After the fiscal cliff
Updated: Thursday, January 3 2013, 07:14 PM EST
(NEWSCHANNEL 3) – Thursday is the last day of the 112th Congress; unpopular, unproductive and sometimes seemingly unhinged.
It did manage to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff with a lot of backroom brinksmanship over the past several days, but in this installment of Tom’s Corner, Tom Van Howe says he is not impressed.
Look, ever since this Congress fell apart a year-and-a-half ago over the debt ceiling they knew this fiscal cliff issue was coming. These are the people we the people hired to represent us in conducting our nation’s business, but they turned out to be, for the most part, much more petulant than practical.
This country has been spending more than it takes in for a long time. Who votes to spend that much money? Congress. Who gave the president authority to start two wars and borrow money to pay for them? Congress. Who goes around acting like debts coming due are a surprise? Congress. Who wants to avoid acting grown up and owning up to the fiscal problems we face? Congress.
What was it President Barack Obama signed into law on Wednesday by autopen after resuming his vacation in Hawaii? It raises taxes by four-and-a-half percent on those individuals who make more than $400,000 a year and on couples who make more than $450,000 a year. That, my friends, will raise roughly $600 billion dollars in revenues over the next ten years. That’s it? Are you kidding me?
The national debt is $16 trillion and growing. That new $600 billion will pay roughly one-quarter of the interest on that debt over the next ten years. That’s all. 25 percent.
It would be one thing if that was just for starters, but it’s not. Nobody wants to tackle entitlements because they’re the mines in the battlefield and to step on one could mean voters will no longer like you. It’s a kind of cowardice.
I’m not sure anyone even knows how to attack defense spending, but we could start by not spending money on weapons the armed forces say they don’t need.
Everyone is hoping that federal revenues will go up dramatically as the economy improves in the years ahead, but there’s no guarantee of that, not by a long shot. The truth is we’re in serious financial trouble and we’re in this together and if it means a change in our Medicaid or Medicare or our Social Security checks, we’ve got to bite the bullet.
It is not acceptable to give these bills to our children and grandchildren, nor is it acceptable to think we can find the state on the backs of the fewer than half-million people, out of a population of 310 million people, who make more than $400,000 a year.
Somebody in Washington has got to have the courage to say that we’re sinking and that we really do need a bigger boat.
In this corner, I’m Tom Van Howe.
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Last Update on May 17, 2013 17:38 GMT
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WASHINGTON (AP) -- A measure of the U.S. economy's future health rose in solidly in April, buoyed by a sharp rise in applications to build new homes and apartments.
The Conference Board says its index of leading indicators increased 0.6 percent last month to a reading of 95. That followed a 0.2 percent decline in March.
The index is intended to signal economic conditions three to six months out.
Conference Board economist Ken Goldstein said the index is 3.5 percent higher at an annual rate than it was six months ago, suggesting expansion for the economy. He said the biggest risk at the moment is the drag from cuts in federal spending.
STATE UNEMPLOYMENT
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Solid hiring helped push down unemployment rates in 40 U.S. states last month, the most since November. The declines show job markets are improving in most areas of the country.
The Labor Department says unemployment rates only rose in Louisiana, Tennessee and North Dakota. Rates were unchanged in seven states.
California, New York and South Carolina all reported the largest declines in April unemployment. Each states rate fell by 0.4 percentage points.
The report noted that 30 states added jobs in April; 18 reported fewer jobs.
Nationwide, employers added 165,000 jobs in April and the unemployment rate fell to a four-year low of 7.5 percent. The economy has added an average of 208,000 jobs a month since November. That's up from only 138,000 a month in the previous six months.
GENERAL MOTORS-STOCK
DETROIT (AP) -- Shares of General Motors are trading above $33 for the first time in over two years.
The automaker's stock reached $33.58 Friday morning before pulling back to $33.50, up 3.4 percent, at midday. It's the first time the stock has risen above GM's initial public offering price since May 4, 2011. GM sold shares for $33 in a November 2010 IPO.
The shares are up almost 14 percent this year, due largely to strong first-quarter earnings, better prospects in Europe and a rally in U.S. stock markets.
The European automakers association said Friday that registrations rose last month for the first time in 18 months. European Union sales rose 1.7 percent, but GM sales fell 4.5 percent.
GM has lost money in Europe for more than a dozen years.
CHINA-CADILLAC-RECALL
BEIJING (AP) -- China's product safety agency says General Motors Co.'s main Chinese joint venture is recalling Cadillac SUVs to correct a problem with nuts that hold their wheels in place.
The General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine said Friday that Shanghai GM will recall 2,653 imported Cadillac SRXs.
The agency said torque might cause nuts on the wheels to loosen. It said the nuts will be adjusted and tightened.
It was not immediately clear if the problem was limited only to such models in China.
The incident is the second recall of vehicles by a global automaker in China in two months after Volkswagen AG said in March it needed to fix gearboxes on 384,000 vehicles.
NATURAL GAS-EXPORT TERMINAL
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Energy Department has given conditional approval to a Texas company that wants to export liquefied natural gas, the second LNG export project the Obama administration has approved as it faces a wave of export requests.
The permit would allow Freeport LNG Expansion L.P. to export up to 1.4 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day from its terminal near Freeport, Texas, south of Houston. It is subject to environmental review and final regulatory approval.
The approval Friday follows Energy Department authorization for the Sabine Pass LNG Terminal in Louisiana in 2011.
Energy companies are seeking federal permits for 20 export projects that could handle as much as 29 billion cubic feet of natural gas a day as production booms as a result of improved drilling techniques.
IRS-POLITICAL GROUPS
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The ousted head of the Internal Revenue Service is apologizing to Congress for his agency's tougher treatment of tea party and other conservative groups seeking tax-exempt status.
At a hearing that saw lawmakers from both parties harshly criticize his agency, Steven Miller conceded that "foolish mistakes were made" by IRS officials trying to handle a flood of groups seeking tax-exempt status.
But he told the House Ways and Means Committee that the process that resulted in conservatives being targeted, "while intolerable, was a mistake and not an act of partisanship."
IRS-TEA PARTY
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Dozens of tea party groups and other conservative organizations of the kind subjected to improper scrutiny by the Internal Revenue Service operate with small budgets and rarely displayed overt partisan activities.
The Associated Press reviewed the public tax filings by 93 such activist groups.
Tax law experts say that a few of the groups built million-dollar operations and political ties that could have been legitimate grounds for IRS investigation.
Only 21 of the 93 groups the AP reviewed reported annual gross receipts higher than $25,000 between 2009 and 2011.
The median income for all the groups was just $16,700 a year. That figure includes the nation's biggest tea party group, the Georgia-based Tea Party Patriots Inc. It took in $20.2 million in 2012.
BUDGET BATTLE-AIR SHOWS
BRUNSWICK, Maine (AP) -- The automatic budget cuts that grounded the Navy Blue Angels and Air Force Thunderbirds are taking a toll on performers, air show announcers, concessionaires, vendors and others who depend on air shows and the millions of spectators.
All told, the International Council of Air Shows says 64 air shows that depended on military participation have canceled this season.
Those included Wings over Wayne at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base in North Carolina and Skyfest 2013 at Fairchild Air Force Base in Washington state this weekend.
The council says air shows draw nearly three times more spectators than NASCAR events and pump about $1.5 billion into the economy and. Aerobatic pilot Sean Tucker describes the air shows as "the Indianapolis 500, the Fourth of July, and `Top Gun' rolled into one."
BRITAIN-FT-HACKING
LONDON (AP) -- The Financial Times says that several of its blogs and Twitter feeds have been compromised by hackers. The Syrian Electronic Army, a pro-government group which has repeatedly attacked Western media organizations, has claimed responsibility.
A few of the FT's dozens of Twitter feeds were compromised Friday and broadcast messages supporting Syrian President Bashar Assad. One described the Syrian rebel group Jabhat al-Nusra as terrorists and linked to a graphic video of a hooded man shooting kneeling prisoners in the back of the head.
The hackers have apparently spent much of the past 24 hours trying to break into the FT's system.
An internal company memo distributed Thursday and seen by The Associated Press warned FT employees not to click on suspicious emails.
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