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 Message Boards » » The circus is back in town: NCGA resumes 1/30 Page [1]  
eyewall41
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The NCGA briefly met today to get things in order for 1/30, when the new circus begins. What will these nutjobs pass this time now that the state is fully under the grips of the GOP? It should be interesting and it should make for some great material for Colbert and Stewart as the slide towards becoming another Mississippi resumes.

1/9/2013 2:40:37 PM

wlb420
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atleast we'll get a break from using schools/education as an excuse for everything.

1/9/2013 3:03:44 PM

disco_stu
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What else is left for them to fuck up? They've essentially had complete control the past 2 years. The districts are gerrymandered to fuck. Gay marriage is double-plus bad. Climate change is officially denied.

I guess voter id laws, killing early voting is still up for bid. Maybe some bs "Academic Freedom Act" to try to get creationism back in the school?

1/9/2013 3:59:09 PM

dtownral
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Voter ID, reduce early voting time, reduce voting sites, make voter registration more difficult, etc...

1/9/2013 4:20:48 PM

Patman
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One would hope they might lay off the electioneering, since there are no major elections in the near future. One thing is for sure, they can't blame the democrats any more. They own the results--win, lose, or draw.

The thing that will be interesting is the battles now will be between republicans, much like they used to be between democrats. I doubt they will be a united force for long. I also doubt it will be Kumbayah between the legislature and McCrory. I'm curious to see if McCrory will offer any meaningful resistance to the anti-business social policies of the GOP. I can't help but believe some of the crap last year only happened because they knew it would never become law. They were just showing off for the far-right.

[Edited on January 9, 2013 at 8:22 PM. Reason : ?]

1/9/2013 8:19:33 PM

eyewall41
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^ I think the relationship between the NCGA and McCrony will be quite cozy given the Art Pope appointment. Perhaps one of the worst things is we are going to have fracking permits going out as soon as 2014.

1/9/2013 8:55:00 PM

mbguess
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Expect Voter ID, limited Early Voting hours, fracking, charter schools, possible offshore drilling, handouts to duke energy, and a gutting of regulatory agencies. AKA The Art Pope plan

1/10/2013 10:42:01 PM

HockeyRoman
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So the Republican plan is to eliminate income taxes and shift the burden of paying for government down the economic food chain. And what they can't raise through regressive taxation, they will just use as an excuse to cut such as higher education, environmental protections/regulations, corporate oversight. Well played, Republicans...

1/16/2013 5:09:12 PM

y0willy0
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link?

1/16/2013 5:37:51 PM

HockeyRoman
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I thought you were on Elba...

Hold on, I heard it either on Rush Radio while listening to Limbaugh or on WBT. Let me see what I can conjure.

Call it biased or whatever the fuck you want, but this is what I found in a pinch, and I would love to see you or anyone else point out where it's wrong.

Art Pope and his allies sharpen their knives on the state budget
Quote :
"There's a pause in the action in Raleigh as Gov. Pat McCrory appoints his staff and the newly organized General Assembly breaks until the end of the month. But it's only a pause.

There's an eagerness to get things done. And with the Republican governorship and overwhelming GOP majorities in the state House and Senate, little lies in the way. Change will happen. The only questions are how much and in what form. The answers come soon since the first task is the state budget.

Among the main reasons the Legislature held a one-day session and promptly adjourned is so that its large class of newcomers—more than half are in their first or second terms—can get up to speed on state finances and expenditures before lawmakers reconvene Jan. 30. Expect sweeping changes on both sides of the balance sheet.

Revenues

During election season it was hard to find an interview with any candidate that didn't mention the urgent need to "reform" the state tax code. At least a half dozens studies from the past two decades—gathering dust in the legislative library—back that up. With tax code changes near the top of the governor's list of promises, this is the year.

It was no coincidence that during the first week of the McCrory administration Arthur Laffer, famous for developing supply-side economics—aka the trickle-down theory—was making the rounds in Raleigh. Laffer gave a talk sponsored by the John Locke Foundation, an organization founded by Art Pope, the governor's new state deputy budget director. Laffer was selling a plan put together by his consulting firm and the Civitas Institute—a Pope Foundation-funded think tank—to eliminate the state corporate and income taxes and replace them with a sales tax hike.

The report, entitled "More Jobs. Bigger Paychecks," came out in mid-December. Part of the sales pitch for the concept is neatly summed up in a headline from the executive summary, "Progressive Income Taxes More Harmful to Growth."

Whether McCrory will buy into the plan this year is unclear. So far, the governor has offered no specifics on his budget. (Neither Pope nor the governor's press office responded to requests for information for this column.) But it should be noted that while McCrory talked about "cutting" income taxes and "reducing" corporate rates during the campaign, he chose a different verb last weekend during his inaugural address, saying "Government must work with business as partners—not against them as adversaries—to identify and eliminate burdensome taxes, rules and regulations that stifle economic growth."

The same day, Reuters published a story on the move toward higher sales taxes that quoted state Sen. Bob Rucho, R-Mecklenburg, saying he and other like-minded legislators did indeed have a plan similar to the one outlined in the Civitas/ Laffer study.

"We have no choice but to make change," Rucho, who co-chairs the Senate Finance Committee, told Reuters.

Alexandra Sirota, director of the North Carolina Budget & Tax Center, says it shouldn't be a surprise that the state might make such a major change. Several Republican-led states, most recently Louisiana, have made the move.

"It's a tax proposal that's not modernizing in any sense of the word," she said. "It's going to create an upside-down tax system that asks the middle class to pay more."

Sirota says it would be extremely difficult for the state to make the switch. Most states that have eliminated income and corporate taxes have other revenues sources, such as oil and mineral royalties.

In North Carolina, the pot of gold at the end of the trickle-down rainbow comes mainly from expanding sales taxes to include services and a statewide real estate transfer tax—two changes that would require spending a lot of political capital to pass.

Last week, the N.C. Association of Realtors, one of the most powerful business interests in the state, fired off a warning to its members saying it would fight the proposed fee. The group noted that in 2007 referenda on transfer fees were defeated in all 24 counties that proposed them.

"I doubt they can move that kind of proposal forward even if the sales tax could pay for it," Sirota says.

Expenditures

Whether there's a sweeping rewrite of the tax code this year or not, the GOP majority's effort to restructure state government continues, this time with Pope and McCrory aboard.

Here again, much of what happens will be couched as "reform."

We saw an initial glimpse of state mental health system reforms in a recent report to the new Legislature from a Health and Human Services subcommittee. After years of moving more patients into community-based care, the plan calls for construction of a new state mental hospital. If a new hospital alleviates the burden on community programs, it would be welcome. If it's in lieu of additional aid, then it's a turnaround in policy.

And it was clear last Wednesday during Thom Tillis' speech after being unanimously re-elected Speaker of the House that when he talks about regulatory reform he's talking about further cuts to the already heavily depleted Department of Environment and Natural Resources.

"Fewer regulations means fewer regulators," he told the House, drawing thunderous applause.


Because of his role as one of the main organizers and financial backers of the Republicans' rise to dominance in elective office, Pope's role in drafting the budget will draw a lot of scrutiny. Since the budget process starts with a proposal from the governor, his stamp will be on the first draft.

His critics have rightfully painted him as a wealthy puppet master who has used his millions to manipulate the political system. But Pope is no outsider.

He knows the system from his years as a legislator—from 1989 to 1992 and again from 1999 to 2002—and guiding an array of think tanks afterward. He knows the budget codes, the intricacies of the various state trust funds and the dedicated revenue streams that keep certain programs afloat.

He issued his first memo as deputy budget director on the Monday after McCrory was sworn in. It included a not-so-subtle reminder to state agencies that by law they must "furnish the Director, in the form and at the time requested by the Director, any information desired by the Director in relation to their respective activities or fiscal affairs."

Pope's ready. Is North Carolina?"

http://www.indyweek.com/indyweek/art-pope-and-his-allies-sharpen-their-knives-on-the-state-budget/Content?oid=3244692



[Edited on January 16, 2013 at 5:58 PM. Reason : So...yeah...]

1/16/2013 5:44:37 PM

IMStoned420
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http://www.stupidpoliciesrepublicanslove.net

1/16/2013 5:44:40 PM

y0willy0
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Got it.

All exaggeration in TSB from now on confined to this thread.

Thanks for the heads up.

1/16/2013 5:51:08 PM

HockeyRoman
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Here's another, yet more condensed, link..

http://abclocal.go.com/wtvd/story?section=news/politics&id=8956326

1/16/2013 6:06:59 PM

 Message Boards » The Soap Box » The circus is back in town: NCGA resumes 1/30 Page [1]  
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