Democrats | Politics.MyNC.com - Part 2

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House Democrats To Unveil Pollution Reduction Plan

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WASHINGTON- House Democrats are outlining a plan to cut greenhouse gases by 20 percent over the next decade and 83 percent by mid-century.

But the draft proposal to be unveiled Tuesday leaves for future negotiations one of the most contentious issues: It does not say how pollution allowances would be distributed or whether they will be sold by auction or given away to polluting industries.

The so-called “discussion draft” also calls for increasing energy efficiency and requiring utilities to produce a fourth of their electricity from renewable energy sources by 2025.

The emission reductions mirror a proposal by President Barrack Obama.

Unified Democrats Mirror Obama Budget Priorities

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WASHINGTON  – In a springtime show of unity, congressional Democrats welcomed President Barack Obama to the Capitol Wednesday and unveiled budget blueprints that embrace his key priorities and point the way for major legislation this year on health care, energy and education.

Even so, both the House and Senate versions lack specifics for any of the administration’s signature proposals. And Democrats decided to cut spending – and exploding deficits – below levels envisioned in the plan Obama presented less than a month ago.

Administration officials and congressional leaders said any differences were modest.

“This budget will protect President Obama’s priorities – education, energy, health care, middle class tax relief and cut the deficit in half,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said after the chief executive met privately in the Capitol with rank-and-file Democrats.

Earlier, White House Budget Director Peter Orszag told reporters the congressional budgets “may not be identical twins to what the president submitted, but they are certainly brothers that look an awful lot alike.”

Neither house included the $250 billion that the administration seeks for any future financial industry bailout. Additionally, Senate Democrats assume in their version that Obama’s $400 tax credit for most workers will expire after 2010, and the House blueprint allocates $200 billion less to tax cuts over five years than the president.

But none of that means the tax cuts can’t be kept in place in 2011 and beyond, only that lawmakers would have to find offsetting revenue to pay for them, said Kent Conrad of North Dakota, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee.

The House and Senate plans both call for spending $3.6 trillion in the year that begins Oct. 1, according to the Congressional Budget Office, compared with $3.7 trillion for Obama’s plan.

The House plan foresees a deficit of $1.2 trillion for 2010 but would cut that to $598 billion after five years. The comparable Senate estimates are $1.2 trillion in 2010 and $508 billion in 2014.

Obama’s budget would leave a deficit of $749 billion in five years’ time, according to congressional estimates – too high for his Democratic allies – and would grow to unsustainable levels exceeding 5 percent of the economy by the end of the decade.

Given the strong Democratic congressional majorities in both houses, there is little or no doubt the spending blueprints can clear both houses by the end of next month. But Republicans greeted them with criticism nonetheless.

Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., who was briefly Obama’s choice to become commerce secretary earlier in the year, said the president had laid out a “blueprint to move the government dramatically to the left … hard left.” The senior Republican on the Senate Budget Committee added that Democrats were masking the true deficits left by their plans by leaving out the cost of legislation that is politically essential, such as funding to shelter doctors from payments they receive for serving Medicare patients.

In the House, Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said Democrats were advancing “the president’s high-cost, big-government agenda in camouflage. … Instead of simply righting the ship, this budget steers it in a radically different direction straight into the tidal wave of spending and debt that is already building.”

Ryan, who is the senior Republican on the House Budget Committee, and GOP colleagues are expected to unveil an alternative on Thursday. No similar effort is expected in the Senate.

The budget is largely a nonbinding statement of targets for lawmakers to meet as they look ahead to the next fiscal year. No presidential signature is required, since it is not legislation.

At the same time, the budget sets limits on overall domestic spending and on defense and – perhaps equally important – anticipates later legislation on health care, energy and education.

The House budget, for example, would establish fast-track rules for legislation the White House wants for remaking the nation’s health care system, as well as for another measure to have the government begin making loans directly to students.

Both budgets also would create deficit-neutral special accounts that will be used to pay for Obama’s signature initiatives, a step that Orszag specifically noted in his comments to reporters as a key element of the administration’s own budget.

Nor were Democrats willing to let Republican charges go unanswered.

“President Bush has left President Obama a hard hand to play: an economy in crisis and a budget in deep deficit, in deficit this year alone by $1.752 trillion,” said Rep. John Spratt, D-S.C., chairman of the House Budget Committee.

“President Obama has responded with a budget that meets the challenge head-on.”

Democrats also made several decisions that reflect their priorities and mark a major change from those favored by the Bush administration and Republicans.

Each of the two houses’ plans envisions substantial increases in core non-defense domestic programs over the Bush administration’s final year – $35 billion in the case of the Senate and $42 billion for the House – although both are smaller jumps than the administration’s figure of almost $50 billion. Those differences are relatively modest in the context of spending of $500 billion or more on the programs involved.

Both House and Senate are embracing Obama’s core defense budget, granting a 3.8 percent increase and endorsing his assumption of $50 billion annually for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, a figure many believe is too low as the war in Afghanistan continues to escalate. But defense spending slows further in subsequent years, which is sure to put pressure on acquisition of weapons systems.

On taxes, the Democrats followed Obama’s lead in agreeing to extend many of the Bush-era tax cuts that were enacted in 2001 and 2003. An exception was made in the case of cuts that applied to upper-income wage earners.

Still, the administration appeared sensitive to the perception that the president’s key tax cut proposal might be ended in two years.

Orszag announced that an administration board headed by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker would have until December to study the issues of tax simplification, closing tax loopholes and reducing “corporate welfare.” The result could be to make additional revenue available that might close the deficit, pay for Obama’s tax cuts in the future, or both.

GOP Disputes UNC Board of Governors Elections

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The State Senate Wednesday elected eight members to the UNC Board of Governors.Twelve candidates were nominated and the top eight vote recipients were to be elected.

According to a press release from the GOP, Democrats have controlled the voting process so that the real election is conducted behind closed doors.

“Their method is to select the winners in a closed caucus; they then have the nominees who fail to make the cut ‘withdraw’ their names,” the press release said. “The vote on the Senate floor then proceeds with only eight names eligible for the eight seats. Any ballot marked by a Senate member that contains a name other than the pre-selected eight is disqualified and not counted.”

Senate Republican Leader Phil Berger (R-Rockingham) made the following statement:

“Yesterday’s vote on the State Health Plan illustrated how Senate Democrats fix a bill behind closed doors. Today, we saw how they manipulate the UNC Board of Governors election. This “Soviet” styled balloting is an affront to our Democratic system and to the people of North Carolina.”

These are the members elected to the board:

  • John Blackburn of Linville currently serves as Chair of the Appalachian State University Board of Trustees, of which he has been a member since 2005. He is President and General Manager of Linville Resorts, Inc. Blackburn has served on the Crossnore School Board of Trustees, the Cannon Memorial Hospital Board of Directors, and was a co-founder of the Avery County YMCA.
  • Peaches Gunter Blank of Nashville, Tennessee, is a current member of the UNC Board of Governors, where she was first elected in 2005. She is private consultant in healthcare issues who previously served as Chief of Staff and Deputy to the Governor of Tennessee, President of the Hospital Alliance of Tennessee, and as a senior policy staff member for Governor Lamar Alexander of Tennessee. She served for five years as Chair of the Board of Trustees of North Carolina State University.
  • Laura Buffaloe of Roanoke Rapids is a current member of the UNC Board of Governors, where she was first elected in 2006. She is a retired educator who worked at Halifax Community College, serving as Dean of Instruction from 1998-2000 and Vice President of Instructional Services until her retirement in 2005. Buffaloe is a graduate of Elizabeth City State University and received her Doctorate in Education from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and has served on numerous civic boards.
  • Phil Dixon of Greenville is a current member of the UNC Board of Governors, where he was first elected in 2005. He is a practicing attorney, who has represented local school boards for the past 21 years. Dixon has served as Chair of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce and the Pitt County Mental Health, Mental Retardation, and Developmental Disabilities Area Board. He is a graduate of Eastern Carolina University and received his law degree from UNC-Chapel Hill.
  • Paul Fulton of Winston-Salem is currently serving his second term on the Board of Trustees of UNC-Chapel Hill. He worked for Hanes and Sara Lee Corporations for 38 years and was President of Sara Lee from 1988-93, Dean of the Kenan-Flagler Business School from 1993-97, and is currently Chairman of the Board of Bassett Furniture Industries, Inc. Fulton served as a Trustee at Winston-Salem State University for 8 years, Co-Chair of the Carolina First fundraising campaign at UNC-CH, and as Co-Chair of the state’s Higher Education Bond Oversight Committee.
  • Hannah Gage of Wilmington is the currently Chair of the UNC Board of Governors, where she was first elected in 2001. She is a businesswoman and retired broadcast executive who built and managed radio stations across the Southeast. Gage served as a Member and Chair of the UNC-Wilmington Board of Trustees, on the N.C. Coastal Land trust board, and on Southeastern N.C. Community Foundation board. She is a graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill.
  • Franklin McCain of Charlotte currently serves as Chair of the Board of Trustees for North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University. He is retired from Hoest Celanese Corporation and is Chairman of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund North Carolina Committee. He received his undergraduate and Master’s degrees from North Carolina A&T and received worldwide acclaim as one of the four A&T students who took part in the Woolworth sit-in in 1960.
  • Burley Mitchell of Raleigh is currently a member of the NC State University Board of Trustees. He was Chief Justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court, on which he served from 1982-1999. Prior to that, Mitchell was a member of the Court of Appeals, Secretary of the Department of Crime Control and Public Safety, an Assistant Attorney General, and District Attorney. Mitchell is currently an attorney with Womble Carlyle in Raleigh. He graduated from NC State and received his law degree from UNC-Chapel Hill.

The UNC-Board of Governors is the policy-making body legally charged with “the general determination, control, supervision, management, and governance of all affairs of the constituent institutions.” It elects the president, who administers the University. The 32 voting members of the Board of Governors are elected by the General Assembly for four-year terms.

Young Dems of NC Hold State Convention

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ASHEVILLE, N.C. – On Saturday, March 21, the Young Democrats of North Carolina will hold their 51st statewide convention in Asheville.  The largest assembly of Young Democrats to take place this year, the convention will showcase the role that individuals under age 35 played in the 2008 general election and what their agenda will be approaching the 2010 midterms.

Featured speakers will include Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen, Congressman Heath Shuler, Lt. Governor Walter Dalton, Charlotte City Councilman and mayoral candidate Anthony Fox, North Carolina Democratic Party Chair David Young, and numerous other officials — each of whom will be available for comment.

“Young people have become engaged in grassroots political activism with an energy and vigor unlike any seen in North Carolina for many years,” said President of the Young Democrats of North Carolina Zack Hawkins. “I am looking forward with great excitement to building on the momentum of 2008 and unveiling our plans for the future at our 51st statewide convention in Asheville, in the company of officials such as Governor Bredesen, Congressman Shuler, and many others.”    

WHAT:  Young Democrats of North Carolina Annual ConventioN
WHO: Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen
U.S. Representative Heath Shuler (NC-11)
Lt. Governor Walter Dalton
Charlotte City Councilman and Mayoral Candidate Anthony Foxx
Asheville Mayor Terry Bellamy
N.C. Democratic Party Chair David Young
N.C. Rep. Tricia Cotham
N.C. Rep. Jane Whilden
N.C. Rep. Grier Martin
Fmr. N.C. Sen. Cal Cunnungham
Asheville City Councilman Brownie Newman
Watauga County Commissioner Tim Futrelle

WHEN: Saturday, March 21 – 12:30 p.m.
WHERE: Marriot Renaissance Asheville Hotel, 31 Woodfin Street
Asheville, North Carolina 28801

Obama’s Budget Plan Draws Heat From Democrats, GOP

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WASHINGTON – The obstacles that President Barack Obama faces in pushing his ambitious tax and spending plan through Congress became clearer Tuesday as key Democrats took issue with major proposals, and some of their favorite economists said the president’s jobs projections are too rosy.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi signaled that another stimulus bill and bank bailout package are possible, even though both are likely to be unpopular with many voters.

While congressional Democrats appear certain to reject some of Obama’s budget proposals, they were eager to defend his overall approach and to blame the economic crisis on former President George W. Bush.

“We are still having unemployment numbers come out now that are part, still, of the Bush economy,” Pelosi told reporters in the Capitol.

She introduced a trio of prominent economists who had just briefed her leadership team. But even those hand-picked advisers were not totally in tune with the Democratic hierarchy.

Allen Sinai, chief global economist at Decision Economics Inc., said Obama is too optimistic when he predicts that the recently enacted $787 billion stimulus bill will save or create at least 3.5 million jobs over two years. About 2.5 million jobs is more realistic, Sinai said.

“Initially, the jobs created may be a little disappointing,” Sinai said as Pelosi looked on. But over three years, he said, “3 million new jobs is not unrealistic at all.”

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com, said more taxpayer money is needed to revive the economy. “Another stimulus package is a reasonable probability,” he said, and “more money for financial stability to shore up the banking system is likely.”

“More money for foreclosure mitigation may also be necessary,” Zandi said.

Pelosi, asked if she agreed with his remarks, said, “I do.”

Her spokesman Brendan Daly later said Pelosi and Congress will watch economic conditions “to determine if further action is needed to stimulate the economy.”

Obama’s team expects little help from Republicans in passing his massive budget blueprint for the year that begins Oct. 1. On Tuesday, Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said the plan has three “fatal flaws:” it spends, taxes and borrows too much.

More troubling for Obama are the arrows coming from congressional Democrats. They generally support his plans to revamp health care, education and energy policies. But prominent Democrats oppose several of his proposals for targeted tax hikes and spending cuts to pay for the changes.
 
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad, D-N.D., said numerous colleagues have cited objections and told him, “If this is in, don’t count on my vote.”

It has happened so often, Conrad told White House budget director Peter Orszag at a hearing Tuesday, that everyone can “absolutely be sure we can’t pass this budget.”

Conrad himself is part of Obama’s problem. He is among those who oppose the president’s bid to eliminate subsidies to farms with more than $500,000 in annual sales. There is no need to revisit the farm bill approved last year, Conrad said.

Also unpopular with many Democratic lawmakers is the president’s proposal to reduce the tax deductibility of mortgage payments and charitable gifts by households making more than $250,000 a year. House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., said he worries there would be fewer donations to groups that help the needy “during a time of crisis.”

The White House has cited studies suggesting the drop would be tiny, but Rangel said he wants more information.

Obama also may face hurdles in trying to impose higher premium payments for upper-income retirees receiving Medicare drug benefits. Senate Democrats killed such an effort two years ago. They are taking a wait-and-see approach to the president’s plan.

“Having the president supporting that certainly doesn’t hurt it,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., told reporters. “So it’s something we’ll take a look at.”

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said there’s no need for panic over the potshots coming Obama’s way.

“I don’t think, ultimately, the criticism is surprising,” he told reporters. “That certainly happens and is all part of a process.”

“The American people can be assured,” Gibbs said, “that the president spends the vast majority of his time thinking and working on the economy.”

Republicans Want To End Automatic Pay Hikes

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WASHINGTON – Senate Democrats are trying to thwart a Republican effort to make lawmakers vote every year on whether or not to give themselves a pay raise.

For the past two decades, lawmakers have been receiving automatic cost-of-living increases each year unless they vote specifically to reject them. In January, they got an automatic increase of $4,700, boosting their annual salary to $174,000.

Republican Sen. David Vitter of Louisiana demanded a vote Tuesday on a measure that would do away with those automatic raises. He argued that they’re inappropriate while the nation is mired in a recession and millions of Americans have lost their jobs. Lawmakers aren’t contradicting that reasoning, but they are accusing Vitter of using the issue to delay a broader bill boosting government spending.

Young NC Dems To Advocate At General Assembly

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RALEIGH, N.C. — N.C. Young Democrats will advocate passage of three laws in partnership with members of the House and Senate on Feb. 24.

The Young Democrats of North Carolina will lobby members of the North Carolina General Assembly to support the Renewable Energy & Energy Efficiency Tax Credit, the Prohibit Smoking in Public & Work Places Act, and the School Violence Prevention Act.    

Preceding the effort will be a press conference held in the North Carolina General Assembly Legislative Building Press Room at 10:40 a.m. 

The following members of the North Carolina General Assembly will be on-hand to discuss specific pieces of legislation: N.C. House Majority Leader Hugh Holliman (Davidson County), N.C. Sen. Josh Stein (Wake County), N.C. Rep. Rick Glazier (Cumberland County) and N.C. Rep. Tricia Cotham (Mecklenburg County).

“In 2008, young people across North Carolina demonstrated that the application of our energies, our resolve, and our commitment to North Carolina’s future can accomplish great things,” said President of the Young Democrats of North Carolina Zack Hawkins. “The Renewable Energy & Energy Efficiency Tax Credit, the Prohibit Smoking in Public & Work Places Act, and the School Violence Prevention Act each represent a worthy investment in the people of our state by placing North Carolina on the cutting edge of the green-energy economy, promoting public health, and ensuring a safe learning environment for our children.”

Perdue Speaks At Meeting Of US House Democrats

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North Carolina Gov. Beverly Perdue told congressional Democrats she’s working on the state’s budget shortfall but needs federal assistance quickly and with few strings attached.

Perdue and other governors spoke Friday to the U.S. House Democratic Caucus Issues Conference in Williamsburg, Va.

The speech was closed to the public. But in prepared remarks released by her office, Perdue urged House members to work out a compromise with the Senate that would distribute money to states as soon as possible.

Perdue said North Carolina needs flexibility so it isn’t penalized for spending more money than other states in the past on education.

Perdue recently projected using $900 million in federal money to help narrow a $2 billion budget shortfall this year.

Centrists Push Cuts On Stimulus, Talks Continue

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A bipartisan group of senators worked furiously in backroom negotiations on Thursday to cut the cost of the more than $920 billion economic stimulus plan, the NTY.

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