In this week’s exciting episode:
- Debt Ceiling Deal & Its Aftermath
- Wisconsin Elections
- Phonebank and Canvass for David Weprin
- New Yorkers Against Gun Violence
- Stage Manager/Rally Planner Needed
In this week’s exciting episode:
Is it rabbit season? No, it’s recall season!
As the debt ceiling agreement is finalized, we now have an opportunity to focus our attention on other important issues. For many of us New Yorkers, the summer means rooftop barbecues, trips to the beach and the occasional road trip. In Wisconsin, this summer has come to mean the season of recall elections and politicians are feeling the heat.
On August 9th, a general election will be held to recall 6 Wisconsin Republicans who voted in favor of Governor Scott Walker’s harmful policies. A successful election will send a much needed message across the country that grassroots progressives have not forgotten their core values and will continue to fight for policies preserving our country’s social safety net.
So, if you are ready for a little shellacking, here’s what you can do.
Call Out the Vote
Join Democracy for America and Progressive Change Campaign Committee to phone bank from home. Like Team EMILY they are encouraging voters to get out there and make their voices heard. Sign up for volunteer shifts starting Saturday, August 6th and running until Tuesday, August 9th.
Latest Recall News Coverage
Wisconsin recall ad deluge may presage 2012 election
A deluge of political advertising in Wisconsin this summer to sway the largest wave of special state elections in U.S. history may be a harbinger of the partisan onslaught expected in the 2012 national elections.
Wisconsin Democrat Faces Recall Vote
This summer, Wisconsin is overflowing with recall elections involving nine state senators from both parties…At stake in a dizzying, unprecedented series of recall elections is dominance in the Senate, where the 19-14 Republican majority could shift if Democrats gain three seats.
Thank you for your continued commitment to change.
As the President and Congress work to negotiate a deal to raise the federal debt ceiling, Republicans are demanding huge funding cuts and radical changes to vital social service programs. Greater NYC for Change opposes these cuts, and urges all lawmakers to reject any deficit reduction proposal which will make harmful benefit reductions to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid programs. Specifically:
This summer has been a busy season of activism for New York. Join our email list for the most recent updates on progressive issues and events taking place across the City and check out our calendar of events. In the meantime, here are several additional resources of interest:
Debt Ceiling Resources
The current discussion on the debt ceiling and potential cuts to vital programs has raised many questions. Our recent blog post “What’s up with Obama’s Debt Ceiling Offer” provides some insight into this issue. The following information may also be helpful:
Debt Ceiling Events
3:45pm: Join our fun “Boat Brigade”!
Gather at the South Ferry Terminal in Lower Manhattan. Together we’ll take the 4 p.m. ferry over to Staten Island. Bring group banners and homemade signs!
5:00pm: Press Conference and Rally
Take the Staten Island ferry to Borough Hall – 10 Richmond Terrace (Across the street from the St. George Ferry Terminal – enter on Stuyvesant Place).
Email Hilary Papineau to RSVP or for additional information: hilarina@gmail.com
Events are sponsored by the new “Restore the American Promise” campaign. Partners include 1199 SEIU, Fight for a Fair Economy • Citizen Action of New York • New York State Alliance
for Retired Americans • New York State AFL-CIO • New York Statewide Senior Action Council • New York Association on Independent Living.
OTHER INFORMATION OF INTEREST
Fracking Updates
While New York awaits updates regarding Governor Cuomo’s final stance on fracking, read about the successful lobby visit that took place in Albany last week; this interesting blog depicts the camaraderie and collaboration that took place as over 200 activists
Clean Elections Campaign Initiative
Grassroots NYC is an organization working to reform campaign financing in New York City. The organization has put forth a “Clean Elections” bill at the City Council level and also monitors the impact of federal campaign financing actions on local fundraising. A recent Supreme Court decision ruled against public funds for campaigns, a decision which will negatively impact the NYC matching funds system. This presents an opportunity for GrassrootsNYC’s to pursue its clean elections system initiative.
July 16th and 17th: MoveOn.org American Dream House Meetings
MoveOn.org has organized a series of [American Dream House Meetings to discuss how to attain a more desirable American Dream is in the making, one that is green, sustainable, and equitable based on creativity and cooperation. On July 16, New Yorkers will gather to discuss the possibilities & what this could practically look like and how to make this better world a reality. Join or host one today!
Voter Registration Drives on July 16
Join fellow democrats throughout the City register new voters. Voter registration drives will be taking place at fun and busy locations across the City and beyond, including:
Union Square:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/detail/gpkfwj
Harlem:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/detail/voterregistrationdrive/gpk3tc
Atlantic terminal:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/detail/voterregistrationdrive/gpkfbd
Fulton Street, Brooklyn:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/detail/voterregistrationdrive/gpk3kv
Staten Island:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/detail/voterregistrationdrive/gpkfvv
Astoria, Queens:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/detail/voterregistrationdrive/gpkfvy
Philly:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/detail/voterregistrationdrive/gpkmbp
Bethlehem, PA:
http://my.barackobama.com/page/event/detail/voterregistrationdrive/gpkfgy)
Thank you!
– Hilary Papineau
Congressional Democrats and Republicans have been at loggerheads for weeks over a vote to raise the debt ceiling.* Failure to raise debt ceiling will mean:
Despite this, the GOP has insisted that any vote to raise the debt ceiling be accompanied by cuts in federal spending of $2 trillion over 10 years and they are adamantly opposed to raising any taxes to increase federal revenues. Yesterday, Obama changed the equation. According to the Washington Post,
Obama and Boehner have emerged as the most enthusiastic proponents of a big deal that would save as much as $4 trillion over the next decade by overhauling the tax code and tackling all the major drivers of federal spending, including the Pentagon and health and retirement programs.
What’s behind the political battle over the debt ceiling? Since most people’s eyes glaze over when the subject is economics, here’s a plain English explanation of the ideas and interests underlying the debt ceiling debate.
Does Deficit Reduction Stimulate the Economy?
1. Would it be safe to say that progressives believe that if the government spends money, the economy will be stimulated and grow, and more people will have jobs?
Well, not just that it spends money, but that it does so in targeted ways. According to Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s, the most effective government spending to counteract a recession is food stamps & unemployment insurance. Why? Because people who get that aid need it, so they spend the money right away & it starts circulating through the economy.
Zandi found that the least effective government spending would be on the Bush tax cuts. Why? (i) The Bush tax cuts were never targeted to boost the economy. They were set up, quite literally, to reward Bush’s biggest donors (i.e., fat cats). (ii) Nobody spends money they don’t need to in a recession. Our natural tendency is to hunker down. Do rich people have to spend the money they get in tax cuts? No. Do they? No. Ergo, no additional money circulates through the economy, so it doesn’t grow.
2. Government spends on people, people spend money, other people receive that money, the economy is stimulated. This is good.
Basically, yes. In economic terms, government spending in a recession starts the process. The rest of the process you mention is called the multiplier effect.
3. Republicans believe that we have to reduce the deficit by cutting government spending in order to reduce the deficit because we have to reduce the deficit because….you get the point.
Republicans SAY they believe that, but they’re the ones who created 90% of the current deficit, directly or indirectly, in the first place. They held an extension of unemployment insurance hostage over their demand for continuation of the Bush tax cuts at the end of 2010, further deepening the deficit. And they’re now insisting that (a) no taxes be raised to reduce the deficit and (b) any increase in government revenues via elimination of tax loopholes be offset by additional spending cuts. So there’s no reason to take seriously any statements they make about their supposed concern about the deficit. They love deficits. So if they’re not concerned about the deficit, what are their ulterior motives for all the posturing?
Republicans believe several different things that underlie what they say they believe about the economy, all of them wrong:
a. The smaller the government, the greater the individual freedom. Conversely, the bigger the government, the greater the encroachments on individual freedom: This sounds straightforward. In fact, it has deep roots in American culture, having been expressed directly by Thoreau in the early 19th century. More recently, Friedrich Hayek enunciated it when he predicted that the development of Britain’s National Health Service (universal health care to you & me) would turn the UK into another Soviet Union. His prediction obviously was wrong, but that didn’t stop conservatives from continuing to believe it with their typical fervor. There are lots of other problems with this (what measure is used to determine the size of government? i..e, how do we know if a government is too big or too small?), but limits of space & time preclude further elaboration.
b. Tax cuts pay for themselves by increasing economic activity: Reagan tried it with huge tax cuts in 1981. The enormous resulting deficits led him to pass 8 consecutive tax increases (yes, increases), but nobody in the GOP seems to remember that part of the story. Bush, as we know, gave us the closest thing to a pure scientific test of this we’re ever likely to have: With the GOP in control of all 3 branches of government, he passed enormous tax cuts & didn’t subsequently offset them. He had the worst economic growth record of any president since Hoover. Conversely, Clinton raised taxes & had the biggest economic expansion in our country’s history. So much for tax cuts stimulating growth. Again, the evidence has had no influence on GOP thinking.
c. Starve the beast: Grover Norquist famously said he wanted to shrink government to a size that would enable him to “drown it in a bathtub.” Again, see Bush. He cut taxes, waged two wars without paying for them, & passed the Medicare Part D unfunded mandate. Money was drained from the Treasury, but did government shrink? No, it grew. The only president to preside over a shrinkage in the size of government was Clinton, who raised taxes, as previously noted. Again, no correlation backing up the claim, and no acknowledgment of the fact by the GOP.
Lastly, remember who funds their campaigns. The GOP always knows which side their bread is buttered on.
4. Obama believes that we have to reduce the deficit by cutting government spending because ________?
See my answer to #7 below.
5. Obama wants the economy to be stimulated because if more people have more money they will vote for him. Also theoretically he does actually want people to have more money.
One would think…
6. Does Obama think that cutting the deficit is going to stimulate the economy?
I guess he must, but I don’t know.
7. Does deficit reduction stimulate the economy?
For an economy stuck in a severe recession? Hell, no. See #1 above. Just as there’s a multiplier effect, there’s also a negative multiplier effect. Think about it like this: As rain falls on crops, the water circulates into the soil, around the roots of plants, and the plants are fed, enabling them to grow. Imagine what happens when there’s a drought. Water no longer circulates, plants are not fed, and they die.
Right now, not enough money is circulating through the economy–at least, not to ordinary people (the banks have oodles of the stuff–much of it from the bailouts–but they’re not issuing much credit, businesses are not expanding & hiring, unemployed people are not making ends meet, so they’re not spending, so there’s little demand, so businesses aren’t expanding & hiring, rinse & repeat). Since interest rates are near zero, the Fed can’t lower interest rates any more to stimulate the economy. And the consensus in Washington is that we don’t dare–no, no, no–do further stimulus spending to boost the economy. So we’re stuck.
All deficit reduction will do in this context is remove more money from an economy that already has too little circulating through it. Take a look at what’s happening to public service employees. State employees are being laid off right & left. All of them have families, most have houses, cars, bills to pay, etc. but there’s no money to be had. All this is creating enormous strain on state budgets because the demand for Medicaid is going through the roof due to all these people becoming unemployed. So what are the GOP & now Obama talking about? Making enormous cuts to the federal budget (including aid to the states, which is already failing to meet the exploding need). But all the Very Serious People to whom Obama seems to be listening in DC make 6- or 7-figure salaries. None of them know anybody who’s unemployed, I’d venture to guess. Economists have declared the recession over (that’s the recession defined in technical terms, not in terms of what’s actually happening to ordinary people). So I guess Obama thinks that if the technocrats say it’s over, it’s over, & it’s time to start reducing the deficit. Now that I think of it, this brings to mind a recent thread about epistemic closure among conservatives that appeared in blog posts by Henry Farrell, Julian Sanchez & some other smart people. But obviously, conservatives are not the only ones susceptible to that dynamic (of course, reasonable people may disagree about whether Obama is a liberal, a conservative or something else).
* Note: Failure to raise the debt ceiling will affect our ability to meet obligations already made; it has nothing to do with future budgetary decisions that might or might not increase or reduce the deficit.
Thursday, July 14 • 6:00pm – 9:00pm
Bar 13 at 35 East 13th Street & University
Join Greater NYC for Change and ACT NOW for our summer mixer celebrating marriage equality, warm weather, and our amazing activist community! There will be two-for-one drinks until 9pm. RSVP on Facebook or here. (Click here to volunteer!)
This week, we’re focusing our energy on keeping New York’s drinking water pristine (and our bagels delicious)! As you might know, Governor Cuomo is considering permitting fracking in New York, a dangerous way of drilling for gas by pumping toxic chemicals through our drinking water. Here’s two actions you can take to stop fracking:
1) Join our friends at United for Action as they travel to Albany this Thursday, July 7th to attend an emergency press conference/rally and let the Governor know in no uncertain terms that the water and the health of New Yorkers is not up for sale. The bus leaves at 7:30 am and costs $35 round trip. For more information sign up here.
2) Call Governor Cuomo and tell him you want to ban fracking in New York State! Tell him you have serious concerns that fracking cannot be done safely. Governor Cuomo’s at (518) 474-8390 or (212) 681-4580; you can also send him an email here.
Thanks for all that you do!
Naomi & the Greater NYC for Change team