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Sunday Columns: SEA, Gambling Commission Debates, TARP and More...

by: Jennifer Daler

Sun Sep 27, 2009 at 09:51:51 AM EDT


This morning both Tom Fahey and Kevin Landrigan open their columns with the ongoing and increasingly bitter contract negotiations between the State Employees Association (SEA) and the state. They both claim that the union is looking to the GOP for solace in their difficult times. They're talking with former Republican state senator and congressional candidate Bob Clegg about lobbying for them in Concord.

I've always said the Republican Party is the real party of the working people," he [Clegg] said. "That's why we hate taxes and fees and all that other stuff."

The irony of this is that the salaries and benefits for SEA members come from said taxes and fees.

At the Concord Monitor, Shira Schoenberg mentions the old new old Republican strategy for 2010. You guessed it; repeal taxes and fees:

State House Republicans are making their agenda clear: Repeal taxes. Among the legislation Republicans hope to pass this year: Restoring revenue sharing to cities and towns, repealing the $30 surcharge on motor vehicle registrations, repealing the "campground" tax and repealing the LLC tax.

Again, without revenue, spending will have to be cut, and there don't seem to be specific plans in the offing. At least not publicly.

Or as Landrigan quotes NHDP Executive Director Mike Brunelle

Brunelle said if Republicans had won the across-the-board cuts in the budget that they proposed, the result would have been cuts to local government and higher property taxes.
Jennifer Daler :: Sunday Columns: SEA, Gambling Commission Debates, TARP and More...
Fahey reports on more Republican initiatives

In addition to tax-repeal and budget-cut bills, Republicans are looking to pass health insurance changes in January. Rep. Andy Renzullo, R-Hudson, filed four bills, one of which would allow state residents to get insurance from any company that was licensed to operate in any one of the 50 states. (So much for Sevigny's NAIC plea to Congress.) Another calls for review of insurance mandates to see their effect on premiums. One target he mentioned is the bariatric surgery coverage Clegg fought so hard to include in mandates. There's also a bill to cut back on what he calls "SCHIP crowd-out" by barring families from state-subsidized coverage if their employers offer a health plan. State barriers to Canadian prescription drugs would fall under a fourth Renzullo bill.

Hey, where are the Dems in all this? Do we not send out press releases, or do our Democratic initiatives get no coverage for some reason?

The gaming commission is already involved in its share of controversy according to Schoenberg. The pro and anti factions are arguing over potential staff bias (they can afford paid staff?), the format of the meetings, etc. so on and so forth.
If that weren't enough,

The gambling fight also continues over a new study put out by the Rockefeller Institute of Government. The study found that state and local income from lotteries, casinos and racinos dropped by 2.8 percent in fiscal year 2009. The biggest drop was in commercial casinos, where state and local revenue dropped by 8.5 percent. In New Hampshire, according to the study, revenue from the state lottery was expected to drop from $75 million in 2008 to $68 million in 2009.

Paul Hodes is continuing his criticism of TARP, issuing a letter with 28 other members of Congress, including Carol Shea-Porter. The letter asks President Obama to let the program expire because of poor oversight and use of funds for bonuses to reward failed executives, among other things.

There are reports that have also been made here on BH with respect to US Senate fundraising, DC vs local, etc. so on and so forth.

The staff changes at the NHDP were also mentioned, with communications director Victoria Bonney leaving to work on Steven Pagiluca's US Senate primary campaign. Derek Richer will work for the NHDP as press secretary and Callan Maynard is the new director of operations.

And of course, "Yoga Jack" Barnes. What a visual!

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While I'm waiting (4.00 / 1)
for my bail-out, I'll sing along with these guys



What an edifying race in 2010. (4.00 / 5)
It seems to be shaping up as:
  1. Lynch continuing his pledge to veto an income or sales tax.
  2. The GOP also pledging same.
  3. Both major party candidates open to expanded gambling.
  4. Lynch running as the Competent Manager Making Tough Choices.
  5. The GOP candidate running with no specific differences versus Lynch, but a rhetorical stand that there is unspecified Easy Money if we just Believe in the Free Market, and all those Tough Choices are not necessary.
  6. The SEA wooing its natural enemy.

Just the sort of campaign, completely divorced from reality, that breeds contempt for politics and government.


Democrats need a deeper bench. n/t (0.00 / 0)


[ Parent ]
Where's Jay Buckey? (4.00 / 2)
I really really liked him.  Smart, a scientist and physician, as well as a celebrity astronaut.  I hope we didn't completely discourage him.  


We believe in prosperity & opportunity, strong communities, healthy families, great schools, investing in our future and leading the world by example. We are Democrats; we are the change you're looking for.

[ Parent ]
OK, let me try another tack. (0.00 / 0)
The economy recognizes two categories of exchange and trade--goods and services.  Economists have always "valued" goods higher than services, perhaps because, in an ideal world of slaves and wives, services cost nothing--i.e. they're extracted under pain of suffering and death.

Anyway, public entities also deal in goods and services.  And, for the most part, taxes go to fund services, rather directly and without intermediaries, while capital "goods" are bonded and, not co-incidentally, deliver a revenue stream to the financial class.  So, the money bags prefer bonded projects to taxes.

While it's generally assumed that capital needs and operating expenses are distinct, the fact is that if routine maintenance and repair aren't performed, the capital assets will deteriorate and need to be replaced sooner, rather than later or not in a generation.  So, the effect of constricting the operating budget is to promote capital "improvements" of which the financial class can get a cut.

Those who inveigh against "tax and spend" are really in favor of "borrow and spend" but don't want to admit it because that would give the game away.

So, really, the anti-tax crowd need to be taxed with the reality that they want our public assets to deteriorate to the point where they need to be replaced.  It's the public sector equivalent of "failure by design."

And, it's all because goods are supposed to be better than service, which is supposed to be free.


Restricting public revenues is like failing to change the oil. n/t (0.00 / 0)


Also--- (0.00 / 0)
I've been assuming that the main objective of the bailout was to get a look at the books.  It's hard to devise effective regulations for financial institutions, if you don't know what they're up to.

The reason financial institutions have always been antagonistic to CRA was because of the opportunity it provides for their books and operating procedures to be inspected by community groups and their representatives.  Obama knows that well from having advised on some ACORN law suits against predatory banks and Household Finance.  The latter, by the way, was acquired not long ago by Hong Kong Shanghai Bank Corp for the purpose of acquiring the "model" for ripping off customers to make huge profits.  In other words, their predatory practices are a proprietary asset that's worth a lot of money.

Getting a peek at their operations is what TARP paid for.  Some banks caught on real quick and tried to give the money back.  The Treasury is not sharing the information with Congress because they need to keep it close to the chest until the regulations are drafted.  Regulating the financial sector is next up after health care.

Obama knows exactly what he wants to do.  His not coming to the defense of ACORN proves it.  The point of going after ACORN was to try to get Obama to back off.


May I thank you (4.00 / 2)
for going deeper than the usual superficiality of our political discourse and actually talking about economics in laywoman's terms?

We believe in prosperity & opportunity, strong communities, healthy families, great schools, investing in our future and leading the world by example. We are Democrats; we are the change you're looking for.

[ Parent ]
What? (0.00 / 0)
This isn't economics, it is ideologically based speculation.

Let's take, for example, her comment about "bonded projects" being perferred by the "money bags" to taxes. By using bonds, state and local governments are able to leverage their steady stream of tax revenues to pay for projects they otherwise could not afford. If a town wants to build a $5,000,000 school, raising taxes in one year to pay for the cost of construction would make it impossible for most towns to ever build the school. Do bondholders profit? Yes, but so do taxpayers, because spreading the cost of capital projects over 20 years instead of 12 months makes capital projects possible.  

And Obama's not coming to the defense of ACORN doesn't "prove" anything having anything to do with regulation of the financial sector.  Stating something as an assertion does mean it is not speculation without basis.



"When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on."  Franklin D. Roosevelt    


[ Parent ]

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