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 10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package

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10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package Empty
PostSubject: 10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package   10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package EmptyTue Dec 22, 2020 1:25 pm

10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package
Ann Logue
Tue, December 22, 2020, 8:40 AM MST·3 min read

A “Christmas tree bill,” in legislative circles, is one that includes a lot of little items tangentially related to the point of the law. The $900 billion stimulus package, passed just three days before most Christian denominations celebrate Christmas, definitely fits the theme of the season: The document was over 5,000 pages long and there was apparently trouble uploading the large file, causing a printer delay.

An actual page from the stimulus bill.

This and thousands of pages full of legislation that have absolutely nothing to do with the stimulus are why they don't want Congress reading the bill before voting.

10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package EpzRMrzW4AAK4up?format=jpg&name=medium

The stimulus bill includes – but is absolutely not limited to – the following items:

Families will be able to carry over unused funds in child-care and health care Flexible Spending Accounts into 2021.

An increase in the deductibility of business meals from 50% to 100%. Even though there aren’t that many power breakfasts or three-martini lunches in these days of social distancing, President Trump thought it was important to include, according to the Washington Post.

Funding for two new Smithsonian museums, the Women’s History Museum and the Museum of the American Latino. More things to do in Washington when we’re allowed to travel again!

Creation of a new U.S. consulate in Tibet, guaranteed to cause problems with the Chinese government.

$2 billion set aside for the Space Force.

$500,000,000 for “Israeli Cooperative Programs.”

Elimination of surprise medical bills, in which patients at an in-network hospital or clinic receive treatment by an out-of-network practitioner, resulting in shockingly high bills. Now, patients will pay the in-network rate for all services and the insurance company and provider negotiate the reimbursement.

The repeal of rarely-enforced criminal laws prohibiting the transport of water hyacinths, alligator grass, or water chestnut plants across state lines; putting bogus theft-prevention decals on cars; or misusing the emblems of Smokey Bear, Woody Owl, or the 4-H Club.

A section about the reincarnation and succession of the Dalai Lama.

The prohibition of e-cigarette shipments through the U.S. Postal Service.

=========================================

stimulus $600/american
israel $500 million
weapons $6 billion
candles $3,600
space force $2 billion

Someone who is good at the economy please help me budget this. Our country is dying

10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package EpyeV_kXUAcuQqm?format=png&name=medium

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10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package Empty
PostSubject: Re: 10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package   10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package EmptyTue Dec 22, 2020 2:31 pm

$2.3 TRILLION: Spending Bill Tied to COVID Stimulus Gives Billions to Foreign Countries, $600 to Americans

If Congress succeeds in advancing the proposed $2.3 trillion omnibus spending bill to the President’s desk, the taxpayers will be on the hook for billions of dollars appropriated to special interest foreign aid, even as American citizens are still hurting from government imposed COVID shutdowns...

The 5,593-page omnibus spending bill was posted online Monday afternoon, just hours before House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said a vote would be held. This scheduling made it impossible for any elected official to have read what the bill contained.

Even as the “fact checkers” on social media – and for the many sensationalized mainstream media outlets – scrambled to make sure the country understood that spendthrift taxpayer allocations to foreign entities were not embedded in the COVID relief package, but instead that the COVID relief package was embedded as part of the larger $2.3 trillion spending bill, Christmas did come early for a cadre of foreign states.

Covfefe Coffee
Some of the items included in the bill, which is meant to fund our federal government for the next fiscal year:

$169,739,000 to Vietnam, including $19 million to remediate dioxins (page 1476)
“Unspecified funds” for not-for-profit gender-accessible education institutions in Kabul, Afghanistan (page 1477)
$198,323,000 to Bangladesh, including $23.5 million to support Burmese refugees and an additional $23.3 million for democracy programs (page 1485)
$130,265,000 to Nepal for development and democracy programs (page 1485)
$15 million for Pakistani democracy programs and an additional $10 million for “gender programs” (page 1486)
$15 million for Sri Lanka so they can refurbish a high endurance cutter patrol boat (page 1489)
$505,925,000 to Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama to address the migration of unaccompanied, undocumented minors to the United States” (pages 1490-1491)
$461,375,000 to Colombia for programs related to counter-narcotics and human rights (pages 1494-1496)
$74.8 million to the Caribbean Basin Security Initiative (page 1498)
$33 million for democracy programs for Venezuela (page 1498)
“Unspecified funds” to Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Curacao, and Trinidad and Tobago to mitigate the impacted of refugees from Venezuela (page 1499)
$132,025,000 for “assistance” for Georgia (page 1499)
$453 million for assistance for Ukraine (page 1500)
$500 million to Israel for “Israeli Cooperative Programs” (page 341)
In just what is listed here – and there is more in the legislation, the American taxpayers are on the hook for over $2.189 trillion! Read the report here.

https://docs.house.gov/billsthisweek/20201221/BILLS-116HR133SA-RCP-116-68.pdf

US Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ), blasted the bill before the details even emerged saying, “Just another bill we have to pass before the American people discover all the goodies that special interests jammed into it over the past week.”

To compare, the COVID relief package that Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), spared over prior to the election secured just $900 billion in aid for the American people and American small business with even some of that funding going to commercial airlines and Amtrack.

Six Senators voted no on the omnibus spending bill: Sens. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), Ted Cruz (R-TX), Ron Johnson (R-WI), Mike Lee (R-UT), Rand Paul (R-KY), and Rick Scott (R-FL).

Cruz, as he has done I the past, railed against the process as a whole, tweeting out, “It’s ABSURD to have a $2.5 trillion spending bill negotiated in secret and then – hours later – demand an up-or-down vote on a bill nobody has had time to read.”

And Lee laid down the gauntlet tweeting, “This process, by which members of Congress are asked to defer blindly to legislation negotiated entirely in secret by four of their colleagues, must come to an end.”

The COVID stimulus package reached by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, by comparison, offers only $600 to Americans after almost a full year of economic disruptions and lockdowns.

The language of the legislation is currently ping-ponging in the House and Senate before final votes on the measure.


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10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package Empty
PostSubject: Re: 10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package   10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package EmptyTue Dec 22, 2020 2:31 pm

$2.3 TRILLION: Spending Bill Tied to COVID Stimulus Gives Billions to Foreign Countries, $600 to Americans

If Congress succeeds in advancing the proposed $2.3 trillion omnibus spending bill to the President’s desk, the taxpayers will be on the hook for billions of dollars appropriated to special interest foreign aid, even as American citizens are still hurting from government imposed COVID shutdowns...

The 5,593-page omnibus spending bill was posted online Monday afternoon, just hours before House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said a vote would be held. This scheduling made it impossible for any elected official to have read what the bill contained.

Even as the “fact checkers” on social media – and for the many sensationalized mainstream media outlets – scrambled to make sure the country understood that spendthrift taxpayer allocations to foreign entities were not embedded in the COVID relief package, but instead that the COVID relief package was embedded as part of the larger $2.3 trillion spending bill, Christmas did come early for a cadre of foreign states.

Covfefe Coffee
Some of the items included in the bill, which is meant to fund our federal government for the next fiscal year:

$169,739,000 to Vietnam, including $19 million to remediate dioxins (page 1476)
“Unspecified funds” for not-for-profit gender-accessible education institutions in Kabul, Afghanistan (page 1477)
$198,323,000 to Bangladesh, including $23.5 million to support Burmese refugees and an additional $23.3 million for democracy programs (page 1485)
$130,265,000 to Nepal for development and democracy programs (page 1485)
$15 million for Pakistani democracy programs and an additional $10 million for “gender programs” (page 1486)
$15 million for Sri Lanka so they can refurbish a high endurance cutter patrol boat (page 1489)
$505,925,000 to Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Panama to address the migration of unaccompanied, undocumented minors to the United States” (pages 1490-1491)
$461,375,000 to Colombia for programs related to counter-narcotics and human rights (pages 1494-1496)
$74.8 million to the Caribbean Basin Security Initiative (page 1498)
$33 million for democracy programs for Venezuela (page 1498)
“Unspecified funds” to Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Curacao, and Trinidad and Tobago to mitigate the impacted of refugees from Venezuela (page 1499)
$132,025,000 for “assistance” for Georgia (page 1499)
$453 million for assistance for Ukraine (page 1500)
$500 million to Israel for “Israeli Cooperative Programs” (page 341)
In just what is listed here – and there is more in the legislation, the American taxpayers are on the hook for over $2.189 trillion! Read the report here.

https://docs.house.gov/billsthisweek/20201221/BILLS-116HR133SA-RCP-116-68.pdf

US Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ), blasted the bill before the details even emerged saying, “Just another bill we have to pass before the American people discover all the goodies that special interests jammed into it over the past week.”

To compare, the COVID relief package that Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), spared over prior to the election secured just $900 billion in aid for the American people and American small business with even some of that funding going to commercial airlines and Amtrack.

Six Senators voted no on the omnibus spending bill: Sens. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), Ted Cruz (R-TX), Ron Johnson (R-WI), Mike Lee (R-UT), Rand Paul (R-KY), and Rick Scott (R-FL).

Cruz, as he has done I the past, railed against the process as a whole, tweeting out, “It’s ABSURD to have a $2.5 trillion spending bill negotiated in secret and then – hours later – demand an up-or-down vote on a bill nobody has had time to read.”

And Lee laid down the gauntlet tweeting, “This process, by which members of Congress are asked to defer blindly to legislation negotiated entirely in secret by four of their colleagues, must come to an end.”

The COVID stimulus package reached by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, by comparison, offers only $600 to Americans after almost a full year of economic disruptions and lockdowns.

The language of the legislation is currently ping-ponging in the House and Senate before final votes on the measure.


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10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package Empty
PostSubject: Re: 10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package   10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package EmptyTue Dec 22, 2020 2:45 pm

Taxes don't "pay for" a damn thing.

https://realprogressives.org/mmt-basics/

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10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package Empty
PostSubject: Re: 10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package   10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package EmptyTue Dec 22, 2020 10:46 pm

Pelosi responds to Trump's request for $2,000 stimulus checks: 'Let's do it!'
Catherine Garcia
Tue, December 22, 2020, 9:02 PM MST

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) quickly let President Trump know that if he really wants a coronavirus relief bill that includes $2,000 direct payments to Americans, she's ready to help make it happen.

On Tuesday evening, Trump blasted the $900 billion economic relief package passed by Congress on Monday night, calling the measure a "disgrace." Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin pushed for $600 stimulus checks, an amount Trump said was "ridiculously low." The president did not participate in the negotiations, and suggested he won't sign the bill until it is amended to include checks worth $2,000.

Pelosi tweeted in response that Republicans "repeatedly refused to say what amount the president wanted for direct checks. At last, the president has agreed to $2,000 — Democrats are ready to bring this to the floor this week by unanimous consent. Let's do it!"

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) also chimed in, saying, "We spent months trying to secure $2,000 checks but Republicans blocked it. Trump needs to sign the bill to help people and keep the government open and we're glad to pass more aid Americans need." Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) said she has the legislation already written and "ready to go."

The House will meet on Thursday for a pro forma session, during which Pelosi could advance the $2,000 stimulus checks. For this to work, however, all House Republicans would need to be on board and Senate Republicans would also have to unanimously pass the measure, The Washington Post reports.

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10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package Empty
PostSubject: Re: 10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package   10 Surprises Congress Snuck Into The Stimulus Package EmptyThu Dec 24, 2020 4:56 am

The Fine Print in a 5,593-Page Spending Bill: Tax Breaks and Horse Racing
Luke Broadwater, Jesse Drucker and Rebecca R. Ruiz |The New York Times)
Wed, December 23, 2020, 6:00 AM MST

WASHINGTON — Tucked away in the 5,593-page spending bill that Congress rushed through Monday night is a provision that some tax experts call a $200 billion giveaway to the rich.

It involves the tens of thousands of businesses that received loans from the federal government this spring with the promise that the loans would be forgiven, tax free, if they agreed to keep employees on the payroll through the coronavirus pandemic.

But for some businesses and their high-paid accountants, that was not enough. They went to Congress with another request: Not only should the forgiven loans not to be taxed as income, but the expenditures used with those loans should be tax deductible.

“High-income business owners have had tax benefits and unprecedented government grants showered down upon then. And the scale is massive,” wrote Adam Looney, a fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former Treasury Department tax official in the Obama administration, who estimated that $120 billion of the $200 billion would flow to the top 1% of Americans.

The new provision allows for a classic double dip into the Paycheck Protection Program, as businesses get free money from the government, then get to deduct that largess from their taxes.

And it is one of hundreds included in a huge spending package and a coronavirus stimulus bill that is supposed to help businesses and families struggling during the pandemic but, critics say, swerved far afield. President Donald Trump on Tuesday night blasted it as a disgrace and demanded revisions.

“Congress found plenty of money for foreign countries, lobbyists and special interests, while sending the bare minimum to the American people who need it,” he said in a video posted on Twitter that stopped just short of a veto threat.

The measure includes serious policy changes beyond the much-needed $900 billion in coronavirus relief, such as a simplification of federal financial aid forms, measures to address climate change and a provision to stop “surprise billing” from hospitals when patients unwittingly receive care from physicians out of their insurance networks.

But there is also much grumbling over other provisions that lawmakers had not fully reviewed, and a process that left most of them and the public in the dark until after the bill was passed. The anger was bipartisan.

“Members of Congress have not read this bill. It’s over 5,000 pages, arrived at 2 p.m. today, and we are told to expect a vote on it in two hours,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., wrote on Twitter on Monday. “This isn’t governance. It’s hostage-taking.”

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, agreed — the two do not agree on much.

“It’s ABSURD to have a $2.5 trillion spending bill negotiated in secret and then — hours later — demand an up-or-down vote on a bill nobody has had time to read,” he wrote on Twitter on Monday.

The items jammed into the bill are varied and at times bewildering. The bill would make it a felony to offer illegal streaming services. One provision requires the CIA to report back to Congress on the activities of Eastern European oligarchs tied to President Vladimir Putin of Russia. The federal government would be required to set up a program aimed at eradicating the murder hornet and to crack down on online sales of e-cigarettes to minors.

It authorizes 93 acres of federal lands to be used for the construction of the Teddy Roosevelt Presidential Library in North Dakota and creates an independent commission to oversee horse racing, a priority of Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the majority leader.

McConnell inserted that item to get around the objections of a Democratic senator, who wanted it amended, but he received agreement from other congressional leaders.

Alexander M. Waldrop, CEO of the National Thoroughbred Racing Association, said Tuesday that McConnell had “said many times he feared for the future of horse racing and the impact on the industry, which of course is critical to Kentucky.”

That the racing legislation — versions of which the industry had debated for years — passed as part of the COVID-19 relief bill was of no particular mind, Waldrop said.

“It just developed this way over the last several weeks,” he said. “The only approach left to us was a federally sanctioned, independent, self-regulatory organization. It was our only viable option left, and this legislation accomplishes that.”

But the tax provisions — including extending a $2.5 billion break for race car tracks and allowing a $6.3 billion write-off for business meals, derided as the “three-martini lunch” expense — have prompted the most hand-wringing.

The bill also lowers some taxes on alcoholic beverages.

No break is bigger, however, than the deductions that will soon be permitted under the Paycheck Protection Program. Businesses had been lobbying the Treasury Department and the IRS since the spring to deduct spending from PPP loans, but Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin was firmly opposed, saying deducting expenditures from funds not considered taxable income violated “Tax 101.”

The PPP was the most visible part of the federal government’s coronavirus relief efforts in the spring to keep small businesses afloat. So far, the government has distributed more than $500 billion in loans, which could be forgiven and turned into permanent grants as long as the businesses use most of the money to pay workers and keep people employed.

In passing the law in the spring, Congress explicitly said that the PPP funds should not be included as taxable income — unlike, say, unemployment benefits.

Despite that largess, businesses wanted more. In May, the heads of the tax-writing committees — Sens. Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, and Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Rep. Richard E. Neal, D-Mass. — wrote Mnuchin urging him to reconsider his opposition.

“Small businesses need help maintaining their cash flow, not more strains on it,” they wrote.

But a Brookings Institution analysis said the change would help far more wealthy than mom-and-pop business owners.

“So there’s no cost on the way in and no cost on the way out — those two don’t add up,” said Richard L. Reinhold, the former chairman of the tax department at Willkie Farr & Gallagher and a professor at Cornell Law School. Congress could have simply expanded the PPP program, but instead it did it almost by stealth, through a tax deduction.

“That’s the part that is troublesome,” he said.

Although there had been discussion of limiting the deduction to PPP recipients below a certain income threshold, the final provision was made available to anyone, regardless of income.

The Small Business Administration this month released data showing that just 1% of the program’s 5.2 million borrowers had received more than a quarter of the $523 billion disbursed.

That 1% included high-priced law firms like Boies Schiller Flexner and the operator of New York’s biggest horse tracks, which received the maximum loan amount of $10 million.

“The year 2020 is going to be one of the most unequal years in modern history,” Looney said. “Part of the inequity is the effect of COVID, which hammered service sectors the most and allowed rich, educated people to work on Zoom. But the government totally compounded these inequities with their response.”

Yet in the end, only six senators, all Republicans, voted against the coronavirus relief package and spending bill, mostly citing fiscal concerns about runaway spending, while 85 House members — a mix of Democrats and Republicans — voted against its military provisions. The bill increased military spending by about $5 billion.

Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., opposed the military spending but voted for other aspects of the bill. He and his liberal colleagues had lobbied for direct payments for most Americans as part of a relief package, and he said he shared colleagues’ concerns about a lack of time to review the final piece of legislation.

“We need a better system to have members review online text as it is being drafted and have input,” Khanna said. “That said, leadership did keep us informed on almost daily calls about the essential aspects of the bills and the issues at stake.”

Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-W.Va., one of the leaders of the bipartisan group that pushed for a $900 billion stimulus, said leadership intentionally waited until the last minute to unveil final proposals.

“Leadership likes the process the way it is,” he said. “Wait until the deadline, and then there’s no input at all. They say, take this or not. I’m sick and tired of how this game has been played.”

That said, there was plenty for lawmakers to cheer for. They sent out news releases promoting preferred provisions like the ban on most surprise medical bills, the restoration of college financial aid for incarcerated people, and the restrictions on the use of powerful planet-warming chemicals that are commonly used in air conditioners and refrigerators. The bill also creates new museums honoring women and Latinos.

“What you see at the end of every Congress is a clearing of the decks,” said Josh Huder, a senior fellow at the Government Affairs Institute at Georgetown University. “It’s all the stuff we wanted to pass but couldn’t. Everybody would love for legislation to be passed individually, but that is really a function of a bygone era that is not coming back.”

“There’s a lot of good stuff,” he said, “but something definitely gets snuck in.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

© 2020 The New York Times Company

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