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PUBLIC RADIO'S MARKETPLACE COMMENTARIES:
What the Democrats Should Do Now
Robert B. Reich
Marketplace, November 8, 2006
The 2008 Presidential campaign begins today. Whatever the Democrats do with
their new-found congressional power over the next two years, it will be
with the big 2008 prize in mind.
Some Democrats want to expose the malfeasance and nonfeasance of the Bush
Administration – find out who really knew what and when with regard
to weapons of mass destruction, Abu Graahb, Katrina, payoffs to Abramoff
and all the other rot. That’s understandable, but it would be far better
if Democrats used their new-found power to lay out a new agenda for America.
There’s no point digging up more dirt. Bush isn’t running again.
John McCain, the Republican’s most likely choice to replace him, has
distanced himself so far from the administration that no amount of dirt will
soil him. Besides, the public and the media are already suffering from outrage
fatigue. And the Democrats wouldn’t be credible, anyway. It will be
easy for Republicans to dismiss their efforts as more of the same old partisan
bickering. The fact is, the public is sick of mud-slinging.
Instead of dwelling on what’s gone wrong, Democrats should focus on
what to do right. For example:
- Cut the Alternative Minimum Tax so it doesn’t slam the middle
class, and roll back the Bush tax cuts for the rich.
- Open Medicare to every American who needs affordable health insurance,
and use Medicare’s resulting huge bargaining clout to reduce
drug prices.
- Bar companies from deducting from their corporate income taxes
any executive pay in excess of $1 million a year.
- Raise the minimum wage and index it to inflation.
- Reform Social Security by eliminating the ceiling on payments
so people earning over $100,000 a year pay the same percent
of their
income as
everyone else.
- Raise fuel economy standards, eliminate subsidies to the
oil companies, and use the money instead for basic R&D
in non-carbon based energy.
- Renegotiate the Kyoto protocols on greenhouse gas emissions.
- And while we’re at it, reaffirm the Geneva Conventions.
I could go on, but you get the point.
Democrats should use their new-found clout to offer ideas
for tackling America’s
hard problems. Even if these bills get vetoed by the
President, at least they set out an agenda for where
the nation ought to be heading.
That’s what the election of 2008, which starts
today, ought to be about.
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