Congress has returned from recess and "We the People" stand in fear of their potential actions to further in debt and burden America before the people are able to impose relief by sending new members to Congress in January 2011 based on the November 2010 elections.
The Senate reconvene at today and will take up and vote on the nomination of Jane Stranch to be a judge on the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals. Tomorrow, the Senate is expected to hold a series of cloture votes on Democrats’ small business lending bill, H.R. 5297. The votes are likely to be on an amendment to the bill from Sen. Mike Johanns (R-NE) which would repeal the onerous 1099 reporting requirements from the health care law, an amendment from Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL) that only partially relaxes those requirements for a few businesses, and cloture on the underlying substitute amendment for the bill.
With the return of Congress from its August recess, a critical issue  facing members are the massive tax increases scheduled for next January if  Congress does not act to prevent them. Republicans want to prevent those tax  increases from going into effect and simultaneously provide employers with some  level of certainty so they have a better environment in which to create  jobs.
In an op-ed  for AOL News last week, Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell wrote, “In an interview last year, President Barack Obama said that ‘the  last thing you want to do is to raise taxes in the middle of a recession’  because it would ‘put businesses in a further hole.’ You don't hear this often,  but I completely agree with the president. Raising taxes in the middle of a  recession, particularly on job creators, is a horrible idea. And given those  concerns, one immediate way to jump-start the economy would be a firm  declaration from the president at his press conference Friday that no Americans,  no small businesses will see a tax hike. Period.”
Unfortunately, no such pledge came from the President last  Friday. However, a growing chorus of Democrats in Congress seems to be  echoing Obama’s point from a year ago that a recession is the last time to  raise taxes. Speaking to a local Chamber of Commerce today, Sen.  Joe Lieberman (ID-CT) said, “I don't think it makes sense to raise any  federal taxes during the uncertain economy we are struggling through. The more  money we leave in private hands, the quicker our economic recovery will be. And  that means I will do everything I can to make sure Congress extends the  so-called Bush tax cuts for another year and takes action to prevent the estate  tax from rising back to where it was.”
Other  Democrats have made similar statements. Sen. Ben  Nelson (D-NE) said in a statement last week, “I support extending all of the  expiring tax cuts until Nebraska’s and the nation’s economy is in better shape,  and perhaps longer, because raising taxes in a weak economy could impair  recovery.” Sen.  Evan Bayh (D-IN) said, “The economy is very weak right now. Raising taxes  will lower consumer demand at a time when we want people putting more money into  the economy.”
And Politico  reports today, “Red-district Democrats are pressuring Speaker Nancy Pelosi to  extend Bush-era income tax rates for all brackets, revealing a high-stakes rift  between the party's vulnerable moderates and its safe liberals as the issue  increasingly dominates the national debate. . . . ‘We believe in times of  economic recovery it makes good sense to maintain things as they are in the  short term, to provide families and businesses the certainty required to plan  and make sound budget decisions,’ the House members write in a letter that was  being circulated for signatures on Friday and is expected to be delivered today  or Tuesday.”
It’s certainly a positive sign that some Democrats are  signaling they understand that it would be a terrible idea to raise taxes on  Americans in the midst of a painful recession. But tax hikes are problematic for  more than the obvious reasons. As The  Wall Street Journal writes today, “The uncertainty over looming tax  increases is starting to affect both investing and corporate decision-making.  The economy remains the biggest factor in many investors' and businesses'  decisions. But worries over whether Congress will extend some of the expiring  Bush-era tax breaks are emerging as another important one. . . . Small-business  owners say unease about tax policy, along with the economy, has led them to hold  off on hiring and investment.”
If Democrats really want to help the economy, they should  join with Republicans to provide some certainty to business owners and ordinary  taxpayers and make sure Americans aren’t faced with the largest tax increase in  history in January. A growing number of Democrats seem to have reached this  conclusion, but the question remains as to whether leaders of our present economic disaster, House  Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, and President Obama, will finally be open to this idea.
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Today in Washington, D.C. - Sept 13, 2010 - Congress Back In Session - Will They Raise Taxes During The Recession?
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