----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2011 11:32 AM
Subject: Senate Votes on Bad Budget Plans May be
Tonight!
The U.S. Senate is expected to start debate on some
dangerously bad budget proposals this afternoon (Wednesday, May 25). They
may start voting on them sometime after 5:00 p.m.
Please take a moment to tell both your Senators to
vote NO.
The Senate
schedule is subject to change - but if they don't vote tonight, they will
soon. Your Senators need to know that their constituents DO NOT WANT
massive cuts in Medicaid, Medicare, SNAP/food stamps, education, and pretty much
every other human needs program. And especially do not want these cuts to
pay for massive new tax cuts for the richest among
us.
That's why
we've made it easy to contact them: click here ►for a letter you can email
to your Senators. We hope you'll personalize it by adding something of
importance to you in the middle of the letter. Individualized emails get
much more attention. But personalized or not, please take a minute to tell
your Senators how important it is to vote no.
(To write to your Senators: http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/125/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=6874)
These
budgets are much more about shrinking government and cutting upper-income taxes
than about reducing the deficit. They hurt low- and moderate-income
people, cost millions of jobs, threaten our fragile economic recovery, leave
millions (including seniors) without vital medical coverage, and close off
opportunities for our children to share in future economic
growth.
The bad
budgets that are expected on the Senate floor:
- The
House-passed Budget Resolution: Over 10 years, it would slash $4.3
trillion in needed services, about two-thirds of which help low-income
people. At the same time, it makes net tax cuts worth $4.2
trillion almost exclusively targeted to the top 5 percent, leaving relatively
little for deficit reduction. (Note the word "net" - actually, there are
$6.7 trillion in tax cuts, with a totally unspecified reduction in other tax
breaks said to offset $2.5 trillion of the cost.) This budget proposal
would set rigid limits on Medicaid and food stamps/SNAP, resulting in a 35
percent cut for Medicaid by 2022 and an almost 20 percent cut in food
stamps. Starting in the second decade, the House budget would turn
Medicare into a voucher, doubling the burden of payment for its
beneficiaries. Far from helping the economy, this plan would cause the
loss of 2.2 million jobs over the next two years.
Here's
an example of winners and losers in the House Budget
Resolution:
Just one of the new tax cuts benefiting high-earners
would give a $1.64
million tax cut to a household earning $8.5 million. But the cuts in
food stamps/SNAP would take
away $147 a month from a low-income family of four. And a
family with two children with a parent working full-time at the minimum wage
would lose about $1,500 a year from a cut in the Child Tax Credit.
Just some of the reasons why you
should send this letter to your Senators right now!
For more
information about the House budget, click here.
(http://www.chn.org/humanneeds/110419b.html)
- Senator
Patrick Toomey's budget proposal: Senator Toomey (R-PA) has drafted
a budget that cuts even more than the House plan (spending 3 percent less over
10 years). It is less specific than the House budget, but would also
restrict Medicaid spending, and would target other programs like food
stamps/SNAP, Unemployment Insurance, and Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families for cuts (such programs would be cut back to 2007 levels by
2014). The plan outline speaks of "reform of welfare programs" by
setting fixed annual spending caps. Domestic programs requiring annual
appropriations (such as education, housing, job training, and many social
services) would be slashed back to FY 2006 levels, a deeper cut than the House
budget proposes, with spending reduced from $515.1 billion in FY 2011 (this
year) to $435 billion in FY 2012. Senator Toomey's plan also makes a
one-year cut of $188.4 billion from programs that do not need annual
appropriations, including Medicaid, food stamps, Supplemental Security Income,
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, child welfare programs, unemployment
insurance, etc. The plan indicates that more than half this figure will
come from programs that provide income security for low-income people.
This plan also reduces tax rates for the wealthiest and for corporations, with
the stated goal of remaining revenue neutral (however, the "special tax
breaks" that would be eliminated to pay for rate reductions are
unspecified). For more information about the Toomey
budget plan, click here:
(http://www.chn.org/pdf/2011/Toomey-Restoring-Balance-Final1.pdf
) .
For more information about these and other deficit reduction and/or
massive service cut proposals, see CHN's SAVE
for All webpage: http://www.chn.org/save4all/index.html
When so
much is at stake, please don't let your Senators say that no one cared enough to
contact them. Don't delay! Click here
to send the letter (http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/125/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=6874)
==========================
Please forward this
e-mail!
Do not reply to this email. But we want to hear
from you! See our contact information at http://www.chn.org/about/staff.html
to contact us directly.
Follow us on Facebook
and Twitter!
If you received this message from a friend, you
can sign up for CHN emails at http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/125/t/3748/signUp.jsp?key=4631.
This message was sent
to caro...@earthlink.net. To modify your email communication preferences or
update your personal profile visit your subscription management page here
. To unsubscribe
from Coalition on Human Needs lists, click here: http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/125/p/salsa/supporter/unsubscribe/public/index.sjs?unsubscribe_page_KEY=219&Email=caro...@earthlink.net&email_blast_KEY=1215447.