May 1, 2017


The national media really does work in a bubble, something that wasn’t true as recently as 2008. And the bubble is growing more extreme.



 The national media really does work in a bubble, something that wasn’t true as recently as 2008. And the bubble is growing more extreme. Concentrated heavily along the coasts, the bubble is both geographic and political. If you’re a working journalist, odds aren’t just that you work in a pro-Clinton county—odds are that you reside in one of the nation’s most pro-Clinton counties. And you’ve got company: If you’re a typical reader of Politico, chances are you’re a citizen of bubbleville, too.
The “media bubble” trope might feel overused by critics of journalism who want to sneer at reporters who live in Brooklyn or California and don’t get the “real America” of southern Ohio or rural Kansas. But these numbers suggest it’s no exaggeration: Not only is the bubble real, but it’s more extreme than you might realize. And it’s driven by deep industry trends.
 Jack Shafer in Politico:
 Read more »





 pro-life Democrats 


“For the sake of winning elections, there should thus be a general rule of thumb that says pro-life Democrats should be tolerated so long as they do not meaningfully impede access to abortion.”
Ryan Cooper untangles the thorny question faced by some in the Democratic Party of whether to embrace or reject Democrats who hold anti-abortion views. His recommendation is a nuanced look at political coalition-building and pragmatism in country where “both hard-core pro-lifers and pro-choicers” are “relatively rare.” Read more »
• Ryan Cooper in The Week:

LOCKING UP OUR OWN: CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN BLACK AMERICA






NY TIMES



WASHINGTON POST


ATLANTIC

April 30, 2017








‘Everyone tunes in’: Inside Trump’s obsession with cable TV
For the president — a reality TV star who parlayed his blustery-yet-knowing on-air persona into a winning political brand — television is often the guiding force of his day, both weapon and scalpel, megaphone and news feed. And his obsession with the tube has upended the traditional rhythms of the White House.
By Ashley Parker and Robert Costa  •  Read more »
 







The attorney general has issued a series of orders wrecking efforts to reform police practices, cutting back on voting rights and more.






It’s not just Fox: What every working woman knows about sexual harassment.


Consumer backlash was the only force strong enough to get Bill O’Reilly off the air.

April 29, 2017





Sorry, Republicans, but most people support single-payer health care.

As government-provided health insurance expands, more Americans want in.

WASHINGTON POST

As a country, we’ve long since acquiesced to the idea that Uncle Sam should give insurance to the elderly, veterans, people with disabilities, poor adults, poor kids, pregnant women and the lower middle class.
Many Americans are asking: Why not the rest of us, too?

 A recent survey from the Economist/YouGov found that a majority of Americans support “expanding Medicare to provide health insurance to every American.” Similarly, a poll from Morning Consult/Politico showed that a plurality of voters support “a single payer health care system, where all Americans would get their health insurance from one government plan.”

-----
Many of those not among the growing pool of public-insurance beneficiaries, on the other hand, have become resentful of the fact that everyone else seems to be getting a big fat government handout. Or so they perceive.... often what these Trump voters say they want is not a return to pre-Obamacare days; rather, they want in on the great insurance deal that they think their lazy, less-deserving neighbors are getting.




GOP backs off a health-care push that threatened deal to avert shutdown
Under pressure from the White House, House Republican leaders appeared to be gauging support for a vote on health care as early as Friday but ultimately determined they didn’t have enough support. The move had alarmed key Democrats, who said they would pull their support from an agreement to keep the government open past midnight Friday if Republicans brought the health-care bill to a vote.
By Kelsey Snell and Paul Kane  •  Read more »

-- House Republicans delayed a vote to rewrite parts of the Affordable Care Act, denying the Trump administration a critical victory after a late push to act on health care threatened the bipartisan deal to fund the government. Kelsey Snell and Paul Kane report: “The failure of Republicans to unite behind the new health-care measure was a blow to White House officials, who were eager to see a vote ahead of [Trump’s] 100-day mark. Congressional leaders were more focused this week on securing a spending agreement … It was also evidence of just how divided Republicans are about how to overhaul Obamacare, despite seven years of GOP promises to repeal and replace the 2010 law. Conservatives and moderates have repeatedly clashed over the contours of such a revamp, most sharply over bringing down insurance premiums in exchange for limiting the kind of coverage that is required to be offered.” As many as 15 or so House Republicans publicly said they will not support the latest proposal; crafted among the White House, the House Freedom Caucus, and a leading moderate lawmaker. That leaves Paul Ryan and the Trump administration with an incredibly narrow path for passage. Ryan is only able to lose 22 Republicans on the vote.








President seeks 15 percent corporate tax rate, even if it swells the national debt.
Sticking to one of his campaign pledges but shattering another, President Trump instructed advisers to drastically cut the corporate tax rate from 35 percent. By doing so — but not committing to measures that would offset the revenue loss — Trump is making clear he is putting a priority on cutting taxes over the national debt.
By Damian Paletta and Robert Costa  •  Read more »


Trump plan would raise tax deductions, lower corporate and small business rates
The proposed increases to standard deductions and the business proposals are among several major changes to the tax code that the White House will begin to roll out Wednesday. Officials say the changes will give Americans and companies more money to spend, expand the economy and create more jobs. But the proposals also could lead to a large loss of government revenue and, without offsets, bloat the federal deficit.
By Damian Paletta and Steven Mufson  •  Read more »

Trump goes big on tax overhaul plan that would affect most Americans
The president's one-page outline for changes to the tax code would reduce the current seven income tax brackets to three, cut the corporate tax rate by more than 50 percent and abolish the alternative-minimum tax and estate tax. Trump administration officials didn’t address how much the plan would reduce federal revenue or grow the debt.
By Damian Paletta  •  Read more »
In new tax plan, Trump promises to do what Reagan couldn’t
The president’s advisers touted the proposed tax cuts as the start of an economic renaissance that would supercharge the U.S. economy and pare the federal debt, but economists were very skeptical that the plan could deliver the level of growth Trump promised.
By Max Ehrenfreund  •  Read more »
 
- The president’s team offered few key details on how he would accomplish the effort. Damian Paletta reports: “The one-page outline pinpointed numerous changes he wants to make – among them, replacing the seven income tax brackets with three new ones, cutting the corporate tax rate by more than 50 percent, abolishing the alternative-minimum tax and estate tax, and creating new incentives to simplify filing returns. But the White House stopped short of answering key questions that could decide the plan’s fate. For example, Trump administration officials didn’t address how much the plan would reduce federal revenue or grow the debt. They also didn’t specify what income levels would trigger inclusion in each of the three new tax brackets. The goal, White House officials said, was to cut taxes so much and so fast that it led to immediate economic growth, creating more jobs and producing trillions of dollars in new revenue and wealth over the next decade…
“Despite its brevity … the document marked the most pointed blueprint Trump has presented Congress on any matter. [Now], the plan must navigate a legislative and political gauntlet on Capitol Hill that has killed numerous other efforts to rework the tax code.” And business groups were already squaring off: The National Association of Realtors called the proposal a ‘non-starter,’ alleging that it would remove tax incentives for people to buy homes because of changes it would make to certain tax deductions. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, by contrast, issued a statement saying the plan would ‘help drive job creation, investment, and economic growth.’”
-- Trump is promising to do what Reagan and both Bushes couldn’t. Max Ehrenfreund analyzes the proposal: “His advisers say that the plan will pay for itself. But in the experience of two other Republican presidents, Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, tax cuts produced an uneven record on prompting economic growth. And in both instances, reductions in taxes failed to pay for themselves and, instead, left the nation to deal with increasing federal debt. After his 1981 tax cut, Reagan was forced to raise taxes several times. And Bush’s tax cuts put the nation on vulnerable fiscal footing, depriving the government of revenue as the United States waged two wars and faced a financial crisis. Ultimately, Congress and [Obama], after several standoffs over federal finances, hiked taxes by billions of dollars and imposed strict limits on government spending. [Now], economists fear it will happen again. ‘This is definitely not in pays-for-itself territory,’ Alan Cole, an economist at the conservative Tax Foundation, said of Trump’s plan.”
-- Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin admitted that Trump “has no intention” of actually releasing his tax returns,despite repeatedly promising the American people he would do so. “The president has released plenty of information, and I think has given more financial disclosure than anybody else,” he told reporters in a news conference Wednesday (this is totally untrue). “I think the American population has plenty of information.” (Philip Rucker)
-- Without Trump’s returns, we cannot know exactly how much he’d benefit from his proposal. But there is no doubt that the plan would slash taxes on hundreds of Trump-owned real estate, licensing and other companies, many of which qualify as pass-through businesses. Drew Harwell and Jonathan O'Connell report: “A copy of Trump’s tax return from 2005 suggests that a tax cut similar to the one Trump is proposing could have lowered his tax obligation by potentially tens of millions of dollars in a single year. The White House said it would create rules to prevent wealthy individuals and corporations from taking advantage of the low pass-through rate. But because they did not provide details, it’s difficult to know how those rules would apply to the Trump companies. ‘Trump is the king of pass-throughs,’ said Steven M. Rosenthal, a senior fellow at the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center. ‘He has pass-through businesses everywhere. This is a very large issue.’”
-- House Democrats plan to force a floor fight with Republicans today over legislation that would require Trump to disclose information about his personal taxes, business holdings, ethics waivers, and visitors to the White House and his vacation propertiesEd O’Keefe reports: “Responding to the deep opposition to Trump, Democrats for the first time will use the legislative process to try tying congressional Republicans to Trump’s decisions to withhold information about his personal wealth, business dealings with the federal government and visitors to the White House and Mar-a-Lago … During debate and votes on unrelated legislation, aides said Democratic lawmakers plan to use procedural gimmicks to try forcing a vote on a bill by Rep. Katherine M. Clark (D-Mass.), who represents suburban Boston. Given their control of the chamber, Republicans are likely to step in and either block consideration of the legislation or hold a vote that outright rejects it. Then, Democrats could begin attacking vulnerable GOP incumbents as supportive of Trump … The bill also would force Mnuchin to provide the House Ways and Means Committee with copies of Trump’s tax returns from 2007 through 2016 that would be reviewed in a closed executive session.”
-- Most top House Republicans privately say Trump’s tax framework is fundamentally unserious. Many also see it as disruptive to their own process, which they’ve been thinking about and working on for years. "It's not tax reform. Not even close,” a senior GOP aide told CNN last night. “It's really easy to talk about big cuts. We're about solutions. They aren't to that point yet, either on the policy or on the personnel level, and it's both obvious and disruptive to the process."
-- During a panel discussion with other experts last week, which aired on C-SPAN 2 but got little pick-up in the mainstream press, one of Ryan’s top aides called the idea of enacting a temporary business tax cut through the reconciliation process a “magic unicorn running around.”
"Not only can that not pass Congress, it cannot even begin to move through Congress,” George Callas, Ryan's senior tax counsel, said at the Institute of International Finance event. “A plan of business tax cuts that has no offsets, to use some very esoteric language, is not a thing. It’s not a real thing! And people can come up with whatever plans they want. Not only can that not pass Congress, it cannot even begin to move through Congress. … And there are political reasons for that. Number one, members wouldn’t vote for it. But there are also procedural, statutory and legal reasons why that can’t happen.”
Callas spoke candidly about the problems of trying to pass tax reform with only 51 votes in the Senate, as opposed to 60 votes. To do permanent reform, under the rules, the measure cannot increase the deficit after a decade. “A corporate rate cut that is sunset after three years will increase the deficit in the second decade. We know this. Not 10 years. Three years. You could not do a straight-up, un-offset, three-year corporate rate cut in reconciliation. The rules prohibit it. You might be able to do two years. A two-year corporate rate cut … would have virtually no economic effect. It would not alter business decisions. It would not cause anyone to build a factory. It would not stop any inversions or acquisitions of U.S. companies by foreign companies. It would just be dropping cash out of helicopters onto corporate headquarters.

Consider one element of the tax reform proposal he rolled out this week. Ending the deduction for state and local taxes, which allows individuals to subtract their home-state levies from their federal taxable income, would disproportionately hurt people who live in blue states and not make much difference for his voters in red states. “That move was a major shift for Mr. Trump, who (as a New Yorker) previously had called for capping deductions but not killing the break,” the Wall Street Journal’s Richard Rubin reports. “It would shift the tax burden from low-tax states such as Texas and Florida to high-tax states such as New York and New Jersey. … Democrats mobilizing to defend the deduction are in the awkward position of standing up for a tax measure that helps some of the highest-income Americans—the same people they typically say don’t pay enough in taxes.”






In its first 100 days in power, the GOP scrambles to learn how to govern
Big results have eluded a splintered party in Congress and an ad hoc president who keeps adding new demands.
By Ed O'Keefe, Kelsey Snell and Karen Tumulty  •  Read more »

President’s executive orders pack little punch despite hoopla
More than half of President Trump’s orders merely call for reviews, reports or recommendations. But he has reveled in the symbolic speed and decisiveness they represent, even if his policy aims may not be realized for quite awhile.
By Abby Phillip and John Wagner  •  Read more »


  • Several of Trump’s proposals and promises were sweeping legislative initiatives — laws that would each have be proposed, drafted as a bill, and passed by Congress before Trump could sign them into law. He’s made little process on those kinds of policy goals. Meanwhile, of his signature executive orders, some have proven to be toothless, and others have been blocked by the courts. [New York Times / Josh Keller, Adam Pearce
  • Where Trump has been able to make progress, however, is in rolling back regulations and revamping the focus of federal agents. So while some things he targeted (like Obamacare) have become de facto winners of his presidency because they’ve avoided legislative threats, the environment and immigrants are already weathering serious and sustained attack. [Vox / Dylan Matthews
  • The self-styled “resistance,” meanwhile, has been mobilized and energized to an extent most presidents don’t inspire at any time, much less at the beginning of their term — which raises the question of how long it will be sustainable. [NPR / Scott Detrow
  • Another group that’s flourished even as the administration has labeled them the “enemy of the people” and “the opposition party”? The media. [Washington Post / Margaret Sullivan​] 







Half of immigrants arrested in Feb. raids had traffic convictions or no record, data shows
Records provided by congressional aides offer the most detailed look yet at the individuals rounded up and targeted for deportation by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in raids days after President Trump took office.
By Maria Sacchetti and Ed O'Keefe  •  Read more »

April 27, 2017

Trump’s lies are working brilliantly. This new poll proves it.









GREG SARGENT, WASHINGTON POST



. IT’S ALIVE!

Freedom Caucus Says Yes to Zombie Trumpcare



170215_Freedom_Caucus_jordan_meadows_js_1160.jpg
 Rep. Jim Jordan, vice chair of the archconservative House Freedom Caucus,  ( John Shinkle/POLITICO)



On Wednesday afternoon, the House Freedom Caucus officially announced its support for a revised version of the American Health Care Act, a.k.a. Trumpcare or Ryancare. The announcement comes after weeks of attempts to revive the previously failed Obamacare-repeal legislation in the House and following negotiations that produced a proposed amendment from Rep. Tom MacArthur. The caucus’ declaration of its support means the new incarnation of Zombie Trumpcare now has at least 80 percent of the HFC to a “yes.” The caucus said in a statement that retooled Trumpcare now has its support even though “the revised version still does not fully repeal Obamacare.” It is unclear how many of the more moderate Republican House members the revised text will frighten off or win over—and chances of the revised Trumpcare making it through the Senate as is remain [at zero]. President Donald Trump publicly blamed the Freedom Caucus for the failure of Trumpcare the first time around. (The president had previously tweeted that conservatives should line up to “fight” both Democrats and the hardline-conservative Freedom Caucus.) With the caucus now on board, other House Republicans are in a tough spot: They risk having the blame shifted to them for tanking Trumpcare again or risk receiving blowback for voting for deeply unpopular measures. Rep. Charlie Dent (R-PA) told a huddle of reporters Wednesday afternoon that the Zombie Trumpcare negotiations and revision have been “an exercise in blame-shifting” among Republican factions.
—Asawin Suebsaeng

Senior House Republican sources said they still didn’t have the votes for passage Wednesday evening. But GOP leaders felt bullish enough about their progress that they began considering a vote as early as this week. Nothing is scheduled. However, Republicans on Wednesday — through an obscure House rule for another piece of legislation — gave themselves same-day authority to fast-track any bill at the last minute, through Saturday.--Politico





The harm caused by immigration restrictions.

Immigration restrictions impose enormous costs, both economic and in terms of lost liberty. And much of the price is paid by American citizens.
By Ilya Somin  •  The Volokh Conspiracy  •  Read more »


“US News and World Report” recently published my new op ed on the harm immigration restrictions inflict on American citizens, as well as potential immigrants. Here’s an excerpt:
As the Trump administration seeks to cut H-1B visas for skilled workers and ramps up arrests of immigrants without legal status, including thousands who do not have a criminal record, it is worth remembering that immigrants are not the only ones harmed by the new administration’s harshly restrictionist immigration policies. Severe restrictions on migration condemn hundreds of thousands of potential immigrants to lives of poverty and oppression in underdeveloped nations, yet such policies… harm American citizens, as well….
Restrictions prevent millions of people from freely seeking employment and other opportunities. Economists estimate that abolishing migration restrictions around the world could potentially double world GDP. No other potential policy change is likely to have anything like the same massive beneficial effects…..
Immigration restrictions also threaten the liberty and property rights of Americans. Most obviously, they curtail American citizens’ freedom to associate with immigrants. Jim Crow segregation laws restricted the freedom of association of whites as well as African-Americans. Similarly, immigration restrictions curtail the freedom of natives as well as immigrants. In both cases, laws that classify people based on conditions of birth dictate where they are allowed to live and work and who they can interact with….
Building Trump’s much-ballyhooed wall across the Mexican border would require using eminent domain to seize the property of thousands of Americans. Numerous homeowners and businesses are likely to suffer….
The deportations advocated by Trump would cost far more. According to the conservative American Action Forum, mass deportations on the scale envisioned by the administration would cost taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars, a figure that does not include the cost of losing the goods and services that would have been produced by deported workers….



Washington Post





  1. For the first time, drivers killed in crashes are more likely to be high than drunk. 
  1. A new report finds that 43 percent of drivers tested in fatal crashes in 2015 had used a legal or illegal drug -- eclipsing the 37 percent who tested above the legal limit for alcohol. The data comes as part of a complicated portrait of drug use, as an opioid epidemic persists and marijuana laws are increasingly relaxed. (Washington Post )