Bernie Sanders reveals 'major plans' to be funded by new taxes, massive lawsuits, military cuts
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Bernie Sanders unexpectedly released a fact-sheet Monday
night explaining that he'd pay for his sweeping new government
programs through new taxes and massive lawsuits against the fossil fuel
industry, as well as by slashing spending on the military, among other
methods. The move sought to head off complaints from Republicans
and some rival Democrats that his plans were economically unrealistic,
especially after a head-turning CBS News interview
in which the frustrated Vermont senator said he couldn't "rattle off to
you every nickle and every dime" about his proposed expenditures. He released his plan on his website just minutes after promising to do so during a CNN town hall. However,
the fact-sheet highlighted for the first time that many of Sanders'
expected cost-saving measures relied on conjecture and best-case
scenarios. For example, Sanders' document asserts that a "modest tax on Wall Street speculation
... will raise an estimated $2.4 trillion over ten years" and, in one
fell swoop, make all "public colleges, universities and trade schools
tuition-free ... and cancel all student debt over the next decade." The
proposal specifically would place a "0.5 percent tax on stock trades –
50 cents on every $100 of stock – a 0.1 percent fee on bond trades, and a
0.005 percent fee on derivative trades." The National Review has likened
a tax on so-called "Wall Street speculation" to a de facto tax on
savings, saying the Sanders plan "would mean paying $25 to the federal
government every time you traded $5,000 worth of stock — or five times
what you’d pay the typical online brokerage in fees. ... Over the long
term, that imposes serious costs on actively traded funds such as the
ones containing many Americans’ retirement funds." Meanwhile,
housing for everyone would cost $2.5 trillion over ten years, and would
be paid entirely by a "wealth tax on the top one-tenth of one percent,"
raising a total of $4.35 trillion, according to Sanders' fact-sheet.
Similarly, "universal childcare and pre-school to every family in
America" would be provided with a wealth tax on the "top 0.1 percent,"
again raising more than $4 trillion. Sanders' plan did not discuss
the possible stock market ramificiations of a major seizure of some of
this wealth, much of which is held in markets and other investments. The
plan also did not discuss how the government would be able to reliably
obtain the money, given that many investments could simply be liquidated
or transferred elsewhere before his administration took office. BLOOMBERG STAGING MASSIVE AD, SURROGATE BLITZ AGAINST SANDERS Instead,
Sanders' proposal said only that it would eventually establish
a "national wealth registry and significant additional third party
reporting requirements," buff up IRS funding and, and "include
enhancements to the international tax enforcement." The plan would
require the IRS "to perform an audit of 30 percent of wealth tax returns
for those in the 1 percent bracket and a 100 percent audit rate for all
billionaires," and would include a "40 percent exit tax on the net
value of all assets under $1 billion and 60 percent over $1 billion for
all wealthy individual seeking to expatriate to avoid the tax." A
new "income inequality tax on large corporations that pay CEOs at least
50 times more than average workers" would take care of $81 billion in
past-due medical debt, Sanders further claimed. Sanders'
projections also stated without providing details that his Green New
Deal plan would create "20 million new jobs," thus ensuring $2.3
trillion in "new income tax revenue." Additionally, Sanders cited "economists"
as he promised that by "averting climate catastrophe we will save: $2.9
trillion over 10 years, $21 trillion over 30 years and $70.4 trillion
over 80 years." FACT CHECK: WERE SANDERS' REMARKS ON CUBAN LITERACY PROGRAMS OFF-BASE? No
information was provided to validate that assertion, although the Trump
administration's National Climate Assessment found that it was possible
climate change could reduce
the size of the U.S. economy by 10 percent by the end of the century,
assuming no substantial changes in technology (including carbon-reducing
innovations) or policy occur in the meantime. Sanders claimed to
be able to raise "$3.085 trillion by making the fossil fuel industry pay
for their pollution, through litigation, fees, and taxes, and
eliminating federal fossil fuel subsidies." He has repeatedly suggested
on the campaign trail that he would direct the Justice Department to
pursue the fossil fuel industry, although it was unclear how successful
that legal strategy would be. "If we do not act, the U.S. will
lose $34.5 trillion by the end of the century in economic productivity,"
Sanders alleged -- putting the consequences of climate change in
stark economic terms. On health care, Sanders has previously vowed to provide benefits, including health care,
even to illegal immigrants. It's unclear how many people that
unprecedented proposal would cover, especially given that such a plan
would likely lead to a rise in immigration to the United States and that
the number of illegal immigrants presently in the country is unknown.
The issue is not mentioned at all in Sanders' fact-sheet. BLOOMBERG OFFICES ALLEGEDLY VANDALIZED WITH ANTI-RICH GRAFFITI; ARE WE SURE WHO IS RESPONSIBLE? Instead, although some nonpartisan estimates
have put the cost of Sanders' "Medicare-for-all" proposal at over $32
trillion, Sanders' fact-sheet simply doubled down on a "proposed a menu
of financing options that would more than pay" for the program. Among
the available options: "creating a 4 percent income-based premium paid
by employees, exempting the first $29,000 in income for a family of
four," as well as imposing a 7.5 percent "income-based premium paid by
employers, exempting the first $1 million in payroll to protect small
businesses."
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders I-Vt. speaks
at a campaign event in El Paso, Texas, Saturday, Feb. 22, 2020. Sanders
urged his supporters to vote in the primary, which is already underway.
Democratic primary voting in Texas ends March 3, along with other
states who, all together, will decide one third of the delegates in the
contest. (AP Photo/Cedar Attanasio)
Other savings would come from eliminating "health tax
expenditures, which would no longer be needed under Medicare for All,"
and "raising the top marginal income tax rate to 52% on income over $10
million." Reducing defense spending by "$1.215 trillion" would be
achievable by "scaling back military operations on protecting the global
oil supply," Sanders' fact-sheet continued. Defense spending is slated
to total $934 billion from Oct. 1, 2020 to Sept. 30, 2021. As the numbers were released, Sanders doubled down on his comments praising Cuban dictator Fidel Castro's "literacy program," saying it was a positive outcome from the violent Cuban Revolution that literacy rates quickly rose. The
pro-Castro remarks had drawn scrutiny even from Democratic lawmakers,
especially in Florida, which has a large Cuban-American population. "As
the first South American immigrant member of Congress who proudly
represents thousands of Cuban Americans, I find Senator Bernie Sanders’
comments on Castro’s Cuba absolutely unacceptable," wrote Florida
Democratic Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell.
"The Castro regime murdered and jailed dissidents, and caused
unspeakable harm to too many South Florida families. To this day, it
remains an authoritarian regime that oppresses its people, subverts the
free press, and stifles a free society." Other Democrats pointed out that Cuba's literacy was on the rise pre-Castro, and asserted that the literacy program amounted to an indoctrination effort. Even so, on Monday, Sanders refused to apologize for his remarks at the CNN town hall, when pressed by moderator Chris Cuomo. "Truth
is truth," Sanders said to applause. "If you want to disagree with me,
if somebody wants to say -- and by the way, all of those congresspeople
that you mention, just so happen to be supporting other candidates --
accidentally no doubt, coincidentally. But, you know, the truth is the
truth. And that's what happened in the first years of the Castro
regime." Also at the town hall, after arguing that people should not be judged solely by their skin color, Sanders promised that his vice president "definitively" would not be an "old white guy."
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