Even WaPo's Dana Milbank Thinks Obama's 'Buffett Rule' is 'Gimmicky'
President Obama is once again shamelessly touring the country promoting class warfare with his pathetic "Buffett Rule" to raise taxes on the most successful Americans.
Sadly for the Commander-in-Chief, even the perilously liberal Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank thinks this is a gimmick to woo voters:
President Obama admits it: His proposed “Buffett Rule” tax on millionaires is a gimmick.
“There are others who are saying: ‘Well, this is just a gimmick. Just taxing millionaires and billionaires, just imposing the Buffett Rule, won’t do enough to close the deficit,’ ” Obama declared Wednesday. “Well, I agree.”
Actually, the gimmick was apparent even without the president’s acknowledgment.
Yes, and it's been apparent to intelligent Americans since it was first broached last year. Sadly, most liberal media members still think it makes sense.
Apparently not Milbank:
Three years into his presidency, Obama has not introduced a plan for comprehensive tax reform — arguably the most important vehicle for fixing the nation’s finances and boosting long-term economic growth. His opponents haven’t done much better, but that doesn’t excuse the president’s failures: appointing the Simpson-Bowles commission and then disregarding its findings, offering a plan for business tax reform only, and issuing a series of platitudes. The Buffett Rule, rather than overhauling the tax code, would simply add another layer.
I'd argue that Congressman Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) has twice proposed budgets with far more tax overhaul than anything Obama and his Party have done since January 2009, although Milbank certainly wouldn't agree with that. The liberal media are collectively on a warpath against Ryan, and I doubt the Post columnist would care to get in their way.
But he did mock the President's plan a bit:
Obama’s prioritization is no mystery: The populist Buffett Rule polls well. This explains its inclusion in countless presidential speeches and statements. White House reporters, tiring of the theme, have proposed a Jimmy Buffett Rule (three-drink minimum) and a Buffet Rule (Newt Gingrich would be an obvious candidate).
Chuckle, chuckle.
Unfortunately, despite showing skepticism about the President's plan, Milbank like so many of his dishonest colleagues provided some misinformation of his own writing, "A search of the White House Web site yields 17,400 mentions of the Buffett Rule — a proposal that would bring in $47 billion over 10 years, much of that from 22,000 wealthy households."
The $47 billion over ten years is correct, but far less than 22,000 households would be impacted. As Investment News correctly reported Tuesday (with emphasis):
President Barack Obama is promoting a “Buffett rule” setting a minimum tax rate for top earners to ensure they pay a higher percentage of their income than middle- class families. For the most part, they already do.
The average tax rate, including payroll taxes, for the middle 20 percent of U.S. families will be 15.9 percent in 2015, according to an estimate by the Tax Policy Center, a nonpartisan research group in Washington. Of the 217,000 households that would be affected by the Buffett rule, only 4,000 will have incomes exceeding $1 million and tax rates below 15 percent, under slightly different measures of income and taxes by the center.
So maybe this "rule" will impact only 4,000 households. Or maybe even less. As Milbank himself reported last September:
At the moment, the Ink-Stained Inc. case study, should the Harvard Business School wish to study it, is a reminder to be skeptical of the “job creator” argument in the tax debate. “It’s a good example of the murkiness of what we mean by small business and the connection to jobs,” William Gale, co-director of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institution’s Tax Policy Center, told me. “There’s sort of this notion of small-business innovation and job creation that just doesn’t necessarily hold.”
That’s even more so with Obama’s “Buffett Rule,” under which millionaires would have to pay a higher tax rate than a typical middle-class worker. As a practical matter, most already do. Gale said the rule would raise the taxes on only a few thousand people, perhaps as few as 1,000.
In a nation of more than 300 million, that’s not going to make a dent in job creation.
So, Milbank wrote roughly seven months ago the Buffett "rule would raise the taxes on only a few thousand people, perhaps as few as 1,000."
Now he's saying 22,000. What a difference an election makes.
And he accuses the President of being gimmicky.
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Comments
Farce
Submitted by sngnsgt on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 9:53am.
Heads up, Dana. Why don't you ask Buffet to pay what he already owes in taxes? I don't care that he's filthy rich. It's the dream. Remember? If I won the lottery, I'd be a happy man. Wake up!!!
Yes, Indeed...
Submitted by bigdaddy on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 10:07am.
...How about a "Berkshire Hathaway Rule"? That's a Billion right there that's "Fundamentally Fair."
The more Obama talks
Submitted by bmac32 on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 10:21am.
I want Obama to keep pushing this and push hard. Push so hard and so long that even the slowest America see Obama for what he truly is. Three plus years and not one budget that makes sense or that ever Democrats will vote for.
Buffoon rule
Submitted by tribchet on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 10:35am.
It should be renamed the "buffoon rule" because only a buffoon could possibly view this as anything more than class warfare and another Obama political stunt
There's a simple explanation:
Submitted by motherbelt on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 10:46am.
No class, just class warfare. -mb's slogan for the Obama campaign.
Obama is playing to his base
Submitted by ForeverOnTheRight on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 11:25am.
Obama is playing to his base in the hopes it will get him re-elected. "Buffet Rule", threatening to take the oil subsidies from the Big Evil Oil companies that we go to war for all the time. Both are just gimmicks. The "Buffet Rule" doesn't even put a dent in the deficit and taking the subsidies away from the oil companies plays to the lefts obsession that the oil companies are evil and the "greenies" would love to see us riding bikes because gas prices are too high.
HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA
Submitted by liberalsarefunny on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 12:51pm.
It may be gimmicky, but it resonates with the 60 per cent or so of the population which is very stupid, which elected the very dangerous Obama in the first place, and is about to reelect him.
This travesty has been 60 years in the making: the country is ripe for the plucking.
Rule?
Submitted by Ogundipe S.O. on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 4:20pm.
I noted this earlier in the earlier post re Politico editor's take on this issue. So it's good to see Noel finally catches up to Dana's.
Now, why should there be a legislative vote on someone's "rule"? I thought America is a Republic that elects a leader and not a ruler? Why should someone says they have a rule that Americans must follow? Especially when records shows that they're not following the pontificated rule themselves. I would appreciate an elucidation.
Plus, there's a saying that he whom the gods want destroyed first make mad. This saying applies to Mr. Buffet, a man whom God has blessed through the success story of Capitalism is now an advocate of nothing short of Marxism in his last extra years.
Mr. Buffet's empire has never been under intense scrutinity hitherto, I think he just opened a door for whatever evil may befall him before he take his last breath.
A multi billionaire that has never written a $1 free cheque to the tax office, have a company that owes a billion dollar to the tax office is suddenly an advocate of fairness in tax payments and is still able to muster extensive attention from a sitting president. Gross.
Wonders, they say, shall never end.
Rule?
Submitted by Ogundipe S.O. on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 4:21pm.
I noted this earlier in the earlier post re Politico editor's take on this issue. So it's good to see Noel finally catches up to Dana's.
Now, why should there be a legislative vote on someone's "rule"? I thought America is a Republic that elects a leader and not a ruler? Why should someone says they have a rule that Americans must follow? Especially when records shows that they're not following the pontificated rule themselves. I would appreciate an elucidation.
Plus, there's a saying that he whom the gods want destroyed first make mad. This saying applies to Mr. Buffet, a man whom God has blessed through the success story of Capitalism is now an advocate of nothing short of Marxism in his last extra years.
Mr. Buffet's empire has never been under intense scrutinity hitherto, I think he just opened a door for whatever evil may befall him before he take his last breath.
A multi billionaire that has never written a $1 free cheque to the tax office, have a company that owes a billion dollar to the tax office is suddenly an advocate of fairness in tax payments and is still able to muster extensive attention from a sitting president. Gross.
Wonders, they say, shall never end.
My Apologies.
Submitted by Ogundipe S.O. on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 4:23pm.
The webmaster should install a "delete" button to remedy any duplicated posts.
Conservatives need to call
Submitted by big.league.slider on Thu, 04/12/2012 - 10:12pm.
Conservatives need to call out the MSM for calling this a "millionaire's tax". The term millionaire describes an individual's net wealth, not their income. The majority of those with a net wealth above $1 million have annual incomes far below $1 million. Due to property values and pensions our country likely has hundreds of thousands of individuals that qualify as "millionaires".
President Obama himself likely has a current net wealth above $1million, thus technically qualifying him as a "millionaire". Yet because his annual income is below $1 million he would not be subject to his own proposed "millionaire" income tax surcharge.