Login Tuesday Feb 07, 2012
With Democrats like Andrew Cuomo, who needs Republicans?
Cuomo, the Democratic candidate for governor, is echoing Republican
calls for caps on state spending and taxes. Reinforcing the
Republicans, he explicitly rejects higher taxes on the rich who have
enjoyed three decades of repeated tax cuts and, for the last two years,
the biggest bailout and transfer of wealth in world history. Cuomo's
big bankers' agenda means deep cuts for public jobs, schools, colleges,
parks, health care, and any prospect for economic recovery and new
private sector jobs.
My Green campaign for governor offers an alternative to this dismal
future, a Green New Deal. We will make the rich pay their fair share of
taxes again to finance public services and investment to revive the
economy. That begins with guaranteeing living-wage jobs, fully funding
public schools and colleges, and providing quality health care for all
New Yorkers through an efficient single payer system. It includes a
state-owned bank to target investments into a sustainable green
economic recovery based on renewable energy, mass transit, clean
manufacturing, and organic agriculture.
Andy Cuomo's conservative fiscal policies, along with President Obama's
freeze on all federal discretionary spending except military, show that
the Democratic leadership has purged the last vestiges of their New
Deal legacy. They are taking us back to the depression economics of
Herbert Hoover, the recipe for a vicious circle of debt and depression.
With consumers and businesses over-indebted and unable to increase
consumption and investment, only government spending can restart the
economy. Spending and tax caps will only increase the deficits and
debts. Without public spending, economic stagnation will deepen, tax
revenues will decline, public spending will be cut again to balance the
budget, thus deepening the economic decline further.
This is the economic agenda of the big Wall Street bankers. They would
rather balance the budget on the backs of public sector workers and the
general public that uses the public services and infrastructure than
pay their fair and proper share of taxes. Instead of taxing Wall Street
upfront to pay for public spending, their paid-for politicians get
government to borrow from them and pay interest for it.
This is politics, not economics; money-drenched politicians, not
impersonal market forces. The state's fiscal crisis is contrived by the
politicians on behalf of the Wall Street interests that finance both of
the old parties.
They had the money last year and gave it back! The state collected $16
billion in the Stock Transfer Tax and gave it back to Wall Street. That
would have turned the $9 billion deficit into a $7 billion surplus.
The Stock Transfer Tax was instituted in 1905, but the state has been
rebating it since 1981 as part of a three decades long failed policy of
tax cuts for the rich. Instead of motivating investment in the real
economy of production as advertised, this policy has only transferred
wealth to the rich who speculate short term in financial paper
assets--which just rearranges claims to income from existing
production-instead of investing long term in new productive assets.
The Green Party wants to keep the Stock Transfer Tax. That's about $16 billion.
We want to restore the progressive income tax structure New York had in
the 1970s. With that structure today, we could cut the income taxes of
95% of New Yorkers and still raise $8 billion more in state revenues.
We want a 50% Bankers Bonus Tax on the over $20 billion in 2009 cash
bonuses Wall Street handed out after the taxpayers bailed them out.
That would raise another $10 billion.
Put these three progressive tax reforms together and the state would
have a surplus of $25 billion instead of a deficit of $9 billion. With
that $25 billion the Greens would:
l Put the unemployed to work in public works and services.
l Fully fund our public schools.
l Make community colleges, CUNY, and SUNY tuition free.
l Establish a state-owned bank to invest in a sustainable green economic recovery.
We call that the Green New Deal for New York.
The Greens will pick up the New Deal torch the Democrats have dropped.
We will reclaim the New Deal's goals of Full Employment and Universal
Health Care that the Democratic leadership has abandoned. And we will
"green" our New Deal with policies to promote ecological sustainability
and economic democracy.
We can have a state government in New York that continues to be run for
the big corporate special interests. Or we can have a state government
run for average New Yorkers, a Green New Deal.
That is the basic choice Green Party offers the voters in this election.
Howie Hawkins of Syracuse is the Green Party candidate for Governor of New York.
September 22nd, 2010 at 12:38 PM Total delusion!