You are browsing the archive for 2012 election.

The Constitution Changed Without a Vote – The Social Security Act of 1935

10:26 pm in 2012 election, 2012 elections, American Culture, article i of the constitution, article v of the constitution, balanced budget amendment, bread lines, Congress, congressional power, constitution amendment, constitutional compliance, domestic tranquility, enumerated powers, franklin d roosevelt, great depression, Legislation, major stumbling block, power of congress, president roosevelt, social insurance program, social security act, social security act of 1935, supreme court, tenth amendment, united states constitution by TPT Admin

Posted by

Written by David F. Delorey, Jr.

Social Security Act Killed the ConstitutionIn a mere four pages, ratified in 1788, the Constitution of the United Sates of America became a body of fundamental law which guarantees the natural God given rights of the people to establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for a common defense, promote the general welfare and secure the blessings of liberty.

One hundred and forty one years later, the Great Depression began on Oct.  29, 1929 when the stock market crashed.  Suddenly, millions of people were out of work, bread lines formed to feed families, and the elderly could not support themselves.  A potential solution, like the one adopted in Germany in 1889, was a “social insurance” program run by the federal government which stressed the government’s responsibility to provide for citizens’ economic security.  In 1932, Franklin D.  Roosevelt was elected and he put forth such a plan where workers contributed to their future economic security through taxes paid while they worked and then paid out when they retired or became disabled.

From the outset, Roosevelt’s plan had a major stumbling block – – a plain reading of the Constitution finds absent the power of Congress to implement and run a federal social insurance program.  But, such legal limitation did not deter Congress, or the President, or the Supreme Court to assume powers not found in the United States Constitution.  The day that the Constitution was changed without a vote of the people came on August 14, 1935, when President Roosevelt signed the 33 page Social Security Act of 1935 into law.

This legislation indeed wove a new de facto constitutional thread into the United States constitutional fabric when the Congress and the President bypassed the Constitution Amendment process in Article V of the Constitution and ignored the limits of Congressional power stated in the “Enumerated Powers” in Article I of the Constitution.  Implicit with the avoidance of the required constitutional compliance process was that the several sovereign states were denied their right to deliberate, debate and ratify the law.  As a result, Congress and the President, on their own, raised everyone’s taxes and created a new federal government run insurance program bearing upon all the states.

Many have claimed over the years that the Social Security Act is unconstitutional which is the Constitutional right of the people to do so.  There is plenty of evidence to support the claim.  However, even if they are right and it is, the program is so deeply ingrained in the workings of Republic that such may be impossible to reasonably remove or replace it.  This constitutional precedent is now manifest as one of the largest financial burdens on the American taxpayer.  Along with the subsequently enacted federal social entitlement programs of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965, these programs now collectively pose a significant financial threat to the very existence of the Republic as the question of irresponsible levels of deficit spending by the Congress, potentially causing a bankruptcy of the government, becomes part of the political narrative today.

This evolving journey into the consequences of the Social Security Act began with its implementation in 1937 and its administration by the Congress.  The program started modestly with 60% of all wage earners, largely older Americans, being taxed about 2%.  According to the act, all tax revenue collected were to be deposited in a trust fund.  The fund, known as the Social Security Trust Fund, is technically comprised of two component funds in the original Social Security Act of 1935: Section 201, the Old-Age Survivors Insurance program; and Section 904, the Disability Insurance Trust Funds.

The Republic’s Social Security Act unsustainable financial dilemma came as a result of Congress converting what started as a self-funded program into an enormous de facto pay-as-you-go program by appropriating all “surplus” tax revenues [monies collected which exceed what was needed to pay benefits] to fund the annual federal budget.  With this process, Congress ignored its fundamental fiduciary responsibility to retain these assets in the Treasury to pay future benefits, and clearly ignored the word “trust” in the “Social Security Trust Fund.” Today, the Social Security Trust Fund contains only promises that the federal government will repay the fund.

This deficit spending process was facilitated by the specific wording in sections 201 and 904 of the original 33 page Social Security Act of 1935.  Both sections state that all monies collected may only be invested “in interest-bearing obligations of the United States or in obligations guaranteed as to both principal and interest by the United States.” Congress was left to determine the nature of these “obligations”, which presumably could have included such tangible assets as gold, silver and the like.  Instead, Congress elected the option of “borrowing” the “surplus” taxes collected from the Social Security Trust Fund and spending the proceeds on other things.  From an accounting perspective, Congress created nothing more than a “Ponzi Scheme” because there is no guarantee that future tax payers can sustain the level of payments to current beneficiaries forever.  Such a system will eventually collapse, and could result in putting the federal government in default of its “obligations.”

By 1995, 95% of the American workforce, not subject to Congressional exclusions, were covered by the Social Security Act.  While many exemptions have been eliminated through 1990, six million government workers in the ten states of: Alaska, California, Colorado, Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, Ohio and Texas are still exempt from the act and it’s taxation requirements.

By 2011, more than 56 million people were covered by the Social Security Act spending $731 billion or 20% of the federal budget.  The Social Security Trust Fund had about $2.6 trillion in assets on the books.  The Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) payroll tax rate was 6.2%, paid each by the employee and employer, for a total of 12.4%, for the first $106,800.00 of income.  There were no “surplus” revenues because payouts to beneficiaries exceeded the tax payments deposited in the Social Security Trust Fund.  Federal spending that year was $3.46 trillion and the Treasury posted a $1.3 trillion federal deficit.

Today, the Social Security Act is now the largest government social insurance program in the world measured in dollars paid.

Predictions are that the Disability Insurance Trust Fund [Section 904 of the Social Security Act] will exhaust in 2016.  After 2020, the United States Treasury will need to fund the entire program by redeeming the unfunded “obligations” Congress created to pay program beneficiaries.  From an accounting perspective, the Treasury will continue to use this process until the projected absolute exhaustion of the entire Social Security Trust Fund balance sheet in 2033.

The problem is getting worse.  The current economic recession, world economic problems, and other matters are putting a formidable upward pressures on future projections.  Evidence is that the 2012 projection from the “Social Security and Medicare Boards of Trustees” exhaustion date of 2033 comes 3 years earlier than 2036 exhaustion date projected in 2011, only one year earlier.

Congress is well aware of the “ticking time bomb” aspect of the Social Security Trust Fund.  Printing money is not the solution – it causes inflation which every American suffers from.  Kicking the can down the road” only passes the problem on to our children and grandchildren.  A “Balanced Budget” amendment to the Constitution pursuant to Article V of the Constitution would help.  But, Congress has consistently opposed it simply because balancing the books takes away the politically popular option of deficit spending.  This whole matter is plainly a “third-rail” issue because the people who funded the program through payroll taxes are not to be trifled with for fear that these people will reflect their outrage at the ballot box.  Getting reelected is indeed at risk.  Predictably, sustained legislative paralysis has ensued.  The fact is that the problem is real and it is being ignored by Congress and the President.

The consequences of what started in 1935 are now overwhelming as a result of a mere 33 pages of unconstitutional legislation.  If Congress only had stuck with the framer’s concept of a limited federal government, that is, without a federal government run insurance program, we would not be in this mess now.

Let’s look at this issue at the personal level to understand the problem in simple terms.  Commonly understood is that if somebody took your money with the intent to deprive you of said monies, this act would called theft.  It is a crime.  Now comes Congress persistently collecting taxes for one thing, then “borrowing” the money to spend it on another thing, and putting forth no plan to repay the “borrowed” monies.  Did Congress steal the “surplus” money from the Social Security Trust Fund? It certainly looks like it.

How can we solve the problem?

The first problem to solve is that Congress needs to stop stealing the “surplus” money from the Social Security Trust Fund and start putting back what it “borrowed.” As Will Rogers once said: “If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging. “

The second problem to solve is cash flow.  When the “baby boomers” reach retirement age, the Social Security Trust Fund is projected to remain insufficient indefinably to satisfy the level of benefit payments compared to a smaller number of projected wage earners paying into it.  The only available long-term remedy is for Congress to either vote to raise Social Security Act taxes, or diminish Social Security Act benefits, or both.

The third problem to solve is the lack of personal and fiduciary responsibility.  As Alexander Tyler said in 1787: “A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government.  It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury.  From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship. “

During the eight years from January 20, 1993 to January 20, 2001, the total public debt outstanding went from $4.1 trillion to $5.7 trillion for an increase of $1.6 trillion.  In the next eight years, it increased by $4.9 trillion to $10.6 trillion.  Today, less than four years later, it has increased by $5.3 trillion to $15.9 trillion.  Congress has not enacted a federal budget each year, as required by law, for the last 1,200 days.  The Senate majority leader has not allowed the budget from the House come to the Senate floor for a vote for three years.  The President’s two budgets for fiscal 2011 and 2012 were both unanimously rejected, respectively, in the Senate by 0-97, and the next year in the house of representatives by 0-414 and by the Senate 0-99.  None of the President’s four budgets included a plan to save Social Security.  There is no budget approved for the next fiscal year.  Why do we have this problem? The answer is simple.  Congress and the President embrace relentless deficit spending and they see themselves as responsible fiduciary actors.  Conversely, the Republic cannot continue to exist by “borrowing” 40 cents of every dollar it spends.  The fact is that we cannot spend our way out of debt!

Let’s set aside the details and get down to basic logic.  Congress doesn’t want a balanced budget.  If Congress wanted a balanced budget, Congress could simply take a vote to make it so.  Since Congress doesn’t want a balanced budget, “We the People” need to force the federal budget to be balanced.  Such will then force Congress every year to vote on what to fund, what not to fund, or to fund what is left over by raising taxes.  By these votes, the people will have a better measure to determine who in Congress is fiscally responsible, or not.  How do we make this happen? Start work on “Change” with a Constitutional amendment, pursuant to Article V of the Constitution, which requires the federal budget to be balanced.  After reading the foregoing story, if you are convinced that we need to act now – call your Senator and Member of the House – make them do it.

On January 20, 1961, John F.  Kennedy said “And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country.” Accordingly, “We the People” need to put the country first and stop voting for people who vote for deficit spending.  Let’s vote for candidates who have read, understand, and will abide by the Constitution and the oath to defend it.  If not, we eventually will be left with Alexander Tyler proven right once again, as governments before us have fallen for the same reason.

Source: Illinois Conservative Beacon

The Obama Legacy

12:34 pm in 2012 election, Commentary, farming community, governor romney, governor romney's vision, mitt romney, Obama campaign, obama legacy, Obamacare Report, Paul Ryan, romney campaign, vp nominee, vp nominee of the gop by Thomas Purcell

The Obama Legacy
by Thomas Purcell
The President is pounding the ground for more relief in the Midwest due to the ravages of widespread drought on the farming community while his minions are moving out and striking against the running mate of Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan of Wisconsin.
These two things, while seemingly separate are actually intimately connected and how the next 30 days plays out, and how aggressive the Romney campaign plays it, will have a major impact on the election In November. Central to both issues is the philosophy of the two camps, which are diametrically opposed to one another. Like no previous generation in recent history, this election will be about the philosophy between the left and the right.
In Paul Ryan’s opening salvo as the VP nominee of the GOP, he talked about his ideas and what the GOP stands for:
We Americans look at one another’s success with pride, not resentment, because we know, as more Americans work hard, take risks, and succeed, more people will prosper, our communities will benefit, and individual lives will be improved and uplifted.

But America is more than just a place…it’s an idea. It’s the only country founded on an idea. Our rights come from nature and God, not government. We promise equal opportunity, not equal outcomes.

Ryan talked about a nation that created its own future through hard work and government playing the role of protector, not provider. Now compare that with a speech Obama made the next day:

He’s a very articulate spokesperson for Governor Romney’s vision. The problem is it’s the wrong vision for America. It’s a vision that I fundamentally disagree with.”

Obama is telling us that he fundamentally disagrees with the vision of the founding fathers of this nation– that government is there only to protect the people not actually provide for them. This is what ‘Change’ means to Team Obama.
Obama then proceeded in talking about a 175 million dollar relief bill for farmers to ease the drought. While Ryan talked about the greater common good and a much broader sense of society and what America stands for, Obama talked about the smaller issues of a specific farm bill, and more ways to spend money, while neglecting to mention that many in the agricultural business are howling mad that it was the EPA and USDA regulations that put the American corn and foods markets in this pickle in the first place through mandatory growing and harvesting rules put in place in the last three years.
Great men talk about ideas and philosophy; smaller men talk about things and people.
The drought was not the cause of the agribusiness woes; it was merely the catalyst to the problems now. Paul Ryan knows this and sees things from a greater perspective than the details of some entitlement. Obama’s theories stem form a belief that the government can solve any problem or at least contribute to the solution; whereas the GOP strategy is to allow the private marketplace to solve problems while government is there merely to ensure that the marketplace has a free hand to do so.
It is a philosophical debate. It is a debate on issues. It is a debate about ideas in this campaign now; a debate about which direction this country will go after November.
This is a debate the GOP will win every time, and Team Obama knows this, which is why over the next few weeks expect every media outlet to talk about ANYTHING other than philosophy and issues, and why it has tried to do this constantly so far.

Fortunately there are people like the Paul Ryan’s in this world that will prevent that.

Attacking the Ryan Plan

11:08 am in 2012 election, Attacking Paul Ryan, Elections, entitlement programs, federal spending, fiscal cliff by mrcurmudgeon

Photo:Joshua Roberts/BLOOMBERG

By Mr. Curmudgeon:

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s choice of Rep. Paul Ryan for the V.P. slot shows the GOP ticket wants a budget debate with team Obama. As the chairman of the House Budget Committee, Ryan is a fiscal policy wonk who knows the financial disaster awaiting the country if Americans continue drinking the Progressive entitlement Kool-Aid. Obama’s “you didn’t build that” campaign is about to meet Ryan’s “you are going to wreck that” response … with the facts, figures and rhetorical flourishes to match.

“Leaders are supposed to fix problems,” Ryan told Obama’s Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner last February, “We have a $99.4 trillion unfunded [entitlement] liability. Our government is making promises to Americans that it has no way of accounting for them. And so you’re saying yeah, we’re stabilizing it [the budget] but we’re not fixing it in the long run. That means we’re just going to keep lying to people. We’re going to keep all these empty promises going.”

“We have millions of Americans retiring every day and that will drive substantial growth rates for healthcare costs,” admitted Geithner, “And so you were right to say … We’re not coming before you to say we have a definitive solution to our long-term problem. What we do know is that we don’t like yours.”

Geithner proved as evasive with his solutions to America’s long-term fiscal problems as he was in paying federal income taxes. And that pretty much typifies the theme of the Obama campaign for 2012 … “We don’ have any solutions for averting America’s Greece-like day of reckoning, but we sure don’t like your solutions for the problem.”

Need proof? The last time Harry Reid’s Democrat-controlled Senate passed a budget was April 29, 2009. This reminds me of an old Mad Magazine parody of the movie “The Professionals.” When a group of mercenaries goes to Mexico to rescue a damsel in distress, the leader is asked by one of his men, “What is the plan?” the leader responds, “If we don’t have a plan, it can’t fail!”

“As House Budget Committee chairman, Mr. Ryan has drawn a blueprint of a government that will be absent when people need it the most,” said a lead editorial in the New York Times the day after Ryan was named the GOP’s vice presidential candidate, “It will not be there when the unemployed need job training, or when a struggling student needs help to get into college. It will not be there when a miner needs more than a hardhat for protection, or when a city is unable to replace a crumbling bridge.”

Like a child sitting on Santa’s lap, the Times has a long laundry list of entitlement Christmas wishes with no mind as to who will pay for them. The Times forgets to mention that sustaining America’s unsustainablely high levels of spending requires our government to borrow 45 cents of every dollar it spends. As we’ve seen in Greece, Italy and Spain, governments with high debt loads have a hard time finding suckers … err … investors interested in buying their bonds.

As the costs associated with government programs increase – and the money to fund them is siphoned from the broader economy – killing small business and job growth – funding Progressive entitlement programs at their current levels becomes impossible. Like it or not, cuts are coming. In fact, they have already begun.

Appearing on CBS’s “Face The Nation, Obama’s deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter praised Obama’s “more than $300 billion in saving from Medicare. On top of the savings we’ve already achieved,” said Cutter. “You know I heard Mitt Romney deride the $700 billion cuts in Medicare that the president achieved through health care reform.”

Buried inside ObamaCare’s 2,700 pages is a provision creating the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB). Like the Federal Reserve and the Environmental Protection Agency, the IPAB is an independent bureaucratic board authorized to legislate cuts in Medicare. Overriding the rulings of ObamaCare’s death panel requires a two-thirds vote from Congress.

Recently, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi was in Florida campaigning on behalf of Democratic congressional candidates and warning seniors against the Ryan proposal to save Medicare.

Pelosi was clear in her criticism of the Ryan plan, but the “long-term alternatives they put forward to extend Medicare’s solvency were a murky collection of pending studies, future demonstration projects and hopes for medical breakthroughs,” reports the Palm Beach Post. Santa, are you listening?

“Christmas is a time when kids tell Santa what they want and adults pay for it,” said Colorado’s three-term governor Richard Lamm, “Deficits are when adults tell the government what they want and their kids pay for it.”

If Obama and Pelosi win the debate, generations of Americans yet unborn will inherit a nation that isn’t worth a lump of coal.

————————————————————————————————————————–

Mr. Curmudgeon is a freelance writer living in South Florida.

morethanright@gmail.com

Is the Inertia Greater Than the Momentum?

7:48 pm in 2012 election, boom and bust, Dr. Robert Owens, Federal Reserve, Government Spending, inflating bubbles, tax-and-spend by drrobertowens

The causes of our problems are not hard to see.  Americans aren’t obese because evil restauranteers are forcing them to eat fried butter on a stick.  We are bulging at the seams because we eat too much and exercise too little.  Americans aren’t trapped in upside down mortgages because evil bankers waylaid us and forced us to sign up for a house that was too big and cost too much.  We’re living in homes we can’t afford because we wanted them and thought we deserved them even though we didn’t have an income that could support them.  Americans aren’t buried in personal debt because credit card companies mailed us credit cards.  We carry an average of $14,517 household debt because we wanted what we wanted when we wanted it and couldn’t wait until we could pay for it.  And America isn’t drowning in national debt because we did anything more difficult to understand than electing people who bought our votes with entitlements we didn’t need and couldn’t afford.

The problem isn’t that we don’t know the answers.  Instead it’s that we don’t want to face up to the fact that the free ride has to stop if we’re going to get off before we land in Athens.  America’s economy is beginning to resemble one of those increasingly ridiculous action movies where the hero gets blown up, shot, stabbed, and hit with a brick only to jump up ready to roll.  Every time a bubble bursts instead of allowing the economy to bottom out and correct itself the Government spends as it borrows from foreign countries and the Fed creates money out of thin air to pay for it.  It’s time our leaders learn we have learned that blowing up a bubble to take the place of the last burst bubble is not building an economy.

As boom and bust turned into boom to boom to boom we have inevitably made our way to KABOOM!!!

The coming crash in this double dip dilemma is going to be a double whammy.  We are currently blowing up a new financial bubble providing Fed funds at near zero % that the banks then loan out at 3-4% pumping more and more money into the system.  And in a reprise of the 2000 dot.com crash the social media bubble is once again giving us billion dollar companies that aren’t making any money for anyone except the gamblers in the stock market casino.

The Federal Government keeps inflating bubbles to avoid the real crash so they can continue to buy votes with entitlements and pay for them with funny money.  This postpones paying the piper, but it increase the bill when it finally comes.

Today the government Leviathan is devouring America’s income.  In 2012 it’s estimated that the central government will consume 24 % of GDP kicking back 4% to the States and localities, the States will swallow 10% of GDP, and the local entities will inhale 11%.  Subtracting the 4% Federal to State shell game and the governance of America is today costing us 40% of America’s production.  On top of that the regulatory burden grows heavier every day until everyone everywhere is in violation of something.  And we wonder why industry isn’t expanding?  When you eat your seed corn and make impossible to follow guidelines for planting you can’t expect a bumper crop.

With money pouring out of a 5” hose how can anyone take the politicians promises to cut the deficit and reduce the debt seriously?  The most draconian plans suggested so far, such as Representative Ryan’s doesn’t balance until 2040 and that is only if future politicians decide to play nice and not buy votes with free goodies which is about as likely as a dog with fleas not scratching.

That’s the problem: a dysfunctional government made up of kleptomaniacs writing phony checks on the future and a population addicted to easy money and unfunded entitlements.

What’s the solution?  We as a people must kick the entitlement habit.  Like any addiction our national addiction to freebees has debilitated us.  It has made us dependent on the outside stimulus.  Where once families and churches took care of the needy we have been taught for generations that Uncle Sugar will do it, so we have let Uncle Sugar do it.  How has that worked out?  Ever since the government bureaucrats have stepped between the givers and the receivers welfare hasn’t been well and it isn’t fair.  Many of us know people who need help who are denied and people who should be helping themselves who are riding in their Cadillacs to spend their food stamps.

After more than 15 trillion dollars and four decades of a war on poverty the percentage of Americans below the poverty line is higher than it was when we started.  There are more people on food stamps, more on disability and more that have just dropped out of the work force than ever before, and the only answerWashington seems to have is we haven’t spent enough yet.  That’s like telling the heroin addict who almost died last night of an overdose that the problem was he didn’t shoot up enough junk.

How do we stop spending?  How do we balance the budget?  This is like the question the backslider always asks, “How do I get back to God?”  The answer to the backslider is, “You get back to God.”  The answer for the nation is, “we stop spending more than we bring in.”  The politicians have a way to make that solution work: raise taxes until income matches outgo.  This brings up another problem: we can’t eat the goose that lays the golden egg and expect to collect more eggs tomorrow.  In any country that robs Peter to pay Paul eventually everyone changes their name to Paul.  Case in point, we now have more people qualifying for disability each month than people finding jobs.

Yes, this is a call for austerity.  Yes, this will cause major dislocations.  Yes, when drug addicts quit taking the poison their bodies have come to crave they get sick.  In time drug addicts recover and once again becomes normal people able to stand on their own without the chemical prop of a debilitating drug.  In time if we as a nation will kick the habit of cheap money and government handouts we will once again learn to stand on our own two feet, hold our head up high, and proudly say, “This isAmericathe land of the free and the home of the brave.”

If we will do this the last half of the twentieth century will be but a prelude to the American Century.  If we don’t, the sun will set on the American dream as we devour ourselves in an orgy of hedonism and self-gratification.

The election is coming fast.  Survey your choices and find people who have the courage to lead us in a return to fiscal responsibility before we face the coming collapse of the world we have known.  For if we cast our bread upon the water it will return to us after many days, but if we sow the wind we will reap the whirlwind.

Dr. Owens teaches History, Political Science, and Religion for Southside Virginia Community College.  He is the Historian of the Future @ http://drrobertowens.com © 2012 Robert R. Owens drrobertowens@hotmail.com  Follow Dr. Robert Owens on Facebook or Twitter @ Drrobertowens

Obama campaign soliciting birthday, wedding gifts in fundraising ploy

6:28 am in 2012 election, Fundraising, mainstream media, mitt romney, News Feed, United States by PinkTeaPatriot

Cupcakes bearing the likeness of U.S. President Barack Obama are displayed at Madame Tussauds Wax Museum on Obama's 50th birthday — August 4, 2011 in Washington, DC. (Credit: Win McNamee/Getty Images)

By Lindsey Boerma

President Obama wants to wish you a very happy birthday – and as his gift to you, he’ll let you donate a portion of your gift money to his reelection campaign.

A blog post on the Obama/Biden 2012 website on Friday announced the campaign’s newest fundraising ploy – the “Obama Event Registry,” which asks anyone with an upcoming birthday, wedding, or anniversary to “support the President on your big day” by asking for donation money “in lieu of a gift.”

“Let your friends know how important this election is to you,” the post reads. “Instead of another gift card you’ll forget to use, ask your friends and family for something that will go a little further: a donation for Obama for America.”

Replete with a section that allows anyone interested to create actual accounts for their registry, the site reasons, “it’s a gift that we can all appreciate–and goes a lot further than a gravy bowl.”

(Credit: CBS News)

 

Read More: CBSNews.com

AFL-CIO to fight voter ID laws in six battleground states

9:43 pm in 2012 election, 2012 presidential election, afl-cio, doj, Elections, Headlines, scott walker, swing states, Vote Fraud, voter id by becca.lower

By Kevin Bogardus
The Hill- “Ballot Box”

The nation’s largest labor federation plans to mount an aggressive campaign against voter identification laws in a half-dozen battleground states that will be key in the presidential election.

AFL-CIO Executive Vice President Arlene Holt Baker told reporters on Tuesday that the labor federation will have boots on the ground registering and helping voters in Florida, Michigan, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin in coordination with the group’s political program.

Labor is pushing back against voter ID laws, which they say suppress voting by minorities, the elderly, the poor and students. Supporters of the measures say showing identification to vote is needed to crack down on fraud and protect the integrity of elections.

Baker said the AFL-CIO would execute its “most aggressive push” yet against the ID laws in 2012.

“This year, we will be running the strongest voter protection program ever. This will be our most aggressive push, and we have never done anything on this scale before because the attacks that we are seeing on the right to vote are unprecedented,” Baker said, calling voter ID laws passed in several states “a modern-day version of a poll tax and a new form of Jim Crow.”

The announcement comes less than a week after the AFL-CIO suffered a huge defeat in Wisconsin, where Gov. Scott Walker (R) survived the union-led recall against him.

The AFL-CIO plans to partner in voter-protection efforts with groups like the NAACP, the National Council of La Raza, Generational Alliance and the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement.

Read more: The Hill

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012

Romney – Is America Ready For a Private Equity President?

6:55 pm in 2012 election, 2012 US Election, US Elections, US Politics by J Lance Curtis

Is America Ready For a Private Equity President? (via Democracy Chronicles) Mitt Romney’s Bain problem: private equity has bad rap with public (via The Christian Science Monitor) By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer posted May 22, 2012 at 6:48 pm EDT Mitt Romney bills his business background as a major selling point for his presidential candidacy, but a recent attack ad by President…   Technorati Tags: 2012