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Paul Ryan Supports Plan to Let Unemployed Work for Free

Click here to view this media Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) isn’t a fan of President Barack Obama’s American Jobs Act, but he does like the idea of allowing people who are receiving unemployment benefits to work for free . The plan is based on a program called Georgia Works which matches job seekers with employers. Under the plan, employers agree to provide up to eight weeks of on-the-job training. Workers, who can only work for 24 hours a week, continue to receive unemployment benefits instead of getting paid. “The Georgia plan sounds pretty interesting,” Ryan told Fox News’ Chris Wallace Sunday. “I think that’s something we are looking at, which is unemployment reform.” Ryan’s remarks echo House Majority Leader Eric Cantor’s (R-VA) support of the idea. “We stand ready to work with [President Obama] if there is interest in implementing a similar program on the federal level,” Cantor said. According to data the Georgia Department of Labor provided to The Huffington Post’s Arthur Delaney , the program isn’t very successful. Between 2003 and 2010, only 16.4 percent of people that participated in the program found work, about the same rate as those who were not participating. As of late August, there were only 19 trainees enrolled in Georgia Works. The top weekly unemployment benefit in Georgia is about $330.

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Obama sets out ‘balanced’ deficit plan and asks top earners to pay fair share

Obama says half of $3tn deficit reduction will come from tax increases, but stresses: ‘It’s not class warfare – it’s math’ President Barack Obama came out swinging in a tough speech defending his plans to increase taxes on the rich as part of his plan to cut the US deficit, saying: “This is not class warfare – it’s math.” In the speech in the White House’s Rose Garden, the president set out plans to cut more than $3tn from the deficit over the next 10 years. Almost half of that money would come from tax increases. “Washington has to live within its means,” said the president. “For us to solve this problem, everybody … has to pay their fair share.” Over the weekend, Obama’s Republican critics blasted his plans to increase taxes on those earning over $1m – the so-called “Buffett tax” named after billionaire investor Warren Buffett, a frequent critic of the low taxes paid by the rich. Paul Ryan, chairman of the House of Representatives budget committee, called the plan “class warfare.” Obama is proposing to set a minimum tax on people making $1m or more in income. The measure would prevent millionaires and billionaires taking advantage of lower tax rates on investment earnings than the rates middle-income taxpayers pay on their wages. “Those who have done well, including me, should pay our fair share,” Obama said. “I reject the idea that asking a hedge fund manager to pay the same tax rate as a plumber or teacher is class warfare.” Obama called on Congress to approve a “balanced” approach to budget cuts, including tax hikes for the rich and corporations as well as savings from defence cuts and other spending cuts. The plan also includes modest changes to Medicare and Medicaid, the US social insurance programmes Republicans have targeted for larger overhauls. Obama said he would veto any bill that makes changes to Medicare without tax increases on the wealthy. “Either we ask the wealthiest Americans to pay their fair share in taxes, or we’re going to have to ask seniors to pay more for Medicare. We can’t afford to do both,” he said. The plan is the administration’s latest move in the long-running power struggle with Republican opposition over deficit reduction. While Democrats have called for tax increases to be part of any deficit reduction effort, Republicans have rejected the idea of any tax increases. Obama’s proposal has no chance of passing Republican Congress, but is aimed at influencing a cross-party “super-committee” that is currently working on a savings plan that Congress could approve by the end of the year. If the committee can not reach an agreement, draconian cuts could be imposed across government agencies. Obama’s plan would raise $1.5tn in taxes, primarily on the wealthy and big corporations. The proposal also includes $580bn in adjustments to Medicare and Medicaid – but the president has ruled out an increase in the Medicare eligibility age. The speech met with instant condemnation from senior Republicans. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said: “Veto threats, a massive tax hike, phantom savings, and punting on entitlement reform is not a recipe for economic or job growth – or even meaningful deficit reduction.” House Speaker John Boehner said: “This administration’s insistence on raising taxes on job creators, and its reluctance to take the steps necessary to strengthen our entitlement programs, are the reasons the president and I were not able to reach an agreement previously – and it is evident today that these barriers remain.” But Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner said the president was proposing “modest reforms” of the US tax code that would make the system “more fair” and help tackle the budget deficit. Geithner told reporters: “If you do it sensibly through tax reform you’ll strengthen investment centres, you’ll make growth in the US stronger, you’ll make people more confident in the future, more likely to invest here. “That’s something we should all be working toward.” Barack Obama Obama administration US taxation United States US economy Warren Buffett Republicans US politics Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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Will Arrogant Obama Quote (‘It’s Math’) Get Relayed Widely?

It will be interesting to see if a quote noted at the end of Jim Kuhnhenn's early Associated Press report ( saved here for future reference, fair use and discussion purposes) makes the cut in later revisions. I'll bet not, because it sends both the arrogance and ignorance meters well into the red. This post will look at the first and third paragraphs of the 11:20 a.m. version of AP dispatch, and then relay the quote (bolds are mine throughout): In a blunt rejoinder to congressional Republicans, President Barack Obama called for $1.5 trillion in new taxes Monday, part of a total 10-year deficit reduction package totaling more than $3 trillion. “We can't just cut our way out of this hole,” the president said. Geez, Barack — You, Nancy Pelosi, and Harry Reid didn't have any trouble spending your way into “this hole,” did you? Without bothering to correct the accounting trickery (discussed here for those who are interested), deficits in fiscal 2009 and 2010 amounted to $1.42 trillion and $1.29 trillion, respectively. With one month remaining, the fiscal 2011 deficit is on track to reach $1.3 trillion. Also “somebody” said in 2009 (HT Doug Powers at Michelle Malkin's place ) that “Normally, you don't raise taxes in a recession, which is why we haven't and why we have instead cut taxes.” Of course, Kuhnhenn has thus far “forgotten” to pass that nugget on to AP readers. Obama's recommendation to a joint congressional committee served as a sharp counterpoint to Republican lawmakers, who have insisted that tax increases should play no part in taming the nation's escalating national debt. The new taxes would predominantly hit wealthy Americans, ending their Bush-era tax cuts and limiting their deductions. Well, at least Kuhnhenn called them “new taxes.” But at some point (which should have been about five years ago), you would think that the press would recognize that “the Bush-era tax cuts” occurred in 2003, that we've been operating under essentially the same income-tax system for nine years (2003 through 2011), and that tax increases should simply be called, well, “tax increases.” But speaking of tax increases, Kuhnhenn “somehow” forgot — but in July, the Wall Street Journal didn't — that $438 billion in tax increases are already on the books thanks to Obamacare. If the law survives court review and repeal attempts, the economy's producers will face over $1.9 trillion in additional taxes over the next decade. If the President wants to increase the amount of money Uncle Sam takes in, all he needs to do is unleash the economy. Maximizing fossil-fuel production could bring in as much as $50 billion a year in royalties beginning a few years from now. Easing the regulatory burden and throwing the arbitrary authoritarianism in the trash could easily lead to at least much in additional annual income and other tax collections within a year, if not sooner. In any event, the problem isn't the intake, it's the outgo. If fiscal 2011 spending comes in at roughly $3.60 trillion as expected, that will represent a 32% increase over the $2.73 trillion spent in fiscal 2007. What in the world do we have to show for it? Okay, here's that final-paragraph quote: Responding to a complaint from Republicans about his proposed tax on the wealthy, Obama added: “This is not class warfare. It's math.” This statement will not be well received, which in my view explains why Kuhnhenn saved it for the end. Even if it survives in future AP dispatches, the guess here is that it probably won't be picked up at very many of the wire service's subscribing outlets, and you won't hear it much if at all in broadcast network news reports. We'll see. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Phone hacking: Milly Dowler’s family offered £2m-plus settlement

Talks with News of the World publisher understood to be ongoing over payout that would include sizeable donation to charity Milly Dowler’s family have been offered a multimillion-pound settlement by Rupert Murdoch’s News International, in an attempt to settle the phone-hacking case that led to closure of the News of the World and the resignation of the company’s chief executive, Rebekah Brooks. It is understood that News International has made a settlement offer estimated by sources at more than £2m, a figure that includes a donation to charity. But the publisher and media group has not reached agreement with the Dowler family, whose lawyers were thought to be seeking a settlement figure of closer to £3.5m. The seven-figure sums under negotiation are far larger than other phone-hacking settlements reached, reflecting the fact that the phone-hacking case affected a family who were victims of crime. Thirteen-year-old Milly Dowler went missing in March 2002 and was later found murdered. It emerged in July that Milly Dowler’s mobile phone had been hacked after her death. Voicemails were accessed on behalf of the News of the World, and messages left for her were deleted to make room for more recordings. This gave the family false hope that she was still alive, because messages were disappearing. On Monday afternoon there was growing speculation that a deal is close, although other sources familiar with the negotiations indicated that there are still enough matters unresolved to mean that an agreement in principle had not yet been reached behind the scenes. Sienna Miller accepted £100,000 from News International after the publisher accepted unconditional liability for her phone-hacking and other privacy and harassment claims in May. A month later Andy Gray accepted £20,000 in damages plus undisclosed costs. Other lawyers bringing phone-hacking cases are privately indicated that they would be advising many of those bringing actions to try and reach a settlement rather than take their cases to lengthy and expensive trials. A handful of cases have been taken forward as lead actions by Mr Justice Vos, to establish a benchmark for settlements in future lawsuits. Murdoch met with the Dowler family in July, shortly after the original story about hacking into her phone broke, making what the family’s lawyer, Mark Lewis, said was a “full and humble” apology . The News Corporation chairman and chief executive “held his head in his hands” and repeatedly told the family he was “very, very sorry”. •

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Looks like the new approach by the administration is a lot closer to what the rest of us have been calling for. We’ll know the details in President Obama’s speech today — in the meantime, HuffPo reports Obama will veto anything from the Super Committee that’s all Medicare cuts and no tax hikes – not exactly reassuring, so I’d need to see the details: President Obama on Monday will unveil a plan to tame the nation’s rocketing federal debt that will draw a sharp contrast with the Republican vision and amount more to an opening play in the fall’s debate over the economy than another attempt at finding common ground with the opposing party. The president will propose $1.5 trillion in new taxes as part of a plan to find at least $3 trillion in budget savings over a decade, according to a person familiar with the matter. Combined with his call earlier this month for $450 billion in new stimulus, the proposal represents a more populist approach to confronting the nation’s economic travails than the compromises he advocated this summer. Obama will propose new taxes on the wealthy and a special new tax for millionaires , according to White House officials. But he won’t call for any changes in Social Security, officials say, and may seek less-aggressive changes to Medicare and Medicaid than previously considered. In particular, people familiar with the matter say he is unlikely to call for an increase in the Medicare eligibility age from 65 to 67. Coming as a congressional super­committee goes to work to find budget savings this fall, Obama’s position will probably delight Democrats, who have fretted for months that he is doing too little to solve the nation’s jobs crisis while being too willing to embrace major changes to Medicare and Social Security. But his plan has little chance of passing and is already inflaming Republicans, who have vowed to oppose new taxes and have called for deep cuts in federal spending and entitlements. On Sunday, Republicans responded with vitriol to the proposal to create a special tax for millionaires. “Class warfare may make for really good politics, but it makes for rotten economics,” Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), chairman of the House Budget Committee, said on “Fox News Sunday.” “It adds further instability to our system, more uncertainty, and it punishes job creation.”

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Anders Behring Breivik held for further eight weeks

Norway’s self-confessed mass murderer to remain in solitary confinement for four of eight weeks while indictment is prepared The confessed mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik has been ordered to remain in custody for a further eight weeks during a closed court hearing, according to the judge The 32-year-old has confessed to setting off a bomb in Oslo and shooting dead 69 at an island youth camp outside the city , killing 77 people in total on 22 July. Oslo district court on Monday approved a police request to keep Breivik in custody on terror charges for another eight weeks – four of them in solitary confinement – as prosecutors prepare a formal indictment. The judge, Anne Margrethe Lund, said she stopped Breivik “on a few occasions” when he tried to make statements during the hearing, his third since being arrested following the murders on Utøya island and in Oslo. “He wanted to communicate something to the court. It wasn’t relevant for the decision that was to be made today and therefore he wasn’t allowed to say anything further,” Lund told reporters after the hearing. Breivik’s lawyer, Geir Lippestad, also told reporters that his client tried to address the court but Lippestad would not reveal the details, citing a gagging order. The ruling means that Breivik will remain in custody until 14 November, when a new detention hearing will be held. However, police can only hold him in isolation until 17 October because decisions on solitary confinement must be reviewed every four weeks. The district court initially ordered an open hearing, but a higher court overruled that decision after an appeal by police. Some of the survivors, more than 600 of them, were represented by lawyers at that hearing. Breivik has confessed to the attacks but denies criminal guilt. He claims to be in a state of war and believes the murders were necessary to save Norway and Europe from being overrun by Muslim immigrants. In a 1,500-page manifesto posted online before the killings he called for a revolution to purge Europe of Muslims and for politicians who have embraced multiculturalism to be punished. Lippestad said his client has not expressed any remorse about his actions. Anders Behring Breivik Global terrorism Norway Europe guardian.co.uk

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Anders Behring Breivik held for further eight weeks

Norway’s self-confessed mass murderer to remain in solitary confinement for four of eight weeks while indictment is prepared The confessed mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik has been ordered to remain in custody for a further eight weeks during a closed court hearing, according to the judge The 32-year-old has confessed to setting off a bomb in Oslo and shooting dead 69 at an island youth camp outside the city , killing 77 people in total on 22 July. Oslo district court on Monday approved a police request to keep Breivik in custody on terror charges for another eight weeks – four of them in solitary confinement – as prosecutors prepare a formal indictment. The judge, Anne Margrethe Lund, said she stopped Breivik “on a few occasions” when he tried to make statements during the hearing, his third since being arrested following the murders on Utøya island and in Oslo. “He wanted to communicate something to the court. It wasn’t relevant for the decision that was to be made today and therefore he wasn’t allowed to say anything further,” Lund told reporters after the hearing. Breivik’s lawyer, Geir Lippestad, also told reporters that his client tried to address the court but Lippestad would not reveal the details, citing a gagging order. The ruling means that Breivik will remain in custody until 14 November, when a new detention hearing will be held. However, police can only hold him in isolation until 17 October because decisions on solitary confinement must be reviewed every four weeks. The district court initially ordered an open hearing, but a higher court overruled that decision after an appeal by police. Some of the survivors, more than 600 of them, were represented by lawyers at that hearing. Breivik has confessed to the attacks but denies criminal guilt. He claims to be in a state of war and believes the murders were necessary to save Norway and Europe from being overrun by Muslim immigrants. In a 1,500-page manifesto posted online before the killings he called for a revolution to purge Europe of Muslims and for politicians who have embraced multiculturalism to be punished. Lippestad said his client has not expressed any remorse about his actions. Anders Behring Breivik Global terrorism Norway Europe guardian.co.uk

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Anders Behring Breivik held for further eight weeks

Norway’s self-confessed mass murderer to remain in solitary confinement for four of eight weeks while indictment is prepared The confessed mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik has been ordered to remain in custody for a further eight weeks during a closed court hearing, according to the judge The 32-year-old has confessed to setting off a bomb in Oslo and shooting dead 69 at an island youth camp outside the city , killing 77 people in total on 22 July. Oslo district court on Monday approved a police request to keep Breivik in custody on terror charges for another eight weeks – four of them in solitary confinement – as prosecutors prepare a formal indictment. The judge, Anne Margrethe Lund, said she stopped Breivik “on a few occasions” when he tried to make statements during the hearing, his third since being arrested following the murders on Utøya island and in Oslo. “He wanted to communicate something to the court. It wasn’t relevant for the decision that was to be made today and therefore he wasn’t allowed to say anything further,” Lund told reporters after the hearing. Breivik’s lawyer, Geir Lippestad, also told reporters that his client tried to address the court but Lippestad would not reveal the details, citing a gagging order. The ruling means that Breivik will remain in custody until 14 November, when a new detention hearing will be held. However, police can only hold him in isolation until 17 October because decisions on solitary confinement must be reviewed every four weeks. The district court initially ordered an open hearing, but a higher court overruled that decision after an appeal by police. Some of the survivors, more than 600 of them, were represented by lawyers at that hearing. Breivik has confessed to the attacks but denies criminal guilt. He claims to be in a state of war and believes the murders were necessary to save Norway and Europe from being overrun by Muslim immigrants. In a 1,500-page manifesto posted online before the killings he called for a revolution to purge Europe of Muslims and for politicians who have embraced multiculturalism to be punished. Lippestad said his client has not expressed any remorse about his actions. Anders Behring Breivik Global terrorism Norway Europe guardian.co.uk

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Republicans Call for Gutting Social Security, Adding Trillions to Debt

enlarge Credit: Center on Budget and Policy Priorities Over the past few weeks, the political chattering classes have been abuzz over 2012 GOP frontrunner Rick Perry’s claim that Social Security is a “Ponzi scheme.” ( It isn’t .) But largely overlooked in the parsing and the polls is the ocean of red ink the various Republican Social Security privatization schemes would inevitably produce. More than a decade after George W. Bush first proposed them, there’s no escaping the fact that private accounts would divert trillions of dollars from Social Security and thus build a new mountain of federal debt. It is important to note for starters that Social Security is not in crisis, despite Perry’s claims that the system is ” a monstrous lie ” and ” bankrupt .” With a $2.5 trillion surplus, as the New York Times noted, “Government projections have Social Security exhausting its reserves by 2037, absent any changes, but show that the payroll tax revenues coming in would cover more than three-quarters of benefits to recipients then.” With simple changes to benefits, eligibility and most importantly, funding, Social Security can easily be made sound for generations to come. Citizens for Tax Justice and the New York Times each estimated that extending the payroll tax to income over $250,000 a year (as candidate Obama and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders proposed) would deliver about $50 billion annually in new revenue for the Treasury. And as the Times suggested in November , the move is long overdue: When the payroll tax – which finances Social Security and Medicare – was created, it covered 90 percent of all income. Today, with a ceiling at $106,800, it covers closer to 80 percent. Nevertheless, as the AP reported Saturday, when it comes to Americans’ retirement security, Republican presidential candidates are returning to a bad idea whose time never came. Most of the top Republicans running for president are embracing plans to partially privatize Social Security, reviving a contentious issue that fizzled under President George W. Bush after Democrats relentlessly attacked it… Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has a version. Reps. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota and Ron Paul of Texas have said younger workers should be allowed to invest in alternative plans. Texas Gov. Rick Perry has raised the idea of letting whole groups, such as state and local government workers, opt out of Social Security. These proposals are popular among conservatives who believe workers could get a better return from investing in publicly traded securities. But most in the Republican race have been careful to say they would fight to preserve traditional Social Security for current retirees and those approaching retirement. Younger workers, they say, should have more options. Options, that is, to massively increase the U.S national debt while putting their retirement investments – and billions in management fees – in the hands of Wall Street firms. As Matthew Yglesias described one aspect of the problem for the would-be Republican reformers: What privatizers want to say is that current retirees will keep getting benefits and future retirees will be okay despite our lack of benefits because we’ll have private accounts. But current retirees can’t get benefits if my money is in a private account. And my account can’t be funded if I’m paying benefits for current retirees. As it turns out, Vice President Al Gore made the same point during his presidential debates against then Governor George W. Bush. “Because the trillion dollars that has been promised to young people has also been promised to older people,” Gore explained, adding, “And you cannot keep both promises.” And by diverting money to private accounts from the Social Security trust-fund, Republicans also can’t keep their born-again promises to lower the national debt . In 2005, James Horney and Richard Kogan of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities totaled up the fiscal hemorrhaging that would ensue from the privatization plans of President Bush and other Republicans: The President’s plan would create $17.7 trillion in additional debt by 2050. This additional debt would be equal to 19.3 percent of the Gross Domestic Product in 2050. Despite the public’s overwhelming rejection of his plan in 2005, George W. Bush later saw it as a major domestic policy achievement. “Bush,” right-wing water carrier Fred Barnes noted, “said his effort showed it’s politically safe to campaign on changing Social Security and then actually seek to change it.” Despite the collapse of Wall Street, 2008 Republican nominee John McCain apparently felt the same way. And ThinkProgress reported at the time, studies estimated that private accounts would lose money a third of the time. That fall, the Center for American Progress calculated that “that if a worker had retired on October 1, 2008 after 35 years of contributions to private retirement accounts, that retiree would have lost nearly $30,000 in retirement funds because of the downturn in the stock market over the last two years.” And while retirees would face the risks inherent in the market, according to a 1997 analysis their Wall Street money managers would reap an estimated “$240 billion in fees during the first 12 years of a privatization scheme- this number is undoubtedly much higher now.” And all the while, the Social Security Trust Fund which currently helps offset the yawning federal budget deficits would be depleted by trillions over the next several decades. All of which is why the 2012 Republican presidential field determined to undo the Social Security safety net that kept 14 million American seniors out of poverty last year is offering variations on a theme. Pizza mogul Herman Cain had touted the ” Chilean model ,” despite that that program’s rising subsidies required to keep half of the country’s retiring workers out of poverty. For his part, Rick Perry is touting the retirement plan of Galveston, Texas , which has similarly failed to provide lower income employees with the baseline of retirement benefits provided by Social Security. And Mitt Romney , despite his past fondness for private accounts , now claims he does not want to divert money from the current system. Given the personal risk and national red ink that Republican Social Security privatization schemes necessarily entail, selling the GOP’s scary math to a skeptical public is a challenge to say the least. That’s why Congressional Republicans led by then Senator Rick Santorum came up with some handy talking points in 2005 to close the sale. “Talk about how much more money they’d have for retirement if they themselves had been investing in a personal account all these years,” the GOP privatization sales kit counseled Republican officeholders, remembering all the while that: “Your audience doesn’t know how trillions and billions differ. They know these numbers are large, but not how large nor how many billions make a trillion. Boil numbers down to ‘your family’s share.’ Also avoid percentages; your audience will try to calculate them in their head–no easy task while listening to a speech–and many will do it incorrectly.” Put another way, Republicans hoping to privatize Social Security will rely on that time-tested GOP strategy: You can fool some of the people all of the time, and that’s our target market. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

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Open Thread: GOP Presidential Candidates Descend on Florida for Thursday’s Debate

This week, Republican presidential candidates are headed to Florida for a number of high-profile events, including CPAC, a straw poll, and perhaps most importantly, another debate, this time hosted by Fox News and Google at Florida CPAC. The spotlight is again expected to be on Gov. Rick Perry, despite his pummeling by other candidates last week. Do you think he can recover from last week's criticism for his stances on immigration, health care, and Social Security, especially in a state with such large retirement communities? Let us know your thoughts in the comments. Following the debate on Thursday, conservatives will meet up for CPAC in Orlando, followed by a Republican straw poll on Saturday. According to the Washington Examiner : Many of the 3,500 straw poll voters haven't made up their minds about the candidates yet, said Florida GOP spokesman Brian Hughes, so they will be watching the debate performances closely. “These are people who are coming to see which campaign has the right message and the right organization to win,” he said. At the debate, it can be expected that former Gov. Mitt Romney will strengthen his Social Security/”Ponzi scheme” attacks on Perry. Bachmann has continued the fight against mandating Gardasil vaccines over the past week, and many other candidates could again raise the issue of Perry allowing illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition. Who do you expect will do well in Florida this week?

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