Opinion: Weekly remarks: Sen. Mike Johanns on taxes, President Obama on auto bailout
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.
Weekly remarks by Sen. Mike Johanns of Nebraska, as prepared by the Republican National Committee:
Hello, Iâm Senator Mike Johanns from the great state of Nebraska.
I begin with a very sincere question for our President.
Isnât it time, Mr. President, to tone down the rhetoric and to govern?
Iâm a relatively new member of the U.S. Senate. But, Iâve had an opportunity to serve in the Cabinet; to govern a state; and to serve as the Mayor of a wonderful community.
And I learned early on that to advance an agenda, a leader needs to pull people together.
You talk about creating jobs and that sounds good, but your policies just do the opposite â with a fiercely anti-business tone.
Letâs take an honest look at the impact of your agenda.
More than 80 percent of jobs are provided by the private sector. Those are the jobs that put food on the table, pay the mortgage, and send our children to college.
Our small businesses generate 65 percent of the new jobs.
In Nebraska, we like to call them our Mom and Pop enterprises.
These are really good people who donât want to get caught-up in a political debate.
They want to get up in the morning, head to work and find creative ways to build their businesses.
And your policies, Mr. President, are hurting them.
Let me give you an example: embedded in...
your health care law â under Section 9006 â is a job-crushing provision.
It affects every business, every church and charity; every state and local government.
It requires all of them to track their purchases and when they hit $600 with any vendor in a year â for any services or supplies â your health care law requires them to file a 10-99 form with the IRS and with that vendor.
This will create a mountain of new paperwork â increasing it by as much as 2,000 percent, according to one study.
One small business owner in Nebraska did an analysis and came to the conclusion it will cost his business an extra $15 thousand dollars a year.
Now that may not sound like much here in Washington, but to a small business in Nebraska, that would go a long way to putting another American to work.
Instead, that money will pay for paperwork⌠and for what purpose, Mr. President?
Even the National Taxpayer Advocate â a division of the IRS itself â predicts there will be little benefit and a mess of erroneous tax penalties.
This foolish policy hammers our business community when we should be supporting their job growth.
Itâs only one example of how the Administrationâs promise to support small businesses really rings hollow.
Then thereâs the employer mandate in the health care law, which studies confirm will divert money from wages.
It forces employers to provide government-approved coverage or pay a tax of $2,000 per employee.
Another example: the new Medicare tax.
The majority of small businesses pay taxes at the individual level, so this new $210 billion tax will hurt; hitting businesses that employ between 20 and 200 workers especially hard.
And thatâs one-quarter of our workforce.
To put it simply; your actions thus far, Mr. President, donât encourage small businesses to hire employees.
Youâre signaling to the business owners that they best be very cautious, not only because of the flurry of new taxes and regulations, but also because a national energy tax is next on your agenda.
Itâs time to stop pushing anti-growth policies and start supporting a real job growth agenda.
After all, what matters most is what we actually do, not what we say.
Iâm Senator Mike Johanns of Nebraska. Thank you for your time.
Weekly remarks by President Obama, as prepared by the White House:
Hello everyone. Iâm speaking to you from the GM auto plant here in Detroit, Michigan, where a hopeful story is unfolding in a place thatâs been one of the hardest hit in America.
In the twelve months before I took office, American auto companies lost hundreds of thousands of jobs. Sales plunged 40 percent. Liquidation was a very real possibility. Years of papering over tough problems and failing to adapt to changing times â combined with a vicious economic crisis â brought an industry thatâs been the symbol of our manufacturing might for a century to the brink of collapse.
We didnât have many good options. On one hand, we could have continued the practice of handing out billions of taxpayer dollars to the auto industry with no real strings attached. On the other hand, we could have walked away and allowed two major auto companies to go out of business â which could have wiped out one million American jobs.
I refused to let that happen. So we came up with a third way. We said to the auto companies â if youâre willing to make the hard decisions necessary to adapt and compete in the 21st century, weâll make a one-time investment in your future.
Of course, if some folks had their way, none of this would be happening at all. This plant might not exist. There were leaders of the âjust say noâ crowd in Washington who argued that standing by the auto industry would guarantee failure. One called it âthe worst investment you could possibly make.â They said we should just walk away and let these jobs go.
Today, the men and women in this plant are proving these cynics wrong. Since GM and Chrysler emerged from bankruptcy, our auto industry has added 55,000 jobs â the strongest period of job growth in more than ten years. For the first time since 2004, all three American automakers are operating at a profit. Sales have begun to rebound. And plants like this that wouldnât have existed if all of us didnât act are now operating maximum capacity.
Whatâs more, thanks to our investments, a lot of these auto companies are reinventing themselves to meet the demands of a new age. At this plant, theyâre hard at work building the high-quality, fuel-efficient cars of tomorrow â cars like the plug-in hybrid Chevy Volt that can run 40 miles before taking a sip of gasoline. Throughout Michigan, an advanced battery industry is taking root that will power clean electric cars â an industry that produced only 2 percent of the worldâs advanced batteries last year, but will now be able to produce as much as 40 percent in a little over five years. Thatâs real progress.
Thereâs no doubt that we have a long way to go and a lot of work to do before folks here and across the country can feel whole again. But whatâs important is that weâre finally beginning to see some of the tough decisions we made pay off. And if we had listened to the cynics and the naysayers â if we had simply done what the politics of the moment required â none of this progress would have happened.
Still, even as these icons of American industry are being reborn, we also need to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Americaâs small businessmen and women, as well -- particularly since theyâre the ones who create most of the new jobs in this country.
As we work to rebuild our economy, I canât imagine anything more common-sense than giving additional tax breaks and badly-needed lending assistance to Americaâs small business owners so they can grow and hire. Thatâs what weâre trying to do with the Small Business Jobs Act â a bill that has been praised as being good for small businesses by groups like the Chamber of Commerce and the National Federation of Independent Business. Itâs a bill that includes provision after provision authored by both Democrats and Republicans. But yesterday, the Republican leaders in the Senate once again used parliamentary procedures to block it. Understand, a majority of Senators support the plan. Itâs just that the Republican leaders in the Senate wonât even allow it to come up for a vote.
That isnât right. And Iâm calling on the Republican leaders in the Senate to stop holding Americaâs small businesses hostage to politics, and allow an up-or-down vote on this small business jobs bill.
At a time when America is just starting to move forward again, we canât afford the do-nothing policies and partisan maneuvering that will only take us backward. I wonât stand here and pretend everythingâs wonderful. I know that times are tough. But what I also know is that weâve made it through tough times before. And weâll make it through again. The men and women hard at work in this plant make me absolutely confident of that.
So to all the naysayers out there, I say this: Donât ever bet against the American people. Because we donât take the easy way out. Thatâs not how we deal with challenge. Thatâs not how we build this country into the greatest economic power the world has ever known. We did it by summoning the courage to persevere, and adapt, and push this country forward, inch by inch. Thatâs the spirit I see in this plant today, and as long as I have the privilege of being your President, I will keep fighting alongside you until we reach a better day. Thanks. ####
You can get Twitter alerts of each new Ticket item, by clicking here. Follow us @latimestot. Or like our Facebook page right here. Go here for a Kindle subscription to The Ticket, with a free trial.