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Cheney's Economics 101: Higher Deficits, 3 Million Jobs Lost, Mountains of Debt Says Kerry Campaign
WASHINGTON, March 29 /U.S. Newswire/
-- Following is a statement from John
Kerry for President on Bush-Cheney economic policies:
Today Vice President Cheney is attacking John Kerry
for opposing the Bush-Cheney economic plan, which has lost 3 million
jobs, created spiraling budget deficits and put the nation in
debt for generations to come. Like Bush, Cheney has no credibility
to lecture anyone on the economy. 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.
People want a change in the direction of our economy, and John
Kerry is offering that change with his economic plan, which will
create 10 million new jobs, provide real tax relief for the middle
class and cut our record-high deficits.
1. Bush-Cheney: Worst Job Creation Record Since
Hoover. "The economy has lost 2.2 million payroll jobs since
January 2001, giving Bush the worst job creation record of any
president since Herbert Hoover. The U.S. economy, to match the
White House's jobs forecast, would have to churn out well over
220,000 new jobs each month for the rest of the year, economists
say." Nationally, the economy has lost 2.9 million private
sector jobs under Bush-Cheney team. Almost 2.8 million of those
are in the manufacturing sector. (Associated Press, 2/11/2004;
Bureau of Labor Statistics, http://www.bls.gov)
2. Bush-Cheney Solution: Tax Cuts for the Rich.
The Bush administration's solution to economic problems was tax
cuts for the richest Americans. They said their tax cuts would
create about 4 million jobs over the course of Bush's first 4
years. Instead the country lost 3 million jobs, and the richest
1 percent of taxpayers received about 50 percent of the total
amount from tax cuts. Bush's next solution? More tax cuts for
the rich. (http://www.ctj.org; Associated Press, 2/19/2004; NBC,
"Meet the Press," 2/8/2004)
3. Bush-Cheney Team Presided Over "Biggest
Gusher of Red Ink In History." "President George W.
Bush has now presided over the biggest gusher of red ink in the
nation's history, from a surplus of $127 billion when he entered
office for fiscal 2001 to a 2004 deficit projection of $521 billion.
..." (Business Week Online, 2/3/2004)
4. As Gas Prices Soar and Consumers Suffer, Cheney
Keeps Collecting from Oil Company. Vice President Dick Cheney
was CEO of Texas-based Halliburton from 1995-2000. In addition
to providing a massive salary and bonus for only eight months
of work in 2000, Halliburton's board of directors voted to give
Dick Cheney a $20 million retirement package when he resigned.
(New York Times, 8/12/2000; Los Angeles Times, 7/24/2000; Associated
Press, 7/18/2002)
Oil-Industry Execs Argued for Ways to Create Higher
Gas Prices. "A 400-page report in 2002 by the staff of the
Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, then chaired
by Democrat Carl Levin of Michigan, uncovered several internal
memos in which oil- industry execs advocated measures to hold
back refinery output to keep gas prices high. (Business Week,
3/29/2004)
5. Cheney's Firm Also Won No-Bid Contract, Then
Billed Taxpayers. "Because Cheney served from 1995 to 2000
as CEO of Halliburton, which has been the biggest winner in landing
Iraq work, the West Wing's ties to the company invite extra scrutiny.
Cheney, who earned about $44 million during his tenure at Halliburton,
has asserted that he has cut 'all my ties with the company,' but
Halliburton confirms that he receives on average about $180,000
of deferred compensation annually from the company. Since the
onset of the Iraq war, critics have decried the unusual no-bid
contract that a Halliburton subsidiary received and the apparently
inflated bills the company submitted to the government for some
of its work." (National Journal, 2/14/2004)
REALITY CHECK: CHENEY'S NOT TELLING THE TRUTH; KERRY
HAS CONSISTENTLY SUPPORTED MIDDLE CLASS TAX CUTS
"In a speech planned for delivery to the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce on Monday, Cheney questions Kerry's commitment
to extending tax cuts 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 was to say that 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."
(Lindlaw, Associated Press, 3/28/2004)
Once again, Dick Cheney is telling less than half
of the truth. Today the Vice President has cherry-picked a handful
of votes that were part of the Bush Tax Cuts of 2001 and 2003,
which John Kerry opposed because they primarily benefited the
wealthy and contributed to record deficits. What Cheney didn't
say was that Kerry supported the middle class alternatives to
the Bush Tax Cuts. Here are just a few examples of things that
were included in those alternatives, which, again, Cheney failed
to mention:
THE TRUTH: Kerry actually voted he actually voted
to EXPAND the child credit by lowering the eligibility threshold
for a refundable child tax credit from $10,500 to $5,000. (2003,
No. 153)
THE TRUTH: Kerry actually voted for FASTER marriage
penalty relief; casting a YES vote for Conrad's amendment to cause
marriage penalty relief for those in the 15 percent bracket to
take effect in 2002. (HR 1836, 5/17/2001, No. 112)
THE TRUTH: Kerry voted to EXPAND the 10 percent
bracket. (2003; No. 168)
THE TRUTH: Kerry voted to ELIMINATE the estate tax
for small businesses and family farms. He voted to exempt family
owned farms and businesses immediately, raise the exemptions and
cut the estate tax rate for estates under $10 million. (HR 8,
6/12/2002, No. 149, 150)
THE TRUTH: Kerry voted to CUT taxes for small businesses.
Kerry voted to allow businesses for one year to
write off $75,000 in investment, create a 50 percent tax credit
for small business health care expenses, (2003, No. 167) voted
to extend the business research and development tax credit through
2013, (2003, No. 154) and voted to extend R&D tax credit and
increase first- year write-off for small business (a $4.3 billion
tax cut) (1993, No. 326)
http://www.usnewswire.com/
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