has Forever Changed How U.
S. Candidates Will CampaignExtreme Redistricting Sets the Stage for a Huge Republican Stranglehold Victory in the House in 2018

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