|
Home
Page
Cheney Contends Kerry Will Kill Tax Cuts
By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer
March 29, 2004
WASHINGTON -- Vice President Dick Cheney on Monday called
presidential candidate John Kerry "one of the most reliable
pro-tax votes in the Senate" and asserted the Democrat would
sweep away a host of tax cuts if elected.
Cheney claimed that Kerry had voted for higher taxes
some 350 times in his Senate career and was likely to seek huge
tax increases to help pay for nearly $1 trillion in his spending
proposals.
"That averages to one vote for higher taxes
every three weeks for almost two decades. At least the folks from
Massachusetts knew who was on the job," Cheney told a receptive
audience at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
The Kerry campaign called Cheney's allegations misleading
and said that Kerry had fought throughout his career for middle-class
tax relief. "Like Bush, Cheney has no credibility to lecture
anyone on the economy," the campaign said in a statement
issued Monday.
Cheney's sharp attack was an attempt by President
Bush's re-election campaign to shore up Bush's standing on handling
the economy. Kerry has tried to outflank Bush on tax cuts in recent
weeks, promising to lower corporate tax rates and saying that
he and the president agree on the need to extend some personal
income tax cuts due to expire this year.
One major difference between the candidates is on
taxing the wealthiest. Kerry would repeal cuts for Americans who
earn more than $200,000 a year.
"He has given the usual assurances that in
those first 100 days he's planning, only the wealthiest Americans
can expect higher taxes," Cheney said. "But voters are
entitled to measure that campaign promise against Senator Kerry's
long record in support of higher taxes for every income group."
Cheney questioned Kerry's commitment to extending
tax cuts that are due to expire: an increase in the child tax
credit; tax reductions for some married couples who would pay
more than they would as individuals; and an expansion of the bottom
10 percent tax bracket. Kerry has said he would keep those tax
cuts in place.
Cheney said Kerry voted against creating the new
10 percent bracket; against repealing the inheritance tax; against
cutting taxes on dividend income; and against raising the amount
of investment expenses that businesses can write off.
The Kerry campaign accused the vice president of
telling "less than half the truth" by cherry-picking
a few votes that were part of the tax cuts Bush proposed in 2001
and 2003. Kerry opposed them because they primarily benefited
the wealthy and contributed to record deficits, the campaign said.
"What Cheney didn't say was that Kerry supported
the middle-class alternatives to the Bush tax cuts," the
campaign said in a statement.
Laura Tyson, a Kerry adviser who was a White House
economic adviser in the Clinton administration, called Cheney's
claims "misleading, false and fabricated."
"Cheney and Bush have a record to run away
from, not on," Tyson said in a conference call with reporters.
Bush is trying to build support on the economy,
a politically vulnerable spot because the economic recovery has
not yet translated into a surge in hiring.
Cheney offered an upbeat assessment of the economy,
touting the job-creating powers of three Bush tax cuts and saying
that manufacturing and home ownership are up and inflation and
interest rates down.
Cheney said voters in November will be offered "a
choice between a senator who has raised taxes and a president
who has cut them. It is the difference between a senator who makes
endless promises on federal spending and a president who insists
on spending discipline in Washington, D.C."
The Kerry campaign responded that the Bush-Cheney
economic plan "has lost 3 million jobs, created spiraling
budget deficits and put the nation in debt for generations to
come."
"The Bush-Cheney approach to the economy isn't
working, and Bush and Cheney are practically the only ones who
continue to defend their failed economic policies," the campaign
said.
Bush, who spent a long weekend at his Texas
ranch, plans to give speeches on the economy this week in the
electoral battleground states of West Virginia and Wisconsin.
More News:
3-29-04
Fannie, Freddie uneasy about Senate overhaul bill
3-29-04
Arizona Legislators Push for Solar Energy Tax Incentives
3-29-04
ARMs reaching out to more home buyers
3-29-04
Assistance Programs Give College Students Early Start
3-29-04
Homebuyers Enjoy Dip in Mortgage Interest Rates
3-29-04
Long-term unemployment has created debt problems
3-29-04
Mortgage Companies Offer 'Energy-Efficient' Home Loans
3-29-04
Real-Estate Transactions Can Earn Consumers Variety of Perks
3-29-04
Cheney's Economics 101: Higher Deficits, 3 Million Jobs Lost
3-29-04
Mortgage costs' unanticipated dip is good for buyers, owners
3-29-04
Struggling seniors amassing hefty credit debt
3-29-04
Taxpayer audits on the rise
3-29-04
U.S. mortgage rates rise on Monday
3-29-04
Tips to Help Avoid Audit From Uncle Sam
Financial
News
|