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Trump?s worst campaign promise

Rick NewmanSenior Columnist,Yahoo Finance?August 11, 202

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/trum...-183331408.html?.tsrc=daily_mail&uh_test=1_02

President Trump hasn?t said a lot about his agenda for a second term. But he has laid out one perplexing goal: Ending the payroll tax that funds Social Security and Medicare.

At a press briefing on Aug. 8, Trump said that if he wins reelection in November, he?ll ?terminate? the payroll tax. This tax amounts to an automatic 7.65% deduction, which both employees and employers pay, that funds Social Security and Medicare benefits. According to the latest data, the payroll tax raised about $945 billion per year for Social Security, covering 89% of its costs, and $272 billion for Medicare, covering 36% of its costs.

Social Security and Medicare both face funding shortfalls in coming years. Official government projections show Medicare starting to run short of money in 2026, and Social Security starting to come up short in 2034. But those projections don?t account for the coronavirus recession that has slashed government tax revenue, with unemployment surging and far fewer people contributing the payroll tax. Analysts at the Committee for a Responsible Budget think Medicare will now run short in 2023, and Social Security in 2031. Others think it could happen even sooner.

Vowing to eliminate a key source of funding for the two popular programs puts Trump at odds with seniors who rely on Social Security and Medicare benefits?and who also happen to be the most reliable voting bloc. Trump won voters over 65 by 9 percentage points in 2016, his best performance among any age group. But Trump?s Democratic foe, Joe Biden, now has a double-digit lead over Trump among seniors. Trump can only alienate seniors by destabilizing their safety net, and a sizable deficit among older voters could easily cost him the election this time around.

What is Trump thinking? Nobody can ever be sure, but he seems to believe ordinary workers will appreciate his effort to put more money in their pockets, while seniors won?t really worry about the consequences. Trump signed an executive memorandum on Aug. 8 that ?defers? payment of the payroll tax for four months starting Sept. 1, for incomes up to $2,000 per week, or $104,000 per year. For somebody earning $50,000 per year, that?s about $1,300 in deferred taxes.

No net gain for workers
But workers deferring the tax would have to pay it back in 2021, so it?s not really a tax cut as much as a delayed payment providing no net gain to workers. Trump may be trying to trip up Biden, who opposes the payroll tax deferral, by claiming Biden wants to raise taxes on middle-class workers. Biden has no such plan, but if he won in November and let Trump?s deferral lapse, it might feel like a tax hike to workers who hoped Trump would make the cut permanent so they?d never have to pay it back.

As political sleight-of-hand, it could easily backfire, since Biden now says Trump is waging a ?reckless war on Social Security.? That?s not what Trump intends, but shutting the spigot that funds the program leaves Trump vulnerable. Politicians normally bend over backward to praise the benefit programs for seniors and insist they?ll protect them, even though a combination of benefit cuts and tax hikes is probably inevitable at some point to keep the mushrooming programs intact.

The White House insists any funding shortfall for Social Security or Medicare will be filled by general revenue, which would have to come from borrowed money at this point. But that?s an alarming scenario for staunch safety-net defenders. ?Replacing a dedicated payroll tax with income taxes or other general fund revenues would fundamentally alter Social Security,? Howard Gleckman of the Tax Policy Center writes. ?Instead of operating as a guaranteed entitlement supported by that dedicated tax, it would be subject to annual meddling by Congress.?

Since its inception, Social Security has essentially been fenced off from normal budget negotiations in Congress because the payroll tax automatically funds it. Congress doesn?t have to appropriate funding every year, it only needs to adjust the amount of income subject to the payroll tax from time to time. Medicare is partly funded from general revenue, though that too is somewhat automatic, because the general revenue contribution is set to match expenditures each year. And the Treasury Department can borrow the money if necessary.

Trump would be the first president to fiddle with the stability of Social Security funding. If he did eliminate the payroll tax, and fund Social Security like all other federal programs, that would raise the risk of benefit disruptions during a government shutdown, like the one that began at the end of 2018. Members of Congress could also withhold funding as part of a budget skirmish or other political fight. Social Security is popular, but Congress isn?t, in large part because of intense partisanship over matters voters consider national priorities.

Trump?s meddling with Social Security is even more puzzling given that it?s almost impossible to imagine Congress would pass the legislation necessary to permanently eliminate the payroll tax. Social Security is considered the ?third rail of politics??touch it, and you die. Few members of Congress will risk the enmity of seniors by changing a cherished safety-net program. Trump wouldn?t get this legislation even if he won in a landslide and Congress flipped back to full Republican control. And there?s nothing he can do on his own beyond deferring the tax and making the future bill even bigger. Nobody likes taxes, but the payroll tax is one Trump and other politicians should at least respect.

Rick Newman is the author of four books, including ?Rebounders: How Winners Pivot from Setback to Success.? Follow him on Twitter: @rickjnewman.
 

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Biden's team should be headed to Florida to spread the message: Trump is working to cut funding for Social Security and Medicare.

Buy stock in cat food! :142smilie

Political suicide.
 

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Critics slam Trump 'suburban housewife' tweet as racist, sexist 'dog scream' play for white voters
John Fritze, David Jackson and Michael Collins, USA TODAY 4 hrs ago

WASHINGTON ? President Donald Trump ramped up his warnings of a suburban "invasion" Wednesday in a tweet that critics described as both sexist and racist.

The president's missive, in which he suggested a Black senator from New Jersey would be in charge of overseeing an "invasion" of neighborhoods that would undermine the "safety" for "the suburban housewife" came a day after his rival in the November election made history by choosing a black woman as his running mate.

In the tweet, he made reference to the policies of Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., who is Black. As a presidential candidate last year, Booker released a plan to make housing more affordable and get rid of housing discrimination.

The tweet came a day after presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden chose Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., as his running mate, marking the first instance that a woman of color will run on a major presidential ticket in the U.S.

Trump has hammered on an Obama-era anti-discrimination housing regulation his administration recently ended as proof of his fealty to "suburban voters," which critics view as a code for "white voters." Trump has previously tweeted that suburbanites would experience lower crime rates and higher property values because he ended the rule.

Trump has characterized the rule as expanding low-income housing but it, in fact, is an attempt to address longstanding racial segregation in U.S. housing policy. The rule is tied to the 1968 federal Fair Housing Act, signed by President Lyndon Johnson.

Jane McManus, director of the Center for Sports Communication at Marist College, tweeted a play on the term "dog whistle:"

"Is there such an thing as a dog scream?" she asked.

Joyce Vance, a former federal prosecutor and and University of Alabama law professor, tweeted: "The morning after Joe Biden selects a Black, Asian woman as his VP, the only thing Trump brings is an explicit appeal to racism."

The Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump group of Republicans and former Republicans, tweeted: "You sad, racist old man."

Democrats slammed the tweet.

"Trump is racist and sexist and thinks he can use racism to motivate his supporters," said Josh Schwerin of Priorities USA Action, a political action committee that supports Democratic candidates. "Trump?s racism is one of the big reasons voters, including those in the suburbs he thinks he?s trying to appeal to here, are ready to get rid of him."

Former Bill Clinton press secretary Joe Lockhart called it "racism in its' purist form."

"It's what the Trump team thinks will get him re-elected," tweeted Lockhart, a prominent supporter of Biden. "They're counting on the silent racist majority. Let's prove them wrong once and for all."

Trump, who polls show is trailing in battleground states, has tried to frame Democrats as seeking to "abolish" the nation's suburbs, a key constituency for both parties.

Booker aides did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Critics slam Trump 'suburban housewife' tweet as racist, sexist 'dog scream' play for white voters
 

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The ?suburban housewife? will be voting for me. They want safety & are thrilled that I ended the long running program where low income housing would invade their neighborhood. Biden would reinstall it, in a bigger form, with Corey Booker in charge!




 

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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="und" dir="ltr"><a href="https://t.co/36b2xC1GZf">pic.twitter.com/36b2xC1GZf</a></p>— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) <a href="https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1293722878882598914?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 13, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 

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Trump and his aides struggle for a message as political blows keep coming
The president ? who is down in the polls and has failed to deliver on a big stimulus deal ? is resorting to his incendiary attacks.

By QUINT FORGEY


08/13/2020 10:39 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/08/13/trump-sexist-attacks-female-rivals-394657
Updated: 08/13/2020 01:35 PM EDT

President Donald Trump is lagging badly in the polls. His promises of keeping America great have been shredded by the pandemic. And he?s now confronting a female political rival who?s uniquely hard to attack.

Trump is in a slump, and his messaging shows it.

While the president has never been known for discipline when it comes to his communications strategy, he unleashed on Thursday especially sharp and sexist attacks against several female political rivals ? including newly minted vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris and Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who is proving unrelenting in stimulus negotiations.

The rhetoric appeared at odds with his own recent attempts to court the very suburban female voters who are turning away from him in large numbers.

Trump also flashed his tendency to say the quiet parts out loud, explicitly stating that he is trying to block funding for the U.S. Postal Service in order to stop universal mail-in voting during November?s election.

Those comments were later amplified on Thursday by White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow, who labeled voting rights funding a ?really liberal left? wish list item, while slamming congressional Democrats for their coronavirus relief package demands.

The unbridled nature of the comments from the president and his senior aide suggested a new sense of frenzy among Trump?s reelection team, which is entering the final months of the 2020 campaign significantly trailing Joe Biden and facing deadlocked congressional negotiations over another round of stimulus.

Trump?s opening salvo on Thursday targeted ?Morning Joe? co-host Mika Brzezinski, whom he described in a tweet as the ?ditzy airhead wife? of the MSNBC talk show?s other presenter, Joe Scarborough,

In an interview with the Fox Business network?s Maria Bartiromo less than an hour later, he went on to sling insults at Harris, Biden?s running mate.

As he did earlier this week, Trump invoked the California senator?s prosecutorial questioning of his second Supreme Court appointment, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, during contentious Senate confirmation hearings in 2018.

?Now you have a ? sort of a mad woman, I call her, because she was so angry and such hatred with Justice Kavanaugh,? Trump said. ?I mean, I?ve never seen anything like it. She was the angriest of the group. But they were all angry.?

That broadside came after Harris delivered a personal blow to Trump during her debut appearance with Biden on Wednesday.

?He inherited the longest economic expansion in history from Barack Obama and Joe Biden. And then, like everything else he inherited, he ran it straight into the ground,? she said at a campaign event in Wilmington, Del.

The president on Thursday next spoke dismissively of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, pillorying the progressive New York congresswoman?s policy proposals and seeming to claim she was a ?poor student? in college.

?I mean, I won?t say where she went to school. It doesn't matter,? he said. ?This is not even a smart person, other than she?s got a good line of stuff. I mean, she goes out and she ? she yaps.?

Finally, Trump homed in on perhaps his most frequent governing foil, Pelosi. He predicted Republicans would win back the House in November, and called the highest-ranking woman in American political history ?stone-cold crazy.?

The president also revealed that his resistance to certain provisions in the stimulus proposal put forth by Pelosi ? such as Postal Service funding and election security grants ? was rooted in his distrust of mail-in voting amid the coronavirus pandemic.

?[Democrats] want three-and-a-half billion dollars for something that will turn out to be fraudulent. That's election money, basically. They want three-and-a-half billion dollars for the mail-in votes, OK? Universal mail-in ballots,? Trump said. ?They want 25 billion dollars ? billion ? for the Post Office.?

?Now, they need that money in order to have the Post Office work, so it can take all of these millions and millions of ballots,? he added. ?By the way, those are just two items. But if they don't get those two items, that means you can't have universal mail-in voting.?

Trump has argued that mail-in voting ?doesn?t work out well for Republicans,? and has repeatedly claimed that the ballot-casting practice results in widespread incidents of voter fraud.

A recent study found that voting by mail does not benefit one party over another, and cases of election fraud in the U.S. are exceedingly rare. Experts acknowledge there are some slightly higher fraud risks associated with mail-in balloting, but only when proper security measures are not put in place.

Despite the president's erratic messaging Thursday, top White House aides have become increasingly assured about their response to the pandemic ? ostensibly the most important factor influencing the outcome of the November election.

But Trump?s and Kudlow?s latest assessments of voting-related stimulus provisions are likely to offer further fodder to congressional Democrats eager to cast the administration's negotiating priorities as nakedly political.

And the president?s attacks on Brzezinski, Harris, Ocasio-Cortez and Pelosi undermined his recent appeals to female voters less than three months from Election Day ? which themselves have been criticized as outdated, potentially sexist and rife with racial undercurrents.

Last month, Trump implored the ?Suburban Housewives of America? in a tweet to read an op-ed in The New York Post panning ?Joe Biden?s disastrous plans for America?s suburbs.?

The president also boasted last month about pushing low-income housing out of suburban enclaves, tweeting: ?I am happy to inform all of the people living their Suburban Lifestyle Dream that you will no longer be bothered or financially hurt by having low income housing built in your neighborhood.?

And on Wednesday, Trump tweeted that the ??suburban housewife? will be voting for me? in November, insisting that they ?are thrilled that I ended the long running program where low income housing would invade their neighborhood. Biden would reinstall it, in a bigger form, with Corey Booker in charge!?

Booker, the Black New Jersey senator whose name Trump misspelled in his message, responded online: ?Donaled, your racism is showing.?
 

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https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/13/politics/trump-campaign-voter-fraud-lawsuit-pennsylvania/index.html

Judge orders Trump campaign to produce evidence of voter fraud in Pennsylvania



A federal judge in Pennsylvania told the Trump campaign and the Republican Party that they must produce evidence they have of vote-by-mail fraud in the state by Friday.

The judge's order, in a high-profile case about vote-by-mail in the battleground state, essentially forces the Trump campaign to try to back up President Donald Trump's false claims about massive voter fraud in postal voting.
"The Court finds that instances of voter fraud are relevant to the claims and defenses in this case," District Judge J. Nicholas Ranjan wrote on Thursday, telling Republicans that they need to provide evidence of fraud to the Democratic Party and the Sierra Club, which are part of the lawsuit.
 

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It's always called fraud and racism when it doesn't fit the left's story. See: peaceful protests
 

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Trump decries Democratic convention as 'gloomiest' in history
BY MORGAN CHALFANT - 08/21/20 01:25 PM EDT

https://thehill.com/homenews/admini...democratic-convention-as-gloomiest-in-history

President Trump on Friday portrayed the Democratic National Convention as the ?darkest? and ?gloomiest? in history, after Democratic nominee Joe Biden accused Trump of dividing America and cloaking the nation in ?darkness.?

?Over the last week, the Democrats held the darkest and angriest and gloomiest convention in American history,? President Trump said in remarks to members of a conservative group in Arlington, Va. He accused Democrats of ?attacking America as racist and a horrible country that must be redeemed.?

Trump specifically called out Biden for his remarks pledging to help the country overcome a ?season of darkness? under the incumbent president?s leadership. Trump argued that Biden and other Democrats ignored bright spots, like signs of economic recovery amidst the pandemic and progress on a vaccine.

?Joe Biden grimly declared a ?season of American darkness? and look at what we?ve accomplished until the plague came in,? Trump said, referencing the strength of the U.S. economy pre-pandemic. ?And now we?re doing it again. This the most successful period of time in the history of our country from every standard.?

Trump asserted the economic recovery was taking the shape of a ?super V,? which he claimed Democrats were ?probably not happy about.? Trump also claimed that Democrats ?want to punish America and its citizens instead of holding them high.?

Trump delivered the remarks to the 2020 Council for National Policy Meeting Friday afternoon. The speech represented Trump?s first public appearance since Biden delivered remarks accepting the Democratic presidential nomination on Thursday evening.

Biden in his speech criticized Trump as a president who has stoked ?anger,? ?fear? and ?division,? and pledged to unite the country if he is elected president in November.

?The current president has cloaked America in darkness for much too long. Too much anger, too much fear, too much division. Here and now, I give you my word: If you entrust me with the presidency, I will draw on the best of us, not the worst,? Biden said in his address to the virtual convention.

?I?ll be an ally of the light, not the darkness. It?s time for us, for we the people, to come together. And make no mistake, united we can and will overcome this season of darkness in America. We?ll choose hope over fear, facts over fiction, fairness over privilege,? Biden said.

The speech drew praise from political commenters and news anchors, including Fox News's Chris Wallace and former President George W. Bush adviser Karl Rove.

Trump's remarks are part of a targeted assault on the convention by his team.

Vice President Pence argued in an interview on CBS News that the speeches from Biden ?presented such a grim vision for America? and said the Republican National Convention next week would work to tout the Trump administration?s accomplishments.

Trump on Friday commended nurses, doctors and first responders who have combated the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed over 170,000 Americans, and presented a rosy picture of his administration?s response to COVID-19.

He also criticized Biden for not using his speech to talk about law enforcement or China, which Trump has sought to blame for the coronavirus as he faces criticism for his own response to the pandemic.

Many of the Democratic speakers at the convention focused their criticism of Trump on his handling of the coronavirus, and polls have shown a large majority of Americans disapprove of Trump?s handling of the virus. The president is currently trailing Biden nationally and in key swing state polls.

Trump on Friday later pivoted to issuing a grim warning of his own, claiming that a victory by the Democratic ticket would erode safety in American cities and cause an economic depression ?no different than what happened in 1929.?

?If our opponents prevail, no one will be safe in our country and no one will be spared,? Trump told the crowd, which offered cheers of support throughout his remarks. He accused Democrats of endorsing a ?sick ideology.?

Trump has consistently offered dark predictions of American life under a prospective Biden administration, arguing the former vice president would raise taxes and that his election would cause the stock market to crash. Those themes were on full display this week, as Trump and other campaign surrogates traversed the country to visit swing states and offer counter-programming to the Democratic events.

Friday?s event included a sizable crowd of participants, some of whom were photographed wearing masks while others were not. Signs outside the Ritz ballroom encouraged attendees to maintain six feet of distance from one another but many in the room did not do so. The Hill has reached out to the Virginia attorney general?s office regarding whether the event was in compliance with the state?s guidelines for coronavirus.
 

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Blame Blame Deny Lie....The Trump way to Re-election.

How is that new Health Plan coming along.

:0003
 

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In first convention appearance, Trump warns of 'rigged election'
Reuters
Jeff Mason and Jarrett Renshaw
,Reuters?August 24, 2020

https://news.yahoo.com/trump-seeks-reboot-struggling-campaign-050420550.html

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (Reuters) - President Donald Trump adopted a grim tone in remarks to Republicans who formally backed his bid for a second term on Monday, warning without evidence that he could face a "rigged election" in November.

Trump repeated his claim that voting by mail, a longstanding feature of American elections that is expected to be far more common during the coronavirus pandemic, could lead to an increase in fraud. Independent election security experts say voter fraud is quite rare in the United States.

Trump spoke in an unscheduled appearance on the first day of the sharply scaled-back Republican National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina, after he received enough votes to formally win the nomination to take on his Democratic rival, former Vice President Joe Biden, in the Nov. 3 election.

"The only way they can take this election away from us is if this is a rigged election," Trump said. "We're going to win this election."

Party members are meeting amid a pandemic that has killed https://graphics.reuters.com/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS-USA/0100B5K8423/index.html more than 176,000 Americans, erased millions of jobs and eroded the president's standing among voters.

As he has done repeatedly, Trump described states' responses to infections of COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, in starkly partisan terms, casting lockdowns and other steps recommended by public health officials as attempts to influence voting in November.

"What they're doing is using COVID to steal an election," Trump said. "They're using COVID to defraud the American people - all of our people - of a fair and free election."

The in-person proceedings, a far smaller meeting than originally planned, still marked a contrast with Democrats, who opted for an almost entirely virtual format instead of gathering in the election battleground state of Wisconsin. That change was intended to reduce the risk of the virus being spread at the political event.

"We did this out of respect for your state," said Trump, targeting his message at the people of North Carolina, which is expected to be competitive in the November election.

Trump earlier this year moved the convention to Florida, his newly adopted home state, to avoid restrictions on gatherings in North Carolina due to the coronavirus, then abandoned that plan when infection rates soared in Florida.

Biden, 77, is leading Trump, 74, in opinion polls. Biden and his fellow Democrats portrayed Trump as a force for darkness, chaos and incompetence during their convention, while stressing the Democrats' diversity and values like "empathy" and "unity."

Republicans said their convention would offer a more hopeful message, with an emphasis on "law and order," gun rights, tax cuts and the "forgotten" men and women of America.

The party opted not to vote on a traditional platform document detailing its policy goals, instead saying that it supports what Trump is doing. Trump's campaign released a series of bullet-point goals, including a promise to "create 10 million new jobs in 10 months."

In another contrast with the Democratic event, which featured all three living former Democratic presidents, and prior nominees, the Republican event will not include speeches from that party's past living president or candidates.

Neither former President George W. Bush nor 2012 Republican presidential nominee Senator Mitt Romney, who voted to convict Trump at the president's impeachment trial, plan to speak. Also absent from the schedule are several Republicans facing close elections in November, including Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina.

BREAK WITH TRADITION

With the pandemic not yet under control, good news has been in short supply for Trump. His performance as president was sharply criticized by Biden and former President Barack Obama at the Democratic convention.

Biden's campaign said Trump would attempt to change the subject, delivering "more desperate, wild-eyed lies and toxic division, in vain attempts to distract from his mismanagement," according to spokesman Andrew Bates.

"What they won't hear is what American families have urgently needed and been forced to go without for over seven consecutive months: any coherent strategy for defeating the pandemic."

The president, a former reality television star, plans to hold several live events https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...can-national-convention-and-why-idUSKBN25H177 with in-person audiences during the Republican convention, in contrast to Democrats, who showed pre-taped segments or delivered speeches in mostly empty venues.

Trump's planned daily speeches are a break with the tradition of the nominee keeping a low profile before an acceptance speech on the convention's final night.

Overnight, demonstrators and law enforcement clashed for a third straight night near the Charlotte Convention Center with police using pepper spray on the crowd. The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department said in a statement that officers arrested five people late on Sunday.

On Tuesday, Trump's wife, Melania, will give a speech from the White House, while Pence follows on Wednesday from Baltimore's Fort McHenry historic site.

Trump will accept his party's nomination on Thursday night before a crowd on the White House South Lawn. Democrats have criticized the move as a partisan use of public property.

"Trump has four days to make two cases: One is 'we know what we are doing and have done a great job, obviously interrupted by the virus,'" said Constantin Querard, president of Grassroots Partners, an Arizona-based conservative political consultancy.

"And then you have to knock the Democratic ticket for being as far-left as they are," he said.

(Reporting by Jeff Mason in Washington and Jarrett Renshaw in Charlotte, North Carolina; Additional reporting by Leah Mills, Andrea Shalal, Heather Timmons, James Oliphant, Trevor Hunnicutt, Diane Bartz and Tim Ahmann; Writing by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Scott Malone and Paul Simao
 

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