Posted on 10/26/2011 3:44:25 PM PDT by casinva
Praise for Rick Perrys "Cut, Balance & Grow" Plan
See the various comments from people we pay attention to.
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Rick Perry announced his tax plan today, which Ill go on record as saying I, El Rushbo, think is great. Its fabulous. I like it. This is why a lot of people are going to like it. It is a return to fiscal sanity. Rush Limbaugh on The Rush Limbaugh Show, 10/25/11
This program hes come up with is a great program, this tax plan. Perry has come up with one hell of a proposal. Mark Levin on The Mark Levin Show, 10/25/11
The good news is that Mr. Perry and most of his competitors are thinking big, with proposals that will reverse the U.S. slide to high-debt, slow-growth stagnation. President Obama wants to portray the economic debate as pro-growth government spenders vs. the austerity of budget cutting. But the real debate is over whether government or the private economy is the main engine of prosperity. The flat tax puts Republicans on the side of private growth and government reform, a potent combination. Perhaps Mr. Perry and his comrades can even coax Mitt Romney to join the party. Wall Street Journal, 10/26/11
Strong entitlement reform in #GovernorRickPerry flat tax plan. Plus strong growth incentives from 20% flat rate. #GOP tax competition. Good. Larry Kudlow, host of CNBCs The Kudlow Report, via Twitter, 10/25/11
Twenty percent is a very good place to be. And what Governor Perry does right is he sets up an alternative structure. If you like the present tax system, if youve organized your life around the various deductions and credits, nothing changes for you. If youd rather move to a lower rate, fewer deductions and credits, thats available as well. It doesnt have the danger that the Fair Tax or the 9-9-9 has, which is you create these additional new taxes that maybe youll end up with both the income tax and the sales tax and a VAT [value-added tax], which would be France, Greece. Grover Norquist on CNBCs Squawk Box, 10/25/11
Rick Perrys plan for tax reform would be massively pro-growth. A Flat Tax like the one proposed by Perry would unleash years of economic growth if it is passed into law. Furthermore, eliminating the tax on dividends and capital gains would immediately add trillions of dollars in new wealth to the economy, benefiting all Americans. Perry clearly understands that revitalizing the economy should start with a complete overhaul of a tax code that has nearly choked economic growth to death. Conservatives looking for a champion to carry the banner of a pro-growth tax reform will surely rally behind this bold proposal. Club for Growth President Chris Chocola, 10/25/11
[Governor Perry] unveiled a very aggressive plan today. For too many years, our tax code in America has punished, not rewarded success. By 2015, the cost of tax compliance will cost over $480 billion. Think about that money thats being taken out of our economy. Instead of the American taxpayers wasting all those hours collecting all those receipts, wasting all that money on tax preparers and accountants, why not have a simpler, fairer tax system where everybody pays? Governor Bobby Jindal (R-La.) on CNNs The Situation Room, 10/25/11
[Its] the best plan standing. The governors plan is a very bold plan by way of comparison with anything else thats out there, and I think it is possible that it could achieve the growth of the American economy and the job creation that would follow that growth. Dick Armey, former House Majority Leader and chairman of FreedomWorks, on CNN, 10/25/11
I like the plan a lot. I think it has a lot of very appealing pro-growth aspects to it. I particularly like the 20 percent tax. There have been already complaints that this is too complicated, that the phase-in or the opt-in and opt-out will make things too complicated I think thats nonsense. You have basically the option for people to choose whether they want to pay higher taxes. Whos going to choose whether to pay higher taxes? The Weekly Standards Steve Hayes on Fox News Special Report, 10/25/11
Overall, the Perry flat tax plan would be a boon to long-term economic growth and increasing the competitiveness of the U.S. in the global economy. Scott Hodge, Tax Foundation, 10/25/11
Its very aggressive. The fact that Perry has come out forcefully for a balanced budget amendment as well as an 18 percent of GDP spending cap is a good sign. Pete Sepp, executive vice president of the National Taxpayers Union, via Bloomberg, 10/26/11
[T]he 20-percent marginal tax rate will be much more conducive to entrepreneurship and hard work, giving people more incentive to create jobs and wealth.
Since all economic theories agree that capital formation is key for long-run growth and higher living standards, addressing the tax bias against saving and investment is one of the best features of Perrys plan.
If implemented, [Perry's] plan would dramatically boost economic performance and improve competitiveness.
[I]t will be a radical improvement compared to the current tax system Daniel J. Mitchell, Cato Institute, in Forbes, 10/25/11
Heres the thing that gets my attention: Governor Perry has some pretty serious entitlement-reform measures in here: Raising the retirement age for Social Security and Medicare benefits, changing the indexing formula to CPI rather than wages, giving younger workers at least a partial opt-out into private accounts, block-granting Medicaid, putting Medicare recipients directly in control of their own spendingthis would be huge. A Republican president who got nothing else done in a four-year term would be a smashing success in my book if he achieved that kind of entitlement reform. I expect Perry to emphasize taxes, but the entitlement measures are the meat of the Perry proposal, in my view, though theres a lot of good gravy: repealing Dodd-Frank, procedural reform for spending and regulating, repealing section 404 of Sarbanes-Oxley, expanding the Galveston model (another Social Security opt-out) to most government employees, etc. Kevin Williamson, National Review, 10/25/11
[T]his plan does look like the kind of game-changer that Republicans can use to keep the focus on the economy in 2012. Ed Morrissey, Hot Air, 10/25/11
Governor Perrys Cut, Balance and Grow is a solid economic plan for renewing our economy and providing struggling Americans with a path back to economic prosperity. It addresses the key failures of President Obamas agenda in Washington, which at every turn seeks to smother us with more government, and destroy private enterprise and initiative. Jim Martin, 60 Plus Association chairman, 10/25/11
My take on the plan: its excellent. It addresses the key political weaknesses of a mandatory flat tax, while still moving us meaningfully in that direction. While it maintains certain popular deductions, it recognizes the importance of a transitional phase between our current system and a flat tax. And Perry appears to be off to a promising start on Medicare reform. Avik Roy, Manhattan Institute, in Forbes, 10/25/11
Perry is correct in noting that the current complexity of the tax code adds tremendous inefficiency to the current system. A flat tax with limited exemptions and deductions would reduce a lot of the distortions that exist along the income scale. For instance, taxing higher income at a higher rate creates disincentives for work and saving, and these would be minimized under a flat tax. Also, it would reduce compliance costs. Aparna Mathur, American Enterprise Institute, 10/25/11
As far as tax politics go, a new Washington Post -ABC News poll shows a straight ahead flat tax a clear winner over 9-9-9
Poll: Conservatives prefer flat tax over 9-9-9, Washington Post, 10/25/11
Hint: Much more now than ever before!
Find out what brings them all together here.
Ping please.
“Hey Steve, Anita and I are having trouble coming up with a plan. Can you help us out?”
IF you'd rather NOT be pinged FReepmail me.
IF you'd like to be added FReepmail me. Thanks.
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...said the oh-so-clever newbie who likes to put up threads from sources such as The New Republic as if they are gospel.
No media-bias-BS there. Nope. No siree.
They are very scared of the freight train Rick Perry. After his Phase 2 came out they are seeing so much movement toward Perry they know the game is over for them.
2 days, huh? If you had more history, you might have seen this on past FR threads: From Fed Up!: Our Fight to Save America from Washington:
When the federal government oversteps its authority, states should tell Washington that they will not be complicit in enforcing laws with which they do not agree. Again, the best example is an issue I dont even agree withthe partial legalization of marijuana. Californians clearly want some level of legalized marijuana, be it for medicinal use or otherwise. The federal government is telling them they cannot. But states are not bound to enforce federal law and the federal government cannot commandeer state resources and require them to enforce it. So good luck to the federal government if it wants to enforce every law on its books without the help of state and local law enforcement. When the federal government oversteps its bounds, states should think hard about whether a single state resource should be committed to carry out the intrusive policy in question. (p.177)
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First, we must restrict federal spending. Rampant and wasteful spending in Washington is an affront to both freedom and federalism. The most important thing we could do is amend the Constitution now to restrict federal spending. There are generally thought to be two options: the traditional ― balanced budget amendment‖ or a straightforward ― spending limit amendment, either of which would be a significant improvement. I prefer the latter. It is imperative that we establish a constitutional requirement that the federal government live within its means like states and most American households must dobut I dont want the Washington establishment to hide behind tax increases to ― balance‖ the budget. Lets use the peoples documentthe Constitutionto put an actual spending limit in place to control the beast in Washington. (p. 180-181)
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Second, we should restrict the unlimited source of revenue that the federal government has used to grow beyond its constitutionally prescribed powers. One option would be to totally scrap the current tax code in favor of a flat tax, and thereby make taxation much simpler, easier to follow, and harder to manipulate. Another option would be to repeal the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution (providing the power for the income tax) altogether, and then pursue an alternative model of taxation such as a national sales tax or the Fair Tax. (p.182)
Nah, La Raza Rick’s train is going nowhere but around and around his Christmas tree. He has dropped down to Newt popularity level and will likely join Santorum soon.
And you know what a RINO Rush is. The Cainiacs will be dancing on the head of a pin trying to unring this bell. Rick has the ability to prove a nose job is needed for RINOs in congress who are for Romney. Can NOT wait for the new game in town with the Perry campaign. They sure piddled around with the dunces long enough. I love it that a grown up is starting to appear here and there. PUNCHING back is necessity. Overdue. Thanks, Anita. The campaign was certainly not listening to my emails, I know that. Or.....maybe they were. I raised hell, that’s for sure. LOL!
” He has dropped down to Newt popularity level and will likely join Santorum soon.”
OHHHH, why the long face? Rick is taking it to you. That record thing, don’t cha know? Like Trump says, when you’ve got one, when you’re productive, you have your critics. It’s a sign you have DONE SOMETHING. Right on. Your guy is the chat class. Prepare to have to chat against a record. It will sell, and soon. Brace yourself.
Stop whining.
He attacked Romney and his beliefs like none of Romney's sycophants are willing to. Now we need to see people wise up. We are not electing the most entertaining. We are electing a POTUS. Lets get someone with some experience who can get things done.
That's straight talk, for sure.
On substance he is everything conservatives want. We've gotten so hung up wanting to be entertained we've confused entertainment value over substance. I'm with you it's long overdue for Perry to start calling out Romney on his flip flopping and he should follow up with all the sycophants who haven't said a thing. Where have they been?
As I recall, Rush put Perry's plan as second...behind Cain's.
This is what I like about Perry. I know where he stands on issues. I don't have to try and read between the lines, or wait for clarifications. Also, I don't have to worry about flip flops. He says what he means.
Too bad he had to crib shamelessly from the title of the feckless Boehner's "Cut, Cap and Balance" plan of several months ago.
The plan may be capable enough, but politically this makes Perry nothing more than a day late and a dollar short.
Herman Cain is toast...
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