GOP’s shameful treatment of the powerless
Written by Rev. Jesse Jackson | The Chicago Sun Times
House Budget Committee Chairman Rep.
Paul Ryan, R-Wis., center, presides over a markup session where House
Republicans are crafting a budget-balancing plan that sharply cuts
spending on transportation, health care programs for the middle class
and the poor
The Bible’s injunction that we shall be judged by how we have
treated the “least of these” (Matthew 25:40) appears in different forms
in virtually every religion or faith. And surely the measure of a
country is how it treats the most vulnerable of its people — children in
the dawn of life, the poor in the valley of life, the ailing in the
shadows of life, the elderly in the dusk of life.
This week, the House of Representatives is
scheduled to vote on the Republican budget proposal put together by Rep.
Paul Ryan, chair of the Budget Committee and Mitt Romney’s running
mate. The vast majority of Republicans are lined up to vote for it, with
possible exceptions for a handful who think it does not cut enough.
It is a breathtakingly mean and callous proposal.
The Republican budget would cut taxes on the wealthy, giving
millionaires, the Citizen for Tax Justice estimates, a tax break of
$200,000 per year. (Ryan tells us only what tax rates he would lower,
not the loopholes he would close to make his proposal revenue neutral.
But CTJ shows that even if he closed every loophole, it wouldn’t make up
for the revenue lost by lowering their top rate). The Ryan plan would
also extend tax breaks for multinationals, moving to make the entire
world a tax haven. He would raise spending on the military by about $500
billion over the levels now projected over the next decade.
Yet Republicans are pledged to balance the budget in 10 years.
To achieve this, the Republican budget would turn
Medicare into a voucher program (but only for those 55 and younger). He
would repeal the Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”). He would gut
Medicaid, turning it into a block grant for states and cutting it by
more than one-fourth by 2024. The result, as estimated by the Center for
Budget and Policy Priorities, would be to deprive 40 million low and
moderate income Americans of health care insurance.
The Republican budget also devastates domestic
programs and investments, cutting them by one-third of their inflation
adjusted levels over the decade, ending at an inconceivable one-half the
levels of the Reagan years as a percentage of the economy. Infant
nutrition, food subsidy, Head Start, investment in schools, Pell Grants
for college, public housing, Meals on Wheels and home heating assistance
for seniors or the confined all would suffer deep cuts. The poorest
children will suffer the worst cuts.
The Republican budget also savages investments
vital to our future — not just education, but research and development,
renewable energy, modern infrastructure.
This budget is scheduled to be voted on by the
House of Representatives this week. It is expected to pass with a
majority made up entirely of Republican votes. Speaker Boehner has lined
up this vote, even as he refuses even to allow a vote on extending
unemployment benefits and on raising the minimum wage.
It is hard to see this as anything other than a
declaration of class warfare by the few against the many. Republicans
declare the country is broke, against all evidence to the contrary. But
they still want to cut taxes for the rich and corporations and hike
spending on the military. So they lay waste to support for working and
poor people.
Ryan argues that cutting programs for the poor
will set them free, removing a “hammock” and forcing them to stand on
their own feet. That might be worth debating if jobs were plentiful,
schools received equal support, housing was affordable and jobs paid a
living wage.
But none of this is true.
In today’s conditions, with mass unemployment,
savagely unequal schools, homeless families and poverty wage jobs,
Ryan’s words simply ring false.
Needless to say, the wealthy and corporations
reward Republicans for arguing their case. As the Koch brothers are
showing, their campaigns will be lavishly supported; their opponents
will face a barrage of attack ads.
But most Americans are better than this.
Majorities oppose these cruel priorities. The question is whether those
who vote for these harsh priorities are held accountable this fall in
the elections. After decades of struggle, we all have the right to vote.
The majority can speak if it chooses. It has to sort through annoying
ads, poll-tested excuses and glib politicians. But we can decide we
aren’t going to support politicians who protect the privileges of the
few and vote to make the poor pay the price.
Original article on The Chicago Sun Times
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