UPDATE!  August 13, 2012  12:45PM

Tickets are no longer available for the Wednesday event with the President and First Lady in Davenport.  All tickets have been distributed.

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Location: Village of East Davenport - the intersection of East 11th St and Christie St

Doors Open: 3 PM CST on Wednesday, August 15

Ticket Distribution Information for Members of the Public: The event is free and open to the public, but tickets are required for entrance. Tickets are limited to one per person and will be distributed on a first-come, first-serve basis. Tickets will be available starting at 12 PM on Sunday, August 12th at the following locations:

Davenport OFA Office

1706 Brady St. #204

Davenport, IA 52803

CHICAGO - Obama for America Campaign Manager Jim Messina released the following statement in response to Mitt Romney picking Congressman Paul Ryan to be his presumptive nominee for vice president:

"In naming Congressman Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney has chosen a leader of the House Republicans who shares his commitment to the flawed theory that new budget-busting tax cuts for the wealthy, while placing greater burdens on the middle class and seniors, will somehow deliver a stronger economy. The architect of the radical Republican House budget, Ryan, like Romney, proposed an additional $250,000 tax cut for millionaires, and deep cuts in education from Head Start to college aid. His plan also would end Medicare as we know it by turning it into a voucher system, shifting thousands of dollars in health care costs to seniors. As a member of Congress, Ryan rubber-stamped the reckless Bush economic policies that exploded our deficit and crashed our economy. Now the Romney-Ryan ticket would take us back by repeating the same, catastrophic mistakes."

###

Braley Applauds Bi-partisan Success Honoring Dubuque Veteran

 

Dubuque, IA - Today, President Obama will sign H.R. 1627, the Honoring America's Veterans and Caring for Camp Lejeune Families Act of 2012.  Included in the law is the Andrew Connolly Veterans Housing Act which will extend a Veterans' Administration adaptive housing grant program that helps injured and disabled veterans retrofit their homes to make them more disability-accessible.  Without this legislation, the adaptive housing program would have expired at the end of 2012.

 

"Meeting Andrew, Jenny and Brody Connolly will always be one of the highlights of my life," Braley said.  "They inspired me, the people of Dubuque and members of both parties in Congress to do more to help one another.  Andrew would have turned 29 last week and I can think of no more fitting tribute to his memory than this bill being signed into law."

 

The Andrew Connolly Veterans Housing Act is named after the late Andrew Connolly of Dubuque - an Iowa Army National Guardsman who returned from a tour of duty in Iraq with a tumor in his spine. With Braley's help, Connolly was able to get a grant that allowed him to move into a wheelchair-accessible home until his untimely death in August 2011.  Connolly became an advocate for expanding the program, despite his failing health.

 

The bill will extend the adaptive housing grant program for disabled veterans for ten years, through December 31, 2022.  The legislation also increases the adaptive housing grant limit for temporary housing to $28,000, and increases the total adaptive housing grant limit from $63,780 to $91,780, revising current law to exclude the temporary residence adaptation grant from counting towards the total grant amount.

 

The Andrew Connolly Veterans Housing Act is included on page 12 of the bill to be signed into law today.  To see this section of the bill, go to: http://go.usa.gov/GPe.  In addition, to see Andrew Connolly testifying in Congress on May 3, 2011 about the importance of the Veterans Housing programs, go to: http://youtu.be/3haDUPFAPvo.

 

 

VA Veterans Adaptive Housing Grant Limits

 

Current Law

Andrew Connolly Act (Becomes Law Today)

Expiration Date

December 31, 2012

December 31, 2022

Temporary Housing Grant Limit

$14,000

$28,000

Permanent Housing Grant Limit

$63,780

$63,780

TOTAL Housing Grant Limit

$63,780

$91,780

 

# # #

Friday, August 3, 2012

Senator Chuck Grassley issued the following comment regarding UNI President Benjamin Allen's announcement that he will retire by July 2013.

"I was sorry to hear of President Allen's retirement but I'm glad to celebrate his accomplishments.  He's an intelligent, upstanding person who's been dedicated to Iowa, higher education, and science.  The University of Northern Iowa is the smallest of the three state schools, but its reputation has grown and continues to grow, thanks to the leadership of President Allen."

Braley-authored bill extends & expands disabled vets housing program for 10 years

 

Washington, D.C. - Rep. Bruce Braley (IA-01) announced that the Andrew Connolly Veterans' Housing Act was passed overwhelmingly by the US House today.  The legislation, authored by Braley last year, will extend for ten years a Veterans' Administration adaptive housing grant program that helps injured and disabled veterans retrofit their homes to make them more disability-accessible.

 

Without this legislation, included as part of the Honoring American Veterans Act of 2011, the adaptive housing project would have expired at the end of 2012.

 

"Meeting Andrew, Jenny and Brody Connolly will always be one of the highlights of my life," Braley said.  "They inspired me, the people of Dubuque and members of both parties in Congress to do more to help one another.  Andrew would have turned 29 this week and I can think of no more fitting tribute to his memory than this bill being signed into law."

 

The Andrew Connolly Veterans' Housing Act is named after the late Andrew Connolly of Dubuque - an Iowa Army National Guardsman who returned from a tour of duty in Iraq with a tumor in his spine. With Braley's help, Connolly was able to get a grant that allowed him to move into a wheelchair-accessible home until his untimely death in August 2011.  Connolly became an advocate for expanding the program, despite his failing health.

 

The bill will extend the adaptive housing grant program for disabled veterans for ten years, through Dec. 31st, 2022.  The legislation also increases the adaptive housing grant limit for temporary housing to $28,000, and increases the total adaptive housing grant limit from $63,780 to $91,780, revising current law to exclude the temporary residence adaptation grant from counting towards the total grant amount.

 

VA Veterans Adaptive Housing Grant Limits

 

Current Law

Andrew Connolly Act (Passed Today)

Expiration Date

December 31, 2012

December 31st, 2022

Temporary Housing Grant Limit

$14,000

$28,000

Permanent Housing Grant Limit

$63,780

$63,780

TOTAL Housing Grant Limit

$63,780

$91,780

 

# # #

Biden's Trip Focused on Outreach to Veterans and Military Families

DES MOINES - On Thursday and Friday, Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden, son of Vice President Joe Biden, will campaign for President Obama in Iowa. He will lay out the differences between President Obama and Mitt Romney's plans for veterans and their families. Biden is a major in the Delaware Army National Guard and was deployed to Iraq in 2008.

The President knows that sacred trust we have with those who serve and protect our nation. It's a commitment that begins at enlistment, and it must never end -- we owe our veterans and their families the care they were promised and the benefits they have earned.

July is Veterans for Obama Month, which was announced during the launch of the Veterans & Military Families for Obama Steering Committee on July 2.

Thursday, July 19

1:30 PM

WHAT:          Iowa Veterans for Obama Meet and Greet with Attorney General Beau Biden

WHERE:        Iowa Veterans Home, Malloy Leisure Resource Center, 1301 Summit St., Marshalltown, IA

 

5:45 PM

WHAT:          Des Moines Veterans Meet and Greet with Attorney General Beau Biden

WHERE:        Plumbers & Steamfitters Local Union 33, 2501 Bell Avenue. Des Moines, IA

 

Friday, July 20

WHAT: Friday Details to be Determined

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

For four years now, we have heard President Obama talk about the need to raise taxes on those earning more than $250,000.  We heard this from him again just yesterday when he spoke in support of increasing taxes on the so-called wealthy.

In his speech yesterday, he made the following points:

·         That those making under $250,000 deserve certainty now.

·         That it's ok to increase taxes on small business owners making more than $250,000 because those tax increases would affect less than 3 percent of small business owners.

·         That those making more than $250,000 aren't paying their fair share.

·         That we can't afford to extend the 2001-2003 bipartisan tax relief measures to these households because of the impact to the deficit.

·         That, if Congress sent him a bill to extend the 2001 bipartisan tax relief just for those making under $250,000, he would sign the bill into law right away.

Well, I rise today to highlight what the President is not telling taxpayers.

First, on the issue of certainty, the President fails to mention what his plans are for the dozens of tax provisions that expired at the end of last year and the dozens more that are expiring at the end of this year. These provisions affect everyone from teachers who dip into their own pockets to purchase school supplies to families and students struggling to pay for higher education.  They also include key incentives for businesses to invest in new equipment and engage in the research needed to produce the products of tomorrow.

He also fails to mention what he would do about the Alternative Minimum Tax that threatens an ever-increasing number of middle class Americans each year.  Over the past several years, legislation was enacted to avert this crisis through a series of "patches" to increase the exemption amount.

Unless an additional patch is signed into law, the AMT will trap 30 million taxpayers this year, or roughly one-fifth of all taxpayers, compared to about 4 million taxpayers last year.

The President also fails to mention whether he continues to support the middle-class tax increases he included in his budget proposal. These include the reinstatement of the Personal Exemption Phase-out and the Pease limitation on itemized deductions.  Additionally, he would impose a new 28 percent limitation on itemized deductions.  Each of these provisions comes with their own income thresholds and phase-out rules that increase complexity and increase taxpayer burden.

Finally, the President fails to mention the tax increases he supported to pay for his health care reform legislation.

These provisions include a bigger haircut on deductions for medical expenses, lower contribution amounts for Flexible Savings Accounts, and taxes on artificial knees and hips that medical device manufacturers will pass on to patients.

Given all of the looming tax increases the President failed to mention in his speech yesterday, it's difficult to see how extending just the 2001-2003 bipartisan tax relief provides certainty to taxpayers, including small businesses.

The President agrees that they are the job creators and engines of our economy. Unfortunately, he defends his tax increases on small businesses by claiming that the impact will be minimal since only 2 percent to 3 percent of small business would be subject to his tax increase.  What the president fails to mention is that this 2 percent to 3 percent account for a large amount of economic activity and jobs.

According to the non-partisan Joint Committee on Taxation, 53 percent of flow through business income would be subject to the President's proposed tax increases.  This 2 percent to 3 percent also accounts for about 25 percent of the employment.

The President claims that he wants give the 97 percent of small businesses "a sense of permanence".  Yet, the tax relief for those in this group is only for another year.

The President continues to claim that we cannot afford to extend tax relief for those earning above $250,000 because of our current deficit situation.  But, he fails to mention any ideas for reducing the deficit by controlling spending or by enacting tax reform, which is the only real way to provide a sense of permanence.

At the start of his Administration, the President established the Simpson-Bowles commission to come up with a framework to address our current out of control spending, as well as reform our tax code.

The Commission issued a report over a year ago that included substantive proposals on how to reform the tax code.  There are some things in the Simpsons-Bowles plan I like and some that I don't.  I like that it would streamline the tax code, reduce tax rates across the board, broaden the base, and enhance economic opportunity.  At the same time, it violates one of my core tenants for tax reform: that it not increase taxes overall. But, it is at least a serious proposal.

However, the President failed to embrace the Simpson-Bowles plan and offered a token "framework" for corporate tax reform. While the President agrees that our current corporate rate is too high, his framework is overly vague and provides little in the way of simplification.   Instead, as one commentator put it, his proposal simply "rearranges the deck chairs on the Titanic".

That being said, at least the President took a position on lowering the corporate tax rate to 28 percent.  This is in stark contrast to his ideas for individual tax reform.

Even thinner on details, his overarching principle for individual tax reform seems to be the wealthy should pay their fair share.  Yet, he never defines what rate or amount of tax constitutes fair share for individuals.  Adopting this rhetoric seems to indicate support for using the tax code to reduce income disparity between the highest and lowest taxpayers.

However, data from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office shows the so-called wealthy already pay the bulk of the taxes and that our tax code is highly progressive.

This chart shows that, if all federal taxes are considered, the top 5 percent of households pay an average effective tax rate of about 28 percent and account for nearly 45 percent of all federal receipts.  In contrast, the bottom 20 percent of households pay an average effective tax rate of about 4 percent and account for less than 1 percent of federal receipts. All federal taxes include individual income, corporate, excise and payroll taxes.

The disparity is even greater when we only consider individual income taxes.  This is actually a better measure since the President proposes to increase just income taxes on the so-called wealthy. If you look at this chart, you will see that the bottom 40 percent of households have an average effective tax rate below zero.  In contrast, the top 5 percent have an average effective tax rate of nearly 18 percent and account for 61 percent of income tax receipts.

I've highlighted the top 5 percent on these charts because these are the households generally earning more than $250,000.  In other words, these are the wealthy households according the President.

Looking at these numbers, it's fair to ask the President to define what he means by "fair share."  How high is he willing to raise taxes to meet his objective?

I have always stated that taxpayers should pay what they owe - not a penny more, not a penny less.  Anyone who looks at my record will see that I have fought long and hard to shut down loopholes and ensure taxpayers of all incomes pay what they legally owe.  However, I hold a fundamentally different view from the President on how the economy works and what government's role should be.

I believe that the money a taxpayer earns belongs to that taxpayer, not a pittance the taxpayer may keep based on the good graces of the government. I generally believe individuals have the right to enjoy the fruits of their success.  I believe that the best way to increase the wealth and livelihood of all Americans is through pro-growth policies that increase the size of the economic pie, not by redistributing the pie based on some unspecified definition of "fairness."

I believe that 18 percent of the gross domestic product of this country is good enough for the government to collect and spend.

This benchmark of 18 percent is what the government has collected consistently regardless of that the statutory tax rate has been.  In other words, just because you raise tax rates on so-called wealthy people does not necessarily mean we will get the influx of revenue some believe we will.

Higher income individuals generally have a greater ability to choose the form of income they will receive.  They also have a greater ability to decide when the will recognize this income, such as through the sale of stock, in a way to limit their taxable income in a given year.  They also have accountants and attorneys to help them legally shield income from the view of the IRS.  As tax rates go up, so does the incentive to reduce income through legal and non-legal means.

I have a chart here that shows annual revenues as a percent of GDP in relation to our top marginal tax rate.  This shows that our annual revenue has remained relatively constant over the years even as the top marginal rate on high-income individuals has fluctuated.

Since post World War II, revenue as a percentage of GDP has averaged right around 18 percent.  This has remained true whether we have had a top marginal rate of 93 percent, 70 percent, 50 percent, 28 percent, or now a 35 percent marginal rate.

What this means is we are not going to be able to tax our way to surpluses.  We are going to have to make substantial adjustments on the spending side to bring it in line with revenues.

History also shows that tax increases just lead to spending increases.  Professor Vedder of Ohio State University has studied tax increases and spending for more than two decades.

His most recent work on this topic, with Stephen Moore of the Wall Street Journal, found that:  "Over the entire post World War II era through 2009, each dollar of new tax revenue has been associated with $1.17 in new spending".

Another study, this one by the National Bureau of Economic Research, states that when it comes to fiscal adjustments, "those based upon spending cuts and no tax increases are more likely to reduce deficits and debt over Gross Domestic Product ratios than those based upon tax increases. In addition, adjustments on the spending side rather than on the tax side are less likely to create recessions."

So we know that increasing taxes, including on targeted groups, is not going to reduce the deficit.

American workers and businesses deserve tax reform and tax certainty.  There is bipartisan agreement that we need comprehensive tax reform.  What we need is real leadership to get this done.

To be sure, lack of leadership is not because of a lack of interest.  The Senate Finance Committee, of which I am a member, has held more than a dozen tax reform hearings during this Congress alone.  The Senate Budget Committee has also held tax reform hearings.

What has been lacking is presidential leadership.  The President's speech yesterday was just that - a speech.  As I outlined, he spoke only about extending certain tax relief measures for those earning under $250,000.

However, he failed to address other looming tax increases and failed to discuss how his other tax increase proposals provide the certainty he claims he wants to provide.

It's easy for the President to engage in election year antics and goad Congress to send him a bill.  Unfortunately, that's not leadership and such speeches do nothing to help individuals and small businesses.

If the President really was concerned about preventing tax increases on the middle class and small businesses, he would at least be working with leaders in his own party to make sure they all agreed on who the wealthy really are. Democratic leaders in the House and the Senate have signaled that they support extension of the lower income tax rates for those making up to a million dollars. In fact, a year ago this week, here in the Senate, we were debating the majority party's "Millionaire Tax Resolution."

So, if the President really wanted Congress to send him a bill that provided certainty to taxpayers, he would make it a priority to get it done.   Unfortunately, he's too busy traipsing around the country raising money for his reelection.  That is not leadership and certainly is not going to provide timely tax relief to the millions of taxpayers who need it.

Mr. President, I yield the floor.

Washington, D.C. - Rep. Bruce Braley (IA-01) today released the following statement after President Obama proposed extending tax cuts for Americans making less than $250,000:

"The Bush tax cuts for the rich are a big reason why our nation is facing record budget deficits today.  Extending middle class tax cuts will keep money in the pockets of more Iowa families, helping to drive job creation and economic growth.  Rolling back the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans will help close the deficit.  This is a fiscally responsible compromise that deserves bipartisan support."

 

According to the Iowa Department of Revenue, in tax year 2010, 99.2 percent of Iowa taxpayers reported income under $250,000.

The cost of extending the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans (those making over $250,000 per year) is estimated at $850 billion over 10 years.

 

# # #

DES MOINES - Before President Obama outlines his plan to build an economy that is grown from the middle-class out at Kirkwood Community College, there will be an eventful pre-program with participants from Iowa City, Cedar Rapids, Cedar Falls, Waterloo and Central City, IA.

 

  • Band - Diplomats of Solid Sound, soul band from Iowa City.

 

  • Emcee - Margaret "Peggy" Whitworth of Cedar Rapids.  Peggy Whitworth was the executive Director of Brucemore, Iowa's only National Trust for Historic Preservation site for 20 years. She has been involved with the Obama campaign since the 2007 caucus. Peggy is an Neighborhood Team Leader in Cedar Rapids, helping to organize people for the election this fall.

 

  • Pledge of Allegiance - Will Overstreet of Cedar Falls. Will is a member of the Iowa National Guard.  He was deployed to Afghanistan, and currently is a teacher with the Waterloo School System.

 

  • National Anthem - Mary Mathis will be a Junior this fall at Kennedy High School in Cedar Rapids.   She is a member of their award-winning show choir, Happiness, and of three varsity choirs. Mary has had lead roles in several school musicals, including Annie and Smile.  She is currently practicing for a lead role in "Camp Rock" at Theatre Cedar Rapids with performances in August.

 

·         Invocation - Pastor Steve Perkins of Payne Memorial African Methodist Episcopal Church in Waterloo - the oldest African American Church in Waterloo.

 

·         Welcome Remarks - Kirsten Running-Marquardt of Cedar Rapids.  Kirsten was elected to the Iowa House in a special election in 2009.  Prior to that, she was an organizer with SEIU, and was active in the Obama campaign in 2008.  She represents southwest Cedar Rapids, including Kirkwood Community College.

 

  • Volunteer Pitch - Andrea Marie Nemecek, Grinnell College student from Cedar Rapids.  Andrea has been involved with the Obama campaign in Cedar Rapids since she was 15.  She went to Kennedy High School where President Obama held his first campaign event in 2007.

 

·         Introduction - Jason McLaughlin, Principal of Central City High School in Central City. President Obama is visiting the home of Jason and Ali McLaughlin on Tuesday morning to discuss the President's vision for an economy built from the middle-out, which reforms our tax code so it rewards work over wealth and ends loopholes and tax breaks for corporations and the wealthiest.

DES MOINES -- On Tuesday, July 10, President Obama will travel to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where he will visit the home of Jason and Ali McLaughlin to discuss the need for Congress to extend middle-class tax cuts that would prevent a tax hike on all families earning less than $250,000. The President believes our economy grows from the middle out and that's why his plan would prevent a $2,200 tax burden on families like the McLaughlins. Currently, as a result of the tax cuts President Obama has already signed into law, the McLaughlins will receive a total of about $4,900 in tax relief over the President's first term.

In addition to the President's call to extend middle-class tax cuts, his plan would also ask millionaires and billionaires to pay their fair share and let the Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthiest expire, which would help families like the McLaughlins send kids to college, buy new homes, pay for health care and child care, and help the economy recover from the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. This is part of the President's plan to cut the deficit by more than $4 trillion and make investments that strengthen the middle class while cutting spending and ensuring that everyone pays their fair share.

Following his roundtable with the McLaughlins, the President will deliver remarks at a grassroots event at Kirkwood Community College in Cedar Rapids, where he will continue to outline his plan to build an economy that is grown from the middle out, not from the top down, where everyone has a fair shot to succeed and plays by the same set of rules.

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