$350 billion a year is roughly three times the size of the sequester.
Shouldn't there be eighty co-sponsors of this bill? Wouldn't it be grand if
we could get "financial transactions tax" on the table for the Big Deal?

http://www.thenation.com/blog/169950/america-broke-not-robin-hood-tax

Is America Broke? Not With a Robin Hood Tax
John Nichols on September 14, 2012 - 3:33 PM ET

When *The Nation* published its "People’s
Platform"<http://www.thenation.com/article/169300/peoples-platform-democratic-party>prior
to the recent Republican and Democratic conventions, the first plank
in the proposal to move our politics in “a more boldly progressive
direction” was a call for a Robin Hood Tax. <http://robinhoodtax.org/>

The People's Platform declared:

Michael Moore was right when he said, ‘America is not broke.’ But America
will act like it is as long as politicians of both parties fail to
challenge the prevailing view that our resources are insufficient to
maintain Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid—let alone expand essential
programs to meet pressing social needs. Yes, of course it is necessary to
rescind the Bush/Cheney tax cuts for the rich. But at a time when so much
of our economy involves the rapid trading of financial instruments, it is
also time to impose a financial transactions tax on the speculators who
caused an economic meltdown that continues to inflict pain here and abroad.

Celebrating the campaign of the National Nurses United
union<http://www.nationalnursesunited.org/pages/ncha>to win support
for a “Robin Hood Tax” on every trade to fund social
services and rebuild communities, the platform argued that: “Democrats
should make this common-sense levy central to their agenda, part of a
long-term vision for moving America from a Wall Street–driven casino
capitalism to a Main Street–focused caring, clean and green economics.”

That’s what is happening now, as Congressman Keith Ellison, the Minnesota
Democrat who co-chairs the Congressional Progressive Caucus, moves to
introduce the most detailed proposal yet for a robust Financial Transaction
Tax.

Ellison’s “Inclusive Prosperity
Act”<http://maryknollogc.org/alerts/ask-your-rep-cosponsor-%E2%80%9Cinclusive-prosperity-act%E2%80%9D>would
impose a 0.5 percent tax on stock trades. It would also tax trades in
bonds, derivatives and currency.

That could add as much as $350 billion a year to the federal treasury,
providing vital resources that—in combination with the elimination of
Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy and aggressive moves to prevent the
sheltering of assets in tax havens—would make a mockery of Republican vice
presidential candidate Paul Ryan's fantastical claims about fiscal crisis.

“We’re not broke,” Ellison says of the United States. “We’ve got plenty of
money. It’s just not in the hands of the American people because the people
with so much of the wealth bought lobbyists and influence to get loopholes
for themselves so that they would not have to pay for the civilization that
is America.”

Along with more constrained proposals by U.S. Senator Tom Harkin, D-Iowa,
and Congressman Peter DeFazio, D-Oregon, the Ellison plan seeks to extract
a small amount of the money that speculators now pocket in order to pay for
vital public services.

“The money is in the hands of the most privileged and well-to-do Americans,
many of whom churn—and I don’t say ‘trade,’ I mean ‘churn’—stocks, bonds
and derivatives on Wall Street,” the congressman from Minnesota explained
during last week’s Democratic National Convention, when he appeared at a
“Progressive Central” event
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jORJM_onAJY>organized by Progressive
Democrats of America and supported by many
activist groups and *The Nation*.

“So one of the ways for us as Americans to recoup the money is to tax them
when they do this churning of these financial assets,” Ellison continued.
“It’s a transaction tax. It is appropriately named by its most vigorous
advocates a ‘Robin Hood Tax.’”

National Nurses United, which works with nurses around the world in a
global “Robin Hood Tax” campaign, has worked with Ellison to spread the
word about renewing the Financial Transactions Tax. (Yes, renewing": during
the period of America’s greatest economic growth in the 20th
century,<http://maryknollogc.org/alerts/ask-your-rep-cosponsor-%E2%80%9Cinclusive-prosperity-act%E2%80%9D>the
U.S. employed just such a tax.)

“This small tax on Wall Street transactions would raise hundreds of
billions of dollars to restore Main Street, tackle dire needs in the US and
overseas; in short to support humanity, not austerity,” explains NNU’s
Public Policy Director Michael
Lighty,<http://www.nationalnursesunited.org/pages/ncha>who argues
that: “This bill represents an exciting step forward to our
collective goal of taxing Wall Street to meet the needs of Main Street.”

Ellison says he expects to see significant support for the measure from
members of the Congressional Progressive
Caucus.<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jORJM_onAJY>But the real
progress, he argues, will come as Americans organize to
support the measure.

Already, National Nurses United and Progressive Democrats of America have
been joined by groups such as the Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns (the
social justice advocacy arm of the Maryknoll Sisters, Maryknoll Fathers &
Brothers, Maryknoll Lay Missioners and Maryknoll Affiliates) are mounting
campaigns urging voters to "Ask Your Rep to Sign on toe the Inclusive
Prosperity 
Act."<http://maryknollogc.org/alerts/ask-your-rep-cosponsor-%E2%80%9Cinclusive-prosperity-act%E2%80%9D>

“I just want you to know that this can happen, if you’ll get behind it,”
the congressman told supporters of the Robin Hood Tax. “This is a people’s
movement. This is the people’s movement. The people have to play a role in
the movement, and if they play that role… We can win it.”

If Ellison is right, then Paul Ryan is wrong.

Because if Congress makes the rich pay their fair share, cracks down of
off-shore tax havens and makes taxes the speculators, America is not—and
will never be—broke.


-- 
Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
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