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Judd Gregg Puts NH $19 to $48 Million in the Hole

by: Dean Barker

Sun Jun 27, 2010 at 07:33:30 AM EDT


The connection between federal votes and state shortfalls gets too little attention, so major kudos to Shira for highlighting this (I only wish it were the top headline of every paper in  the state):
The U.S. Senate has rejected a pared-down proposal to increase the amount of money states would get for Medicaid reimbursements. Republican senators had said the enhanced FMAP money, as the reimbursement is called, would cost too much. Under the stimulus act, Congress increased the reimbursement rates by 6.2 percent through December 2010. Originally, Congress talked about continuing the increase for six months. The most recent plan would increase the rates by 3.2 percent for three months, then 1.2 percent for three months. An amendment may still be reintroduced with the pared-down proposal.

New Hampshire has budgeted $48 million of extended FMAP money - a hole that would have to be filled if the extension isn't passed at all. If the pared-down proposal goes through, the state would lose $19 million.

Gov. John Lynch said he is continuing to talk to the Obama administration and the congressional delegation. "Forty-seven governors - Republican and Democrat - have stood in support of this legislation to extend health care and employment benefits," said Lynch spokesman Colin Manning. "It's time for the obstruction to end, and for this legislation to pass."

That's right.  Your state services will go down, and your property taxes will go up, and the jobless in your community will suffer, because multimillionaire legacy pol Judd Gregg, while happy to bail out the banksters, is so out of touch with reality he believes the dirty plebs would rather stay on unemployment than have a job.

Adding: and to the predictable Glibertarian Tea response about grandkids' debt, etc...: Where were you when Bush and the Republicans, during good economic times, took Clinton's surplus and spent it on repeated tax cuts for the richest among us, and for a second war that had nothing to do with 9/11?

Addinger: Theda thinks I'm being naive.  I think she's probably right:

Republicans are not "compassionate" toward the unemployed, complain Democrats and bloggers. Sorry, folks, that is not what is happening here.

Republicans have figured out that if they undercut economic recovery and increase unemployment rates, they will gain in the 2010 elections -- and probably have a much better shot in 2012. They want to repeat the old cycle: Republicans undercut the economy and run up debt to pay for reckless wars and upper class tax cuts, then hand the mess to Democrats just long enough for them to take a few small steps and get the blame, then Republicans get back in office as the economy recovers. Repeat same recipe after that. It works! So why should they stop doing it?

Dean Barker :: Judd Gregg Puts NH $19 to $48 Million in the Hole
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Failure and success. (0.00 / 0)
The RSOP plans to fail because, like planned obsolescence, failure has proved the key to longevity in office, under the banner of "try and try again."
Democrats aim to succeed.  This puts them at a disadvantage vis a vis people who aim to cause them to fail.  Failure happens, but it's something Democrats seek to avoid.  So, intentional failure, like deprivation under color of law, is not something they're prepared to handle.
Alan Grayson calls the RSOPs cruel.  I prefer to call them what they are, deprivators under cover of law.  While our Constitution aims to use deprivation of rights as a punishment for crime, the RSOP rely on deprivation to enforce obedience.  The deprivation of rights we witnessed on Guantanamo are just an extreme example.  Human rights have to be earned by being slavishly subservient.

Let's not forget that slavery was once legal.  The RSOP certainly haven't for gotten.  


If we don't lower unemployment (4.00 / 2)
the deficit will never go down.  We need economic growth, which comes from people having jobs and disposable income beyond the very basics to stay alive, in order to have the tax revenue that will bring the deficit down.  So the Republican's argument that their way is good for our children and grandchildren makes no sense at all.  If they continue to try to cut spending, refuse to stop filibustering jobs programs, the economy might very go into a death-spiral.  If people don't have jobs, and then their unemployment payments stop, they cut even further back on spending, reducing the income of their neighbors who work at grocery stores, gas stations, etc.  Those people reduce their spending accordingly, and round and round and down and down we go.  
For the economy to go up, in this country, we have to have people working.  What the Republicans propose is to make unemployment worse, and in the process insult all those people out there who are trying to find jobs that will support their families and their communities.  

Krugman (0.00 / 0)
The Third Depression

[ Parent ]
Debtor's Prisons! (0.00 / 0)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...

It's incredible to me to watch this slow motion push towards punishing regular people for the failures of GOP economic policy.

I agree with Digby, it is akin to the slo-mo buildup of The WMD narrative in 2002.

birch, finch, beech



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