Democrats in Congress step up tax-the-rich efforts

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CAMBRIDGE, Md. (MCT) — Little more than a year ago, Democrats in Congress were hesitant to raise taxes on the wealthy. In the Senate, they could not find enough support for boosting taxes on people making $1 million or more a year, much less on families making $250,000. The pre-2010 House, which had a Democratic majority, barely approved higher rates on investment income.

But after a year in which a tea party-driven Republican Party proposed steep cuts to Medicare and other mainstays of the federal government, polls show that voters have reacted in part by taking a second look at the alternative: tapping corporations and non-earned income as a way to begin balancing the nation’s debt-ridden books.

Congressional Democrats, more liberal since the 2010 elections thinned out moderates’ ranks, are embracing the populist agenda President Barack Obama outlined in his State of the Union speech. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada is planning votes all spring and summer in an attempt to end the tax breaks that corporations and wealthy individuals like Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney enjoy.

With the House controlled by Republicans, none of Obama’s tax measures is expected to become law. But the Democrats are etching a sharp contrast with GOP initiatives on Capitol Hill, as Republicans continue to emphasize last year’s proposals to change Medicare, cut regulations and develop the controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline.

“We’re going to have a robust debate about whose vision is more promising for moving this country forward,” Obama told House Democrats at their annual retreat Friday in Cambridge, Md.

Nothing against the wealthy, the president added — “Everybody wants to be rich.”

“The question is how do we pay for that?” Obama said about the costs of keeping those tax breaks in place. “Because when you give me a tax break that I don’t need and the country can’t afford, two things happen: Either the deficit increases or, alternatively, somebody else has to pay the tab — that senior, or that student, or that family who’s struggling to make ends meet.”

Democrats would prefer to frame this election as a choice between the two parties, using these kinds of contrasts, rather than, as Republicans position the campaign, a referendum on Obama’s policies.

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