In a conference call Wednesday with
Ohio media in advance of his upcoming “Dignity of Work” tour to several early presidential
primary states, Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown didn’t want to quibble over tax policy specifics.
What he did agree to as a baseline
position for him is that the wealthy do not pay their fair share of
taxes.
Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown (right) speaks to Ohio's leading independent reporter |
After the tour launches in
I asked Sen. Brown to
comment whether his tax policy differs are tracks two progressive tax policy
plans released recently, one by new House Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez or Sen.Elizabeth Warren. Both Cortex and Warren
have plans that hike taxes on the very wealthy.
Central to Brown’s “Dignity
of Work” theme are rising wages and better benefits. Over the decades, however,
corporate America
has mostly not delivered on those two objectives. The President’s tax bill passed
without input from Democrats including Sen. Brown has done little to remedy stagnant
wages and job benefits that include affordable health care.
Brown ticked off three bills
he said penalize companies who don’t do right by their workers, tell reporters
on the call that he wasn’t going to pick and choose between specific parts of
plans released by Cortez or Warren
To be specific, though, he
did agree that the wealthy are not paying their fair share of taxes.
“I want the dignity of work
to be the center piece of every Democratic campaign in the country,” he said. “Respecting
and honoring work. That’s the purpose of the tour."
Sen. Brown is seen by many
as the working man’s public official who might be able to do what Hillary
Clinton couldn’t do two years ago, namely, capture key heartland states like Ohio , Michigan , Wisconsin and Pennsylvania that are key to winning the Electoral College.
“It’s not enough to tax the
rich,” he said, adding, “Tax breaks for the middle” are also needed.
Brown, who was on the short
list of VP candidates for Clinton
in 2016, described the White House as a “retreat for Wall Street executives.”
Depictions like this place him next to or very near to the same sentiments
expressed by Cortez and Warren and others, including Vermont Sen. Bernie
Sanders, who gave Clinton
a run for her money in 2016.
Brown wants Congressional Republicans
to stand up to Trump, and if need be, override any veto he might executive on
future budgeting bills, especially those that could trigger another shut down of the federal government.
Brown expressed concern over
trying to “straight jacket the executive branch” given there has never been a Commander in Chief like Trump who
“takes pride in shutting government down.”
Brown said the frigid temperatures in Ohio will no doubt dampen turnout to his kickoff event today.
Brown said the frigid temperatures in Ohio will no doubt dampen turnout to his kickoff event today.
No comments:
Post a Comment