FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - December 13, 2010
Contact:
Mazher Ali
- 617-423-2148 x101, [email protected]
Tim
Sullivan - 617-423-2148 x127, [email protected]
UFE Calls Obama-GOP Tax
Package Shameful – Urges House Democrats to
Fight for a Better Deal and a
Stronger Estate Tax
Boston,
MA –
“The Senate’s decision to approve the ill-conceived tax package negotiated
between Obama and GOP leaders is shameful,” stated Brian Miller, executive
director of United for a Fair Economy (UFE), after the Obama-GOP tax compromise
cleared its first procedural hurdle in the Senate today. “Fortunately, the buck
does not stop in the Senate. We are calling on the House to fight back and win
a better deal for the sake of middle and working class Americans – those who
will be saddled with massive new debt to pay for wasteful tax breaks for
millionaires and billionaires.”
Since the
Obama-GOP deal was unveiled last week, President Obama has been fighting an
uphill battle to sell the deal to his own party, including a defiant House and
the Congressional Black Caucus. A growing chorus of organizations has joined
the fight to oppose the plan in its current form, including powerful unions,
citizen groups, and others affiliated with Americans for a Fair Estate Tax.
Much of the outrage over this proposal has been directed at President Obama’s
dramatic concession to the Republicans allowing for the weakening the federal
estate tax.
Miller
added, “Republicans have ruthlessly allowed the livelihoods of millions of
out-of-work Americans to hang in the balance by refusing to extend unemployment
benefits – unless they get extended income tax breaks for the top 3 percent and
a smashing of the estate tax to an 80-year low. They inexplicably refuse to
have America's most financially enriched contribute to the rebuilding our
economy.”
UFE has
long stood in support of a strong estate tax, along with a generally more
progressive tax system, as foundational to preserving the kind of economy that
merits hard work. “After decades of failed trickle-down policies, inequality in
the U.S. has reached its highest level since 1928, just before the Great
Depression. Despite this disturbing trend, Congressional Republicans seem to
believe the problem with our economy is that rich people don’t have enough
money. That’s a complete misread of the challenge we’re facing. It’s time we
put the middle class first and stop bankrupting our nation to give wasteful and
expensive tax cuts to the extremely wealthy.”
At the 2009
estate tax levels, a wealthy parent could pass down up to $3.5 million tax-free
to their heirs ($7 million for a married couple). Additional breaks and
exclusions ensure even more generous exemptions for small businesses and farms.
In a press conference organized last month by UFE, Dave Eiffert, co-founder of
the Snoqualmie Falls Brewery outside of Seattle, stated, “I don’t know any
small business owners who are worried about paying the estate tax. Opposition
to the estate tax is largely pushed by families who have enormous estates. They
pay huge sums to spread misinformation and use small business people as their
poster children.”
“Thankfully,
we’re seeing some of the gumption we’ve been craving in a rejection of the tax
deal by House Democrats with the support of the Congressional Black Caucus,”
added Miller. “Angry people from across this country are calling on these House
members to stay strong in their opposition, and to fight for meaningful
revisions before this so-called compromise becomes law.”
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