Imagine that obstructing the country's recovery and keeping the workers in turmoil and pain is your magic bullet to regaining power. Imagine that and you have touched the soul of the GOP. They could pretend and tell their dumbest voters that they were needed to save America. The failures of the Bush administration were deep and the obstruction by the republicans made them last years longer than they would have had the GOP helped the Democrats heal the system.
Helping was too much for republicans to handle so they stopped and or slowed down every effort to create jobs and boost the economy. The republicans won and got control of the House and the Senate. The voters bought the GOP garbasge hook line and sinker and here we are today with a nation in recovery and the GOP taking over. That's the same GOP that destroyed the economy to begin with. The republicans couldn't govern then and they won't govern now but here's the Big Difference.
Democrats will help govern the country, something the republican party never did. Democrats will do that which is best for the country and President Obama can and will veto the tea party right wing conservative ignorance that the republican party runs on.
The GOP does not believe in science or education or fair wages. They have sold themselves to the upper 1% and big business and could not care less about normal working people. Here is the real GOP magic trick, they use the money from the upper crust to craft ads for the masses that proclaim the parties interestr in normal workers and promote a division of hate between classes and races that allows them to get just enough votes to stay in power. The republican party motivates the voters to vote against their self interest, to sell out the futures of their children. That's quite a trick and the republicans play it over and over. That doesn't speak well for the intellect of the GOP voter.
Given Republican economic history, the 2 largest depressions in our history, the only 2 times they have had control of congress and White House for more than 8 years.. why does anyone listen to them on economics, when they never show supporting economic data.. . . . just GOP beliefs.
Check out this Info.
Recessions Since 1950 and Party in White House at Onset
Jul 1953 - May 1954 Republican
Aug 1957 - Apr 1958 Republican
Apr 1960 - Feb 1961 Republican
Dec 1969 - Nov 1970 Republican
Nov 1973 - Mar 1975 Republican
Jan 1980 - July 1980 Democrat
Jul 1981 - Nov 1982 Republican
Jul 1990 - Mar 1991 Republican
Mar 2001 - Nov 2001 Republican
Dec 2007- Jun 2009 Republican
There have been 22 recessions since 1900.
16 have started under Republican leadership, 6 under Democrat leadership and the 2 worst 1929 and now when Repubs had control of WH and congress for more than 8 years(the only times in history)
The NBER does not define a recession in terms of two consecutive quarters of decline in real GDP. Rather, a recession is a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months, normally visible in real GDP, real income, employment, industrial production, and wholesale-retail sales. For more information, see the latest announcement from the NBER's Business Cycle Dating Committee, dated 9/20/10.
Info provided by
Public Information Office
National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
1050 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge MA 02138
USA
617-868-3900
Here's how taxes don't work.
What we have now is decades of a more or less strict adherence to the gospel that tax cuts for the highest income earners are good. The trend began with President Kennedy, but his cuts were hardly radical. He lowered rates when the American economy was humming along, no longer paying for World War II and, relative to today, an egalitarian dreamland. To put things in perspective, Kennedy cut rates to around 70 percent, a level we can hardly imagine raising them to today. The huge drops -- from 70 percent to 50 percent to less than 30 percent -- came with the Reagan presidency.
In comparison to decades of cuts, Presidents George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and Barack Obama each raised taxes at the top by a historically insignificant amount. Obama also proposed modest tax increases, raising taxes on families making more than $250,000 from 33 to 36 percent, and on individuals making more than $200,000 from 36 to 39.6 percent. These increases failed in the House. The Tea Party abd the GOP killed the small adjustments that would have leveled out the tax system. They did not do that for the workers and normal rax payers. They represented the upper 1% who own and manipulate the republican party.
A 90 percent top marginal tax rate doesn’t mean that if you make $450,000, you are going to pay $405,000 in federal income taxes. Americans have a well-documented trouble understanding the notion of marginal tax rates. The marginal tax rate is the amount you pay on your income above a certain amount. Right now, you pay the top marginal tax rate on every dollar you earn over $406,750. So if you make $450,000, you only pay the top rate on your final $43,250 in income.
A very high marginal tax rate isn’t effective if it’s riddled with loopholes. These are the games the GOP plays with the average3 tax payer. Along with propoganda like advertising for the republican the average voter stands dam little chance of know what is in his best interest. The middle class carry the burden of financing this country and if the GOP has its way will never see relief.
The U.S. economic outlook for 2015 will be significantly different depending on your vantage point. If you’re wealthy, 2015 will probably be another year of celebratory wealth creation.
If, on the other hand, you’re not, 2015 will feel an awful lot like 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, and 2009. Wall Street and the U.S. government will tell you the economy is doing well, but it won’t feel like it.
In fact, according to a national survey, 70% of Americans believe the U.S. economy is permanently damaged, while 84% do not believe the economy has improved since the recession ended in 2009.
How can this be?
The stock market is, after all, the barometer for the country’s economic health. Since the markets bottomed in March 2009, the S&P 500 has climbed approximately 200%, the NYSE is up 165%, the NASDAQ is up more than 260%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average has gained more than 165%.
With the major U.S. indices reaching uncharted territory almost daily, many have concluded that the U.S. economy has recovered. Unemployment levels have dropped to just 6.1% and inflation is in check. Further, the Federal Reserve is winding down its bond buying program and at the current rate, will wrap up its quantitative easing (QE) strategy this fall. Mission accomplished!
The fact of the matter is that the U.S. is doing spectacularly well. Well, Wall Street is.
Economic Background
The Great Recession in the U.S. started in December 2007 and lasted for 18 months. In late 2008, in an effort to help kick-start the economy, the Federal Reserve initiated its generous bond buying program (quantitative easing) and sent short-term interest rates tumbling to near zero. The low interest rate environment was supposedto encourage banks to lend more money to businesses and people.
This didn’t happen exactly like it was supposed to. Instead of making it easier to get money, America’s big banks tightened their lending rules, taking the opportunity to strategically invest the money themselves.
Granted, the banks were more than willing to lend to well-heeled Americans. Keeping interest rates artificially low has made it cheaper to borrow and is generally recognized as the fuel that’s been propelling the stock market increasingly higher.
Since the Federal Reserve enacted its quantitative easing strategy, the S&P 500 has soared more than 200% in value. During the same timeframe, the number of Americans receiving food stamps has essentially doubled to 46.23 million, or one-sixth of the American population.
As a broader measure, since the Great Recession began, the top one percent of earners have seen their incomes rise more than 30%, while the bottom 99% saw their earnings rise 0.4%. During the so-called recovery, the top one percent captured 95% of the total growth in the U.S.
Unfortunately, the widening gap has slowed the five-year recovery and contributed to Standard & Poor’s (S&P) cutting its growth estimates for the economy. Because (in part) of the income disparity, S&P estimates the economy will grow 2.5% annually for the next decade—down from a forecast five years ago of 2.8%.
This is a little less optimistic than what the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has projected. In 2012, U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) growth was 2.8% and in 2013, it slowed to just 1.9%. In 2014, the IMF expects U.S. GDP growth to hit 2.8% and in 2015, it expects an even three percent.
Unemployment Analysis & Forecast
Again, the stock markets may be doing well, but the underlying fundamentals that hold the U.S. economy together are not. Yes, the jobless rate is down to 6.2% from nearly 10% four years ago, but that number is a little misleading.
Other gauges have become harder to assess and may reflect persistent weakness, including the number of people jobless for more than six months, the millions who are working part-time but want full-time jobs, and stagnant wages. On top of that, the underemployment rate (U-6) remains at an eye-watering 12.6%. (Source: “The Employment Situation July 2014,” Bureau of Labor Statistics web site, August 1, 2014.)
For those who have jobs, they’re making less than they did before the Great Recession. Wages for workers at every pay level, save for the bottom 10%, declined from the second half of 2013 through to the second half of 2014. And there’s no indication wages will increase.
For 70% of the workforce, inflation-adjusted hourly wages are still lower than they were in 2007. Over the same period, inflation (CPI) has risen 15%. The best time to be a worker in America was in the late 1990s, when wage growth was broad-based and strongest for the lowest income earners.
Even U.S. housing, the bright spot in the U.S. economy, isn’t as robust as many think. The Case-Shiller Home Price Index may be up 25% since the beginning of 2012, but it still needs to climb an additional 20% just to break even with its pre-recession levels.
Real Estate Analysis
Where are Property Prices HeadedAnd despite the ultra-low interest rates, first-time home buyers are being priced out by all-cash purchases. As a result, the number of first-time home buyers getting onto the property ladder is lagging, accounting for just 28% of all purchases. The 30-year average, and a number that economists consider to be healthy, is 40%.
The National Association of Realtors also notes that nearly half of Americans said student loan debt is a huge obstacle to buying a home. First-time home buyers are an important part of the U.S. economy, and if they don’t buy homes, they can’t pay for upgrades, renovations, new appliances, or furniture. If they aren’t buying, construction companies aren’t building or employing as many people either. And that adds up. (Source: Gaffney, J., “CFPB director: Student loans are killing the drive to buy homes,” HousingWire web site, May 19, 2014.)
Historically, residential investment (construction, remodeling, etc.) has averaged around five percent of U.S. GDP. Housing services, which includes gross rent, utility payments, and imputed rent (an estimate of how much it would cost to rent owner-occupied units), averages between 12% and 13%—for a combined total of 17% to 18%. (Source:
“Housing’s Contribution to Gross Domestic Product (GDP),” National Association of Home Builders web site, last accessed September 3, 2014.)
Analysis for Investors
Despite the obvious economic warning signs, investors are not yet ready to throw in the towel. And they continue to be increasingly optimistic toward a stock market that many believe is both overvalued and ripe for a correction.
But it appears as though investors don’t care if the markets are overvalued so long as it keeps going up. While bearish indicators continue to surface on a regular basis, there’s no reason to think the markets are going to correct in the near term.
To appease shareholders, companies are going to continue to financially engineer their earnings. While using cost-cutting measures and cash to repurchase shares and increase dividend payouts is a short-term investment strategy used to boost earnings and support stock prices, more and more investors seem content with this strategy.
Eventually, companies will need to report sustainable revenue growth. It’s going to be difficult for a country that relies on consumer spending to drive roughly 70% of its GDP to run at full steam when the vast majority of the population is struggling.
Economic Factors
Economic factors outside the U.S. will also have a serious impact on the U.S. economy in 2015. Russia, one of the world’s biggest economies, is on the brink of a recession as a result of sanctions related to ongoing conflict in Ukraine. Russia’s economic ministry halved its 2015 GDP forecast from two percent to one percent.
This past summer, it was reported that Italy, the third-largest economy in the eurozone, had fallen back into recession. Germany, the region’s largest economy, is grinding down and France, the second-biggest economy in the eurozone, is also in a precarious position.
In the second quarter of 2014, Germany reported a decline in its GDP—this represents the first decline since the first quarter of 2013. In August, the ZEW Indicator of Economic Sentiment (a survey on the health of the German economy) posted a massive decline, collapsing 18.5 points to a lowly 8.6 points. Having been declining for more than half a year, the index is now at its lowest level since 2012. This does not bode well as we head into 2015. (Source: “ZEW Indicator of Economic Sentiment – Economic Expectations Decline Significantly,” ZEW web site, August 12, 2014.)
France, the second-biggest economy in the eurozone, is in a worse spot economically—and a recession may just be around the corner. In 2013, France’s GDP rang in at just 0.4%. During the first half of 2014, France’s GDP came in at zero. In addition to a stagnant economy, France faces record unemployment and a growing deficit. On top of that, Prime Minister Manuel Valls warned the autumn months would continue to be difficult. (Source: “In Q2 2014, French GDP held steady,” National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies web site, August 14, 2014.)
What in 2015?
It doesn’t look like 2015 will be a prosperous year for the eurozone, especially when you consider its three biggest economies are in jeopardy. Why should we, as Americans, be worried about the eurozone economy?
Approximately 40% of the public companies that make up the S&P 500 derive sales from Europe. If the eurozone faces a sustained economic slowdown, the corporate earnings of American companies will suffer. As a result, America won’t be able to skirt the consequences of an economic slowdown in the eurozone because the U.S. economy itself remains weak.
After all, it’s been the lethargic U.S. economy that has necessitated near-zero interest rates for six years. And there is serious doubt as to whether or not the U.S. economy can sustain higher rates. With that in mind, it’s difficult to imagine the U.S. could weather a global economic slowdown unscathed.
That doesn’t mean the stock market won’t continue to do well; it all depends on when the Federal Reserve decides to start increasing interest rates. Initially, the Federal Reserve said it wouldn’t raise interest rates until the U.S. economy was on sustainable economic footing. Many take that to mean a jobless rate of 6.5% and inflation of 2.5%. The unemployment rate is already below the 6.5% target and U.S. inflation is near 1.5%.
At the same time, there is more to the U.S. economy than those two indicators. It’s quite possible the U.S. economy will hit those targets in early 2015 and the Fed chooses not to raise interest rates because it believes there is too much uncertainty.
The Federal Reserve will announce on March 18, 2015 whether or not it will raise interest rates from zero. If the Federal Reserve decides the economy is on the right path and raises interest rates sooner than expected, it’s quite possible the stock market will go through a short-term correction. An increase of 50 basis points could shock the system and negatively impact the broader economy—making it more difficult for people and businesses to borrow and lend.
If this were to happen, investors might want to consider banking stocks and growth stocks. Over the remainder of the year, the Federal Reserve would monitor how the economy is doing and decide whether or not to move interest rates higher…or lower.
Maintaining the current ultra-low levels would signal there is still work to be done and that rates will probably not rise until later in 2015—possibly October. If this happens, investors will, in all probability, remain bullish, sending the stock markets higher over the coming seven months.
Waiting to announce an interest rate hike until October 2015 would allow the U.S. economy more time to set itself on a more stable, sustainable course. It would also allow the U.S. economy time to better understand or assess where the global economy is heading.
Because an interest rate hike in October 2015 would be expected, it would come as less of a shock. As a result, the major U.S. stock indices would be prepared to absorb the expected hike.
What kind of companies thrive on higher interest rates? Few are looking forward to interest rate hikes more than banks. America’s big banks have been the biggest winners of the Great Recession and quantitative easing. When the U.S. financial system was on the brink of collapse, the Federal Reserve and the U.S. government stepped in and bailed out America’s big banks. The six biggest banks were given $160 billion and they borrowed as much as $460 billion; they profited from cheap, taxpayer-funded dollars.
And America’s big banks did well. JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE/JPM) has seen its share price climb almost 350%, Morgan Stanley (NYSE/MS) has seen its share price increase more than 450%, Bank of America Corporation’s (NYSE/BAC) share price is up more than 500% since early 2009, and Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE/WFC) has seen its share price climb more than 625%.
Even in the low interest rate environment, America’s big banks have made a lot of money. But low interest rates mean there is a limit to what banks can charge. With the country’s banking industry on strong financial footing, America’s big banks want interest rates to climb.
When interest rates do start to increase, lending institutions will raise the amount they charge for the loans faster than what they pay on deposits. For America’s big banks, these higher rates will translate into higher profits.
2014 Winds Down
As 2014 winds to a close, I’m reminded of how much can change in 12 months. The year began with an economic contraction and ended with growth roaring at 5%. Oil prices fell from over $100 a barrel to $56 a barrel, putting an extra $108 billion into consumers’ pockets. The unemployment rate dropped from 6.6% to 5.8% as approximately one million Americans found jobs or gave up looking for work.
The New Year will bring even more change, for good or for ill. From interest rates to the new Republican majority, here are five things that could significantly alter the U.S. economy in 2015:
Interest Rate Increase
The Federal Reserve is widely expected to increase interest rates in 2015 after six years of keeping them near zero following the financial crisis. This would mark a needed return to more normal monetary policy, but the transition could be rocky. The stock market could take a hit as rates rise. The market has proven very sensitive to Fed policy, as evidenced by its run-up last week following the FOMC’s announcement that they would be “patient” raising rates. Additionally, consumers may borrow less as loans become more expensive, putting pressure on the housing and auto industries.
Oil Shock
Oil prices are likely to continue to fall amid weak demand and increased American oil production. While the drop in oil prices is bruising the energy industry, it functions as a positive shock to the economy. Consumers, spending less on gas, have more money to put towards other expenditures. This could spur economic growth to higher than expected levels, since consumption comprises nearly 70% of GDP.
Debt Ceiling
The U.S. is scheduled to hit the debt ceiling in March 2015, setting the stage for a political showdown as the potential for default is leveraged for political concessions. This has both positive and negative potential. On one hand, the debt ceiling could be used put forward modest budget reforms that make the U.S. economy more robust in the long-term. On the other, prolonged debate over the debt ceiling could inject considerable uncertainty into the economy, and actual default would be ruinous.
Global Slowdown
Weak global growth poses a threat to our nascent economic recovery. The IMF estimates that there is nearly a 40% chance of the Eurozone re-entering a recession in the next six months. Asia is facing headwinds, with contracting GDP in Japan and slowing growth in China. Even emerging markets are slowing due to weak demand and increased
geopolitical conflict. All of these factors could dampen U.S. growth prospects by restraining U.S. exports.
The New Republican Majority
The new Republican majority in the Senate and House has a significant opportunity. While there will be a temptation to pass symbolic votes — such as the repeal of the Affordable Care Act — these bills will not become law under the current President. Instead, Republicans should use their newfound power to pass serious, pro-growth proposals that will be hard for the President to refuse. This includes, but is not limited to, opening up the Keystone XL pipeline, lowering corporate tax rates, and allowing for more high-skilled immigration. These policies have wide bipartisan appeal and would increase economic growth and job creation. I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for republicans to act in the public good. Rather you should expect them to continue to be the slaves of the upper 1%ers.
Overall, the U.S. economy is expected to perform well next year. The Federal Reserve is predicting GDP growth ranging anywhere from 2.6% to 3.0%. There are relatively few outside factors that threaten to curtail this progress, aside from a severe global slowdown or unforeseen geopolitical conflict.
The biggest game changers in 2015 are likely to come from within the U.S. Between the Federal Reserve raising interest rates and Congress negotiating on the debt ceiling and pro-growth policies, our policymakers have an inordinate ability to shape how the economy performs next year. Let’s hope republicans get serious and the parties work together and get it right. Hope is all we have.
CORRUPTION Runs A-muck in the GOP
House Majority Whip Steve Scalise Spoke At White Supremacist Conference In 2002Founded in 2000 by former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard David Duke (served as a Louisiana state representative from 1989 to 1992), EURO seeks to fight for "white civil rights." The group is recognized as a white nationalist hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. As the SPLC notes, the group is largely inactive, serving primarily
as a vehicle to promote Duke's books.
"EURO already was well known as a racist hate group at the time that Steve Scalise apparently spoke to its workshop, and it is hard to believe that any aspiring politician would not have known that," Mark Potok, a senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center, said in a statement to The Huffington Post. "In any case, it's worth noting
that Scalise apparently did not leave even after hearing other racist speakers spouting their hatred."
Many conservatives aren't buying Scalise's story. RedState's Erick Erickson writes that he finds it highly unlikely the congressman would not have known this was a Duke organization at the time of the event. And then he sticks in the knife: "Trent Lott was driven from the field in 2001 for something less than this."
White supremacy runs deep in the Louisiana region Scalise now represents in Congress. The 2004 race for Louisiana's 1st Congressional District included Democrat Roy Armstrong, an ex-Ku Klux Klan leader and spokesman for Duke. Duke himself had mulled a run for Congress that year, having just been released from federal prison, but ultimately Armstrong ran instead. Republican Bobby Jindal, who is now the governor of the state, won the race in a landslide, but Armstrong managed to pick up more than 19,000 votes.
And now Steve Scalise is a republican leader and the House Majority Whip, Happy New Year.
Rep. Michael Grimm, republican representative of New York, to resign from Congress after admitting to tax fraud
Around this time last year, Rep. Michael Grimm of New York was asked about his campaign finances. He responded poorly. Grimm told the reporter, "If you ever do that to me again, I'll throw you off this f***ing balcony."
Fast forward to now, and Grimm's legal woes have finally caught up with him. The New York Daily News reports the congressman will step down after pleading guilty to one count of tax evasion.
The congressman has been dogged by allegations that he concealed over $1 million in profits from federal tax authorities while running a Manhattan restaurant prior to entering Congress.
Despite the charges, Grimm coasted to victory in the November midterm elections over his Democratic opponent Domenic Recchia. Now that he's stepping down, there'll need to be a special election to fill his place.
Grimm's sentencing, which could come with jail time, is scheduled for June 8.
Alabama GOP Corruption Scandal
The Republican Speaker of the state’s House of Representatives just got nailed on a 23-count corruption charge. So why did the state’s Dems go out with a whimper last November?
It’s the ultimate October surprise: Two weeks before Election Day, one of the most powerful politicians in a state faced a 23-count indictment on ethics charges. It should change everything, right?
Not in Alabama.
Mike Hubbard, the Republican Speaker of the state’s House of Representatives, was indicted for using his political office to solicit favors from a variety of wealthy and powerful Alabama figures. However, this did not have a big effect in the election last November.
Under Hubbard’s leadership, Republicans took control of the Alabama State House for the first time since Reconstruction in 2010 while attacking Democrats for an entrenched culture of corruption.
It’s not because this isn’t a scandal, or even that Alabama voters have grown used to seamy side of politics, as two recent former governors convicted of felonies.
Instead, it’s because of gerrymandering and the weakness of the Democratic Party in Alabama.
Democrats in Alabama are so weak that that incumbent U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions doesn’t even have an opponent, while Democratic gubernatorial nominee Parker Griffith has switched parties twice in the past few years.
Republican voters everywhere look the other way when it is one of their own.
If this steps on your toes then find another place to stand.
A person known for being honest and having strong ethical principles is regarded as having a high degree of integrity, and is the polar opposite of a corrupt person known for dishonesty and fraudulent conduct. There is an adage; “you are known by the company you keep,” that means one’s personality is defined by those they identify with, and it is curious why any person would embrace corrupt and dishonest people to inform their identity. One might believe, errantly, that Americans would demand their leaders possessed a high degree of integrity, but that belief implies that all Americans are honest and driven by strong ethical principles. Sadly, that is simply not the case.
It is reasonable to assume there are still Americans who have a semblance of integrity, but there is a large sector of the population that not only condones and admires corruption and dishonesty, they celebrate it in their elected government representatives; these corrupt Americans are the Republican base. Dutifully, Republicans have
stepped up to meet their base’s demand to be corrupt, and dishonest, and it is evident in the preponderance of Republican governors under investigation for all manner of corruption.
What is telling about their supporters’ own lack of ethical principles is that these Republicans’ polling numbers are much higher than one would expect.
Apparently, corruption is as cherished as a virtue among conservatives as overt racism, misogyny, jingoism, religious extremism, and general hatred.
There are currently 11 Republican governors either under indictment, under investigation, or under intense scrutiny for their ethics violations and outright crimes.
According to a report, the 11 sitting Republican governors are involved in scandals of their own creation, and nine of the eleven ran for re-election.
Most are either led in the polls or stayed competitive with their challengers informing that, at least in their respective states, their base embraces their corruption and in some cases supports their intent to take their corrupt ways to the U.S. Senate.
One former Republican governor, South Dakota’s Mike Rounds, is seeking a Senate seat and openly admitted last Tuesday that he spent $600,000 of taxpayer money on a meat-packing company a former top cabinet official was going to work for when Round’s administration was winding down. The money went directly into the cabinet member, Richard Benda’s pocket in the form of a salary at the now-shuttered meat-packing plant; Northern Beef. There is not a clearer case of conflict of interest, or blatant Republican corruption, any American will likely ever hear about; much less an admission of complicity from a senatorial candidate.
The controversy is centered around Northern Beef’s connection to the EB5 visa scandal that allowed wealthy foreign investors to invest in a local South Dakota business in exchange for going to the head of the immigration line for valuable green cards. A private company headed by Governor Rounds’ employee, Joop Bollen, brought in $100-million to fund Northern Beef, but defrauded South Dakota taxpayers out of $140 million; that was in addition to the $600,000 of taxpayer money Rounds provided for his departing cabinet member’s salary.
Benda, as South Dakota’s tourism secretary, provided “nominal” oversight for the scandal-ridden S.D. EB-5 program, parlayed it into a
job with the company running Northern Beef, then convinced then-governor Rounds to provide taxpayer dollars for his own salary at the private company.
Northern Beef went out of business in less than a year, the debacle cost S.D. taxpayers an additional $4.4 million (at least), and when state investigators got too close to exposing the governor’s part in his cabinet member’s conflict of interest; Richard Benda took his own life. It is the ultimate display of honor among thieves for Benda to “take one for the Rounds’ team” to conceal the former governors’ involvement in a clear conflict of interest and misappropriation of state funds investigation;
something the Republican senatorial candidate Rounds certainly was aware of. Republican voters see the fraud, investigations, misappropriation of taxpayer dollars as qualities that make Rounds well-qualified to represent them as a Republican Senator and corrupt politician.
Recently, another Republican governor, Alaska’s Sean Parnell, is facing intense scrutiny for remaining silent and not investigating gross Alaska National Guard abuses including sexual assaults of young women when he first received complaints. The eventual federal investigation discovered that multiple sexual assault reports were mishandled, including recruiting officers taking advantage of young women in high schools, military helicopters used for personal reasons, and money embezzled from the Guard’s family assistance programs.
Joining Parnell under scrutiny is his Republican Attorney General and Senate candidate Dan Sullivan who continues to refuse to answer questions regarding the Alaska National Guard abuses and fraud. Specifically, Sullivan will not say how early as attorney general he knew about the abuses Parnell kept covered up, or when Parnell informed the state’s lead law enforcement official about the sexual assaults and fraud in the Alaska National Guard. Eventually the truth will come out because Anchorage police continue opening up new lines of investigations. Likely, the new investigations will only embolden Republican voters to support their Republican heroes with renewed enthusiasm; Sullivan has not suffered any ill-effects from his alleged involvement in the fraud and sexual abuse cover up and is leading in the polls before the election.
These corrupt Republicans are just the latest to join the ranks of sitting Republican governors under investigation by authorities. Among the corrupt Republicans under indictment, investigation, and intense public scrutiny and running for re-election are; Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker with two separate investigations including one federal inquiry for illegal fundraising activities at the national level. Ohio Governor John Kasich is keeping pace with Walker with several separate investigations for a variety of crimes including one ongoing FBI investigation for taking bribes; something Ohio voters must consider quite admirable since Kasich had a very substantial lead
over his Democratic challenger.
The list of Republicans being investigated goes on and on, and many are leaders in the Republican-Teabagger movement including Nikki Haley (SC), Rick Perry (TX), Nathan Deal (GA), Paul LePage (ME), Rick Snyder (MI), Tom Corbett (PA), Chris Christie (NJ), and Sam Brownback (KS).
What they all have in common is that regardless the
corruption plaguing them, Republican voters are standing solidly behind them informing that conservatives support fraud, corruption, bribery, election-rigging, cover-ups, and stealing taxpayer money as a virtuous principle of Republican ideology.
The tendency for Republican corruption permeates the movement and is not reserved for national politicians or gubernatorial and senatorial candidates as evidenced in California’s Central Valley and likely throughout the United States. For the second time since the 2012 general election, state-level Republicans were caught red-handed
illegally funneling campaign donations in violation of the state’s campaign finance laws. Instead of even a semblance of shame or remorse, at least at being caught, the revelation their local Republicans broke the law motivated GOP voters to attack long-standing election laws as another underhanded dirty trick; it is the same claim N.J. Governor Chris Christie made because Americans exercise their right to vote.
Of course Republicans are corrupt; they cannot win elections, garner campaign donations, or reward their corporate donors without a high level of malfeasance and criminality. However, what is telling about a large portion of the voting public is that they are just as corrupt for supporting, donating, and voting for Republicans they know are dishonest, corrupt, and have no moral or ethical principles even as they claim Christianity is the guiding force in life and governing.
It is getting increasingly difficult to find even an iota of redeeming quality or value in any Republican politician or their corruption-loving base. A Republican politician or their supporters may claim they hate corruption and demand integrity from their compatriots, but when they continue to support corrupt Republicans, vote for
them, or donate to their campaigns, they reveal that their deeply-held principles are founded in corruption and dishonesty. Americans who support corrupt Republicans may not literally keep company with dishonesty Republican politicians, but they are birds of a feather and their deep-seated lack of integrity and unethical principles are
exposed by the corrupt Republicans they vote for.
If you support the republican party you need to become aware of what you are saying about yourself. Wise up for the New Year.
Amherst County Virginia Democratic News
ACVDN
Amherst Democratic News
Need To Increase Your ClickBank Commissions And Traffic?
ReplyDeleteBannerizer makes it easy for you to promote ClickBank products using banners, simply visit Bannerizer, and get the banner codes for your selected ClickBank products or use the Universal ClickBank Banner Rotator Tool to promote all of the ClickBank products.