Archive for the ‘Progressives’ Category

Progressive Pet Insurance Review (2023) – MarketWatch

Pet health insurance can give pet owners peace of mind that theyll be able to afford vet bills. In this article, we at the Guides Home Team will discuss Progressive pet insurance coverage, which is administered by Pets Best.

Progressive partnered with Pets Best to offer traditional pet insurance in 2009. Pets Best holds an A+ rating with the Better Business Bureau and is underwritten by the top-rated American Pet Insurance Company. Pets Best was founded in 2005, giving it over 16 years of experience providing pet insurance.

Progressive offers a few types of pet insurance policies through Pets Best. These include:

The two wellness plan options from Progressive Pet Insurance by Pets Best help with the costs of routine veterinary care, such as checkups, vaccinations, microchipping and more. Here are the details of each plan:

Progressives pet insurance does not cover:

You can customize your Progressive pet insurance coverage by adjusting the following:

With Progressives pet insurance, you can pay your premium monthly, quarterly or annually. Based on quotes we collected, the BestBenefit plan costs around $36 for dog insurance and $21 for cat insurance each month, which are competitive rates.

The following sample prices are based on average pricing presented by Progressive through Pets Best. Your own prices will vary based on the type of plan you choose, customization options, where you live, your pets age and more. The preventative care plan pricing is based on the EssentialWellness plan, which is $16 per month.

Pets Best offers deductibles ranging from $50 to $1,000 in $50 increments, which gives you a lot of control over your monthly premium. Remember that the higher your deductible is, the lower your monthly premium likely will be. Once youve hit your deductible for the year, you wont need to worry about hitting the deductible again until next year.

You can get a 5% multi-pet discount when enrolling multiple pets in Progressive Pet Insurance by Pets Best.

Progressive Pet Insurance by Pets Best is available in all states. Curious about the best pet insurance company near you? Find your state below:

To give you a look at how customers feel about Progressive Pet Insurance by Pets Best, we combed through dozens of reviews and have selected a few reviews that offer a well-rounded look at Pets Bests customer service.

Easy to work with! Claims have generally been quick, preventative items are faster than illness/injury claims, but thats to be expected. They issued a payment within 30 days on our dogs overnight emergency care which costs us ~$1500. To see the claim approved just four weeks later, we were surprised. Brian Pratt, Trustpilot

My dog had a foreign body ingestion. She had emergency surgery. Submitted a claim and was reimbursed in one month. Easy and fast process. Really happy with Pets Best Insurance. Amber, Trustpilot

Worst company ever to deal with. This insurance is a scam. They do everything in their power not to reimburse you. They expect you to do their job for them and then turn around and say a 24/7 vet didnt answer the phone or call us back and you get a hold of the vet within 2 minutes. Its a scam. Dont waste your money on this place. T Zay, Trustpilot

The one con is the processing time. Right now its 25-39 days. However, it is an improvement from last year, when it was up to 45 days. My recent claims were processed within three weeks. Nina K., Yelp.com

Now that you know a bit about Progressive pet insurance, its important to see how it stacks up against its competitors. Use the following table to compare and contrast Progressive pet insurances prices, discounts, and many other features to other pet insurance providers.

*Progressive is not rated by the Better Business Bureau, but Pets Best, which administers Progressives pet insurance policies, has an A+ rating from the BBB.

Enrolling your pet in Progressive Pet Insurance by Pets Best can give you peace of mind that your pet is covered should it have an accident or develop an illness. The company offers two base plans and two add-on plans, plus a wide range of deductibles to customize your policy and premiums.

Based on quotes weve gathered from different insurers, Progressive Pet Insurance by Pets Best is a relatively affordable option for dogs, but its a little pricier for cats. We recommend requesting quotes from at least three insurers before making a final decision about your pets coverage.

Our review of pet insurance companies is based on in-depth industry research that includes reading hundreds of customer reviews, scoping quotes and purchasing processes by secret shopping, speaking to representatives on the phone to assess the customer service experience, and surveying 1,000 dog and cat owners nationwide to determine the most important elements of pet insurance coverage.

We scored each provider on a 100-point scale based on those elements. We then divided this final score by 20 to calculate an overall star rating out of 5.0 stars.

Here are more details about each factor and how its weighted:

We use our rating system to compare and contrast each company against key factors to help us determine the best pet insurance companies in the industry. To learn more, read our full pet insurance methodology for reviewing and scoring providers.

See the article here:
Progressive Pet Insurance Review (2023) - MarketWatch

Congress Must Mobilize To Halt Bidens Radical Administrative State Transformation – Forbes

[T]he genius of the Progressives in the late 19th century was to preempt or push large sectors of the emerging future (the environment, schools, electromagnetic spectrum, infrastructure, welfare, the medical world) into the political world."

Fred L. Smith Jr.

Alongside deleting the entire Trump-era deregulatory campaign (anybody remember one-in, two-out?), Joe Bidens first day in office brought forth a memorandum called Modernizing Regulatory Review.

In it, Biden called for the Office of Management and Budget to "consider ways that OIRA [the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs] can play a more proactive role in partnering with agencies to explore, promote, and undertake regulatory initiatives that are likely to yield significant benefits."

The new approach entails partnering with agencies, not strictly supervising, questioning and disciplining them and their regulatory offal, as had been the ostensible function of OIRA since the early 1980s.

Now, over two years into Bidens term, we find that misbegotten kickoff memorandum formalized with a new April 6 Executive Order 14,094 of the same name, making regulators less accountable than ever.

In any assessment of Bidens proclamations on regulatory reform or regulatory review as his barnstorming on the inflation and infrastucture laws demonstrate one cannot simply accept at face value that he means what people normally mean by critical analysis and oversight of todays regulatory enterprise.

Rather, one is forced first and foremost see Bidens ambitions here in the context of his self-announced whole-of-government (WOG) pursuits that splay themselves unwelcomed and unbidden across much of American life and, if unopposed, will render limited government impossible. Bidens ambitions include a damaging competition policy that encourages heighted federal meddling in private business and economic affairs, major interventions in the name of climate crisis, and most prominently now, trendy, cultish and divisive equity, ESG and DEI pursuits coordinated with suspect legality across agencies throughout the entire federal government. (Note: for a detailed discussion of this fishy WOG agenda its implications for the expansion of government and the loss of liberty and constitutional normalcy, see the recent edition of Ten Thousand Commandments).

The month of April brougher a two-fer, as Bidens extreme progressive agenda was escalated yet again with a mischevious new April 21 Executive Order to Revitalize Our Nations Commitment to Environmental Justice for All.

As the lefts COVID machinations betrayed its North Star pursuit of a Universal Basic Income to effectuate a custodial administrative state, Bidens array of equity and DEI usuprations reinforce the progressives warlike pursuit of social reparations incorporating massive fiscal and regulatory wealth transfers. These are now embodied in state pilot projccts but are bound for a federal goverment near you, the skids greased by the Biden administrations incitement of animousities and inter-group blame nation-wide.

Congress and normal policymakers need to wake up, and fast. The advocates of limited government did not start this disruptive episode in U.S. history, but they need to stomp the brakes.

To start, the the 118th Congress needs to address Bidens transformative Executive Order on Modernizing Regulatory Review. Bidens initial directive and subsequent actions (see details here and here) continue to affirm that the administrations goal is not to impose strict cost-benefit analysis and to rigorously supervise agency regulators. Already (as few acknowledge since theres an industry behind it), cost-benefit analysis happens rarely enough, particuarly fram any cross-agency or aggregate perspective, to be a non-phenomenon from any big-picture standpoint).

Bidens philosophy instead is one of transforming any governmental action undertaken by the White House net beneficial but as the progressive left sees benefits. We observe a strange non-professed yet naked utilitarianism in top-down regulatory analysis; one that does invoke distributional effects, but seems heedless of the rights of those being distributed from.

A future Congress might better serve the nation by abolishing and replacing OIRA altogether than to abide permanence in the interventions and transformations that Biden is making in that bodys role, some of which will be noted below. Instead of these disruptive changes undermining already often non-existent, misdirected and uncomprehending review, a replacement office challenging the obsolete regulatory premises of our day taken for granted in Bidens order could become the new imperative. These not merely obsolete but faulty assumptions embedded in todaya regulatory review orthodoxy range from market failure, to net benefits, to the knee-jerk top-down central planning that Biden mischaracterizes as bottom up, middle out.

Bottom line, no agency can perform cost-benefit analysis when its very presence is a cost. Often regulation fails to work, even on its own merits, and any actual Modernizing Regulatory Review that Congress should tolerate would recognize that fact.

Bidens new order also undermines the cardinal governmental virtues of transparency and disclosure that it invokes without irony. The following observations addressing some of the foregoing concerns are offered also in light of Bidens proposed rewrite of the Office of Managements Circular A-4 on Regulatory Analysis guidance to agencies that accompanies his order:

The Universe of Significant Regulatory Actions Deemed to Warrant Centralized Review is being Decreased

Even before Biden, guidance and orders on the books for assessing costs never encompassed the full sweep of regulation and intervention for which Washington is culpable. Now Biden proposes to capture even less.

The universe of significant regulatory actions deemed by Joe Biden to warrant review is being, naturally, decreased. Instead of a rule costing $100 million annually being deemed significant and triggering extra inquiry, the threshold rises to $200 million, to be later adjusted by OIRA itself with GDP changes to narrow the inventory for inspection.

This is a problematic for at least two reasons; one, already, too much (nearly all) regulatory action not deemed significant is escaping critical review. Second, the number of significant actions by the traditional measure of $100 million undertaken by Biden that affect small business and state and local governments appears to be on the upswing. This latter is not yet a trend, but is visible, and is highly likely to accelerate in an easily detactable wayunless deliberately obscured in suspect fashion (such as by the changes made via the new Order). In the wake of highly costly and regulatory legislation pushed by Biden himself such as the American Rescue Plan and the problematic Infrastructure and Inflation laws, increased mandates are a certainty.

Many regulatory actions already deemed non-significant (let alone significant at $100 million) by OMB would be considered highly significant by those subject to their strictures and bound to comply.

Executive Order 14,094 Overly Politicizes Regulation

Bidens executive order also deems significant those policy issues for which centralized review would meaningfully further the Presidents priorities. We know from experience with Bidens proclamation and those of agencies enlisted in his whole-of-government campaigns that the adminstrations priorities unfailingly will assert net benefits and expand the federal enterprise and its power.

Policymakers who doubt this are hereby invited to confirm what centralized review will mean from the public pronouncements by acting OIRA administrators in Introductions to the OMBs Unified Agenda on Federal Regulatory and Deregulatory Actions since the Biden administration began. Introductions to the now-bipolar Agenda in the Trump-era touted deregulation.

Rather than boast of success in regulatory streamlining, Bidens OIRA heads uniformly amplify whole-of-government pursuits, rarely if ever call regulation into question or restrain it (apart from exceptions like hearing-aid access), nor act as the adult in the room to call out the excesses of progressives. The adminstrations leadership is composed of those very same progressives.

Congress must appreciate, as we have discussed in the recent past, that the supervisory role that the OIRA once (partly, never thoroughly) embodied is being eliminated. Instead, the one-time semi-watchdog finds itself being inexorably (willingly, alas) converted into an advocate, promoter, and amplifier of regulatory pursuitsnot a steady and strict hand on the reins. This is particularly dangerous given the dangerous knee-jerk propensity to abuse economic crises and shocks with expansion of federal programs, a situation that this order will further automate and worsen with its endorsement of a prevailing great narrative set in opposition to ordered liberty.

The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) is Already Ignoring Existing Law on Regulatory Oversight

Biden proposes to reduce the amount of significant regulation reviewed at a time when the OMB has already failed to issue its annual Report to Congress on regulatory costs and benefits since fiscal year 2019. Required by the Regulatory Right-to-Know Act, the annual cost-benefit roundup is also to be accompanied by an aggregate regulatory cost assessment (not just for individual agencies) that has been ignored almost since its inception. Even the inadequate 10-year lookback OMB adopted in its stead has vanished from recent editions.

In addition, we have reason to suspect that agency sub-regulatory guidance documents are not being properly submitted to Congress and to the Government Accountability Office as required by the Congressional Review Act, making them of dubious legality on a scale so vast that the only cope is to ignore it. The cherry on top is the absence of even the Information Collection Budget on federal paperwork, whose genesis, fittingly, lies in the same 1980-81 era that spawned OIRA.

The Normal Idea of Offsetting Older or Obsolete Regulations when Issuing New Ones is Shoved Further in the Background

As noted, one of Bidens first actions was eliminating all the Trump-era regulatory oversight measures such as one-in, two-out. It is notable now that there is no restoration of even a lighter version of this in the new directive, and the one-time Deregulatory designation for rulessurely, the least anyone can askdisappeared with Bidens appearance.

Progressives Vision of Distributional Effects of Regulations Is a Recipe for Purposefully Expanding Government.

As shown in both Modernizing Regulatory Review and the April 21 Environmental Justice for All executive order, modern progressives malign vision of Equity is being built into the review processand rulemaking itselfin a way that will expand government irretrievably, well beyond the reasonable or anything the Framers would countenance.

Surprisingly enough, the term equity indeed does appear in the Clinton-era Executive Order 12,866 on Regulatory Planning and Review three times, the directive that Bidens E.O. 14,094 on Modernizing supplements. But equity now bears little resemblance to the prior generations notions of equality of opportunity and other forms of societal normalcy. The new framing means institutionalizing identity politics in the regulatory process, and the pursuit of regulatory wealth transfers that progressives will always see as net-beneficial. The Clinton order had already replaced Ronald Reagans E.O. 12,291 (Federal Regulation) directive requiring that benefits exceed costs with a call to merely justify them. Now with Biden, that mere justification is further softened with the rebranding of OIRA into a promoter of net benefits.

It is imperative that Congress look closely at the equity language in Bidens new executive order not just alone (again, it was there in Clintons), but in context of this administrations sweeping regulatory pursuits and the shift in OIRAs function from a regulatory overseer to campaigner, and to decide whether Bidens program is good for America or instead is overly divisive and will artificially pit group against group, generating discontent and agitation for more government growth.

Biden is not coy about his intentions to expand Washington into the economy, finance, medicine; and in our personal lives and social interactions. "Improving Regulatory Analysis" for Biden means "analysis" that, "as practicable and appropriate, shall recognize distributive impacts and equity." Interventions that the Biden administration will not justify in the name of equity are likely to prove few. Congress cannot afford to ignore the deeper implications of radicalized whole of government pursuits that cement further federal powers.

Guidance Documents Do Not Appear in the New Biden Executive Order

Among much oversight Biden eliminated, and in keeping with his desire now to obscure the universe of significant rules to allow them to escape analysis, Biden eliminated a Trump executive order to merely require online Portals for the public to access agencies confounding torrent of guidance documents (Ive tallied residue Portals here).

Each year, we get a few dozen laws from Congress, several thousand regulations from agencies (seemingly on the rise under Biden), plus uncounted guidance documnets, memoranda, notices, circulars, bulletins, administrators interpretations, letters, and so forth, many of which can have regulatory effect or otherwise cause concern among those subject to a particular agencies oversight or zeal for the net-beneficial. The recent torrent of legislation in concert with Bidens whole-of-government pursuits effectively guarantees a surge in guidance. These are inadequately addressed not merely in the E.O. and in the Circular A-4 draft, but across the entire regulatory enterprise.

Congress Needs to Do All it Can to Prevent Bidens Announced Rewrite of the Office of Managements Circular A-4 on Regulatory Review.

OMBs Circular A-4 (indeed not updated since 2003 as the Biden administration notes) provides guidance on the conduct of regulatory review and analysis and instruction on preparing regulatory impact analyses. Bidens Modernizing calls for a rewrite. But Circular A-4 already leaves out most of the universe of regulatory costs. Under Bidens regulatory philosophy, it will not only leave out more, but effectively redefine many regulatory costs as benefits. Congress must quickly take steps (hearings, denial of appropriations, whatever legitimate means necessary) to prevent any rewrite under the auspices of the radical progressivism that this administration embodies, up to and including abolishing OIRA (something the prog left wanted to do before Biden came along with his reformat).

Once upon a time, despite some inherently tainted assumptions in the Administrative State model, it might have been possible to collaborate on a good faith rewrite or update exercise for Circular A-4. But todays OIRA is too compromised against regulatory oversight and too actively pro-regulatory to perform a committed and energetic regulatory review function. The left already sees regulatory review as such as constitutionally suspect (in the socialist house-of-mirrors perpsective that in reality dispenses with the Constitution altogether and replaces it with a fourth branch of government), rather than seeing the administrative state itself as questionable. Any A-4 rewrite will be tainted with disdain for strict cost-benefit analysis altogether, despite invoking those terms, an eventuality observable both explicitly and reading between the proposals droning bureaucratic lines.

Circular A-4 simultaneously embodies both the reason regulators in the past could get away with abuses, and the reason it cannot be useful in remedying regulatory overreach to come. Circular A-4 embodies an archaic 20th Century taxonomy that enshrines the Administrative State as such, believes in agency expertise, and obscures or leaves out most regulatory burdens; and now, unless prevented, it will embody a modern reset progressive taxonomy that would obscure even more unless Congress puts a stop to it.

In Summary

The push from progressives is to remove executive action from cost-benefit scrutiny altogether and from congressional oversight besides, by replacing the notion that regulation is a costly last resort with the pursuit of progressive conceits of centralized planning, politicized net benefits and displacement of the private sector.

Unfortuntately, the GOP is culpable to a large degree in the legislative tranformations of which Biden can and is now taking advantage (An example is Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo "requiring companies that receive [CHIPS Act] funding to tell us how they plan to provide affordable child care for workers," a directive not part of the law but instead yet another iteration of regulatory dark matter).

The preambles to the Spring and Fall Unified Agendas under Biden, Senate testimony and responses to questions for the Senate record of Bidens appointee to head OMBs Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, the disregard of the aforementioned mandatory Report to Congress, and the lack of sympathy with the burdens of regulatory compliance on the public as such affirm the new pro-regulaory, pro-intervention environment.

Before Biden, one suspected that cost-benefit, limited as it already was, if not totally abandoned, considerably downplayed. Now Biden has effectively told us so.

Most that Biden wishes to regulate ought not be; Modernizing Regulatory Review worthy of that designation would seek the reduce the already excessive influence of the federal government in our economy, society, lower-level governments, communities, families and in our personal lives. Congress will need to mobilize and respond.

Further reading on the Biden progressive transformation of regulatory review:

Wayne Crews is Fred L. Smith Fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute & a Cato Institute alum. A one-time Libertarian candidate for South Carolina state senate, he is widely published, contributes to Forbes.com, and authors the annual Ten Thousand Commandments, which the Wall Street Journal called "the best measure of the overall regulatory burden." Wayne also compiles the Tip of the Costberg report on gov't regulatory costs, and catalogs "regulatory dark matter." A frequent speaker, Wayne has appeared at venues including the DVD Awards Showcase in Hollywood, the National Academies, the Future of Music Policy Summit, the Consumer Electronics Show, European Commission-sponsored conferences and the Spanish Ministry of Justice. He has testified before Congress numerous times. While not a lawyer, Wayne's work is cited in numerous law reviews, journals and books, and papers. A dad of five, he can still do a handstand on a skateboard and enjoys custom motorcycles, the beach and the family farm. He is a member of Omicron Delta Epsilon economics honor society. Wayne is co-editor of the books Who Rules the Net?:Internet Governance and Jurisdiction, and Copy Fights: The Future of Intellectual Property In the Information Age. He is co-author of Whats Yours Is Mine: Open Access and the Rise of Infrastructure Socialism, and a contributing author to others. TV appearances include Fox, CNN, ABC, CNBC and NewsHour, and radio such as NPR; Wayne's reform ideas have been profiled in the Washington Post, Forbes and Investors Business Daily. Wayne created CEI's c:spin tech newsletter series, and co-created CEI's OnPoint policy series and Cato's TechKnowledge newsletter (which introduced "The Libertarian Vision for Telecom and High-Technology" with Adam Thierer, which helped inspire the 2012 Declaration of Internet Freedom). He coined the term "Splinternet" in Forbes in 2001 to underscore alternatives to government regulation of the Internet

Read the rest here:
Congress Must Mobilize To Halt Bidens Radical Administrative State Transformation - Forbes

Letters to the editor – Boston Herald

Tax cut plans

Extracting additional revenue from high-income earners is the cornerstone of every progressive tax plan. Their established view on tax policy is that wealth creation is harmful to society; therefore, the legislative process must be reengineered to preempt the flow of income to those at the top. It matters not whether the income is earned or unearned, realized or unrealized. What matters is that wealth never be concentrated, especially at the very top.

That this type of social engineering seeps into every aspect of progressive tax policy is indicative of their desire to affect equal outcomes. Certainly no one can spend tens of millions of dollars in their lifetime, therefore it must be redirected through the legislative process to those on the opposite end of the income scale. This mindset is at odds with effective tax policy, which should never be used to affect outcomes. Tax policy should be used to generate tax receipts sufficient to fund the commitments of the state and not a penny more.

Andrew Farnitano, of Raise Up Massachusetts, makes it plainly clear that a flat, fair tax system in which tax rates on income and capital gains are fixed at a point that keeps Massachusetts competitive as well as fully funded is not his primary consideration. He wants a tax system more punitive than that. Hes willing to accept a tax system more likely to discourage job creation, entrepreneurism, and self-sufficiency if it eventually produces an outcome desired by his constituency.

Like it or not, wealth creation is a marker of success.Using the tax code to discourage success in an effort to create more equality in society goes against the principles of capitalism and freedom. Progressives will never go so far as to admit that, but theyre hoping to establish these policies without you noticing.

Sean F. FlahertyBoston

Sal Giarratanis letter (Mental Health, 4/18/2023) highlights the problems of the catch-and-release paradigm that has governed the mental health system for too long. The fact is, the prospects of a lengthy involuntary confinement in a state hospital provides the badly needed incentive some people need to stay off booze and drugs and comply with the demands of recovery. And for others, a long term stay in a facility gives them a chance to take stock of their lives and make some choices they cant even consider while living in the weeds or in their parents basement. The threat of long term commitment may seem inhumane, but so is letting people die of preventable overdoses.

Dexter Van Zile

Brighton

Senator Edward John Markey, elected from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, introduces a $92.9 trillion plan for the Green New Deal. Markeys counterpart in Congress is Alexandria Ocasio Cortez from New Yorks 14th congressional district. Where is this money coming from? I know: you and me. On a positive note its under a quadrillion.

Tony MeschiniScituate

Thanks for reading!

Your email is already registered. Please subscribe to Boston Herald to continue.

Get unlimited access to enjoy this article and more

4 months for $1

Already a subscriber? Login

View more onBoston Herald

See the original post:
Letters to the editor - Boston Herald

Progressives focus on local-level wins to counter setbacks – The Associated Press

CHICAGO (AP) For many progressives, the past decade has been littered with disappointments. But recent down-ballot victories are providing hope of reshaping the Democratic Party from the bottom up, rather than from Washington.

In Chicago earlier this month, a former teachers union organizer unexpectedly won the mayors race. In St. Louis, progressives secured a majority on the municipal board. The next opportunities could lie in Philadelphia and Houston, which also hold mayoral elections this year.

The focus on lower-level contests already has helped progressives gain power and influence policy at a local level, organizers say, shaping issues such as the minimum wage. It also may help the movement find future stars, with todays city and county officials becoming tomorrows breakout members of Congress and only moving further up the political ladder.

Progressives have taken a look at how to be strategic and how to build power, said Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants who was a leading national voice for Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders 2016 and 2020 presidential bids. If you look around and you say, Who is ready to run for president? If your field is shallow, what do you have to do? Youve got to build the bench.

This years focus on state and local races follows years of incremental progress and some stinging setbacks. Sanders electrified the left with 2016 and 2020 presidential campaigns that centered on bold calls for universal, government-funded health care. But he lost each time to rivals aligned with the Democratic establishment who advocated for a more cautious approach.

On Capitol Hill, progressive candidates successfully defeated several high-profile incumbents during the 2018 midterms and the election of candidates like New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. But from New York to Michigan and Ohio and Texas, prominent progressives were defeated during primary campaigns last year. And, as President Joe Biden now gears up for reelection, he faces no serious challenge from the left.

Still, Sanders and others have left their mark, pushing mainstream Democrats to the left on key issues like combating climate change and forgiveness of student loan debt while inspiring some of those at the forefront of todays movement.

That includes Chicago Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson, who appealed to a diverse and young electorate as he campaigned with Sanders and other top congressional progressives.

Lets take this bold progressive movement around these United States of America, Johnson said in his victory speech.

Our Revolution, an activist group which grew out of Sanders 2016 White House bid, endorsed Johnson and progressive candidates who recently won three of four seats on the St. Louis City Board of Aldermen. That gave progressives a slim majority in a city where the mayor, Tishaura Jones, is also a self-described progressive.

Our Revolution said it activated its 90,000 members in Chicago an average of three times each to urge them to vote for Johnson, and made 100,000 phone calls in St. Louis. The group is also backing Helen Gym, a progressive former Philadelphia City Council member who is among roughly a dozen candidates competing in next months Democratic mayoral primary.

When we win on the ground in our cities, thats actually the blueprint, because we cannot wait for Congress, Gym said during a recent call with Our Revolution volunteers.

Our Revolutions executive director, Joseph Geevarghese, said local progressive organizing, including for races like school board, is more effective now than it has been in decades.

Were building power, bottom up, city by city, Geevarghese said, adding that in major metropolitan areas youve got credible progressive slates vying for power against the Democratic establishment.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers and a Democratic National Committee member, countered that there doesnt have to be tension between the partys left and moderate wings. She said Johnson called for addressing quality of life issues such as homelessness through consensus-building, rather than ideological confrontation.

Every one of these cities are complicated places and you have to work together to get things done, Weingarten said. You have to work with people you dont always agree with. And that is a strength and not a weakness.

It hasnt all been rosy for progressives. Moderate candidates topped progressive alternatives in last weeks Denver City Council races.

But there are more opportunities ahead. In the nations fourth-largest city of Houston, Democratic Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, who has been an outspoken progressive in Congress since she got there in 1995, is running for mayor.

And the left isnt abandoning congressional races.

Progressive champion Rep. Barbara Lee and fellow Democratic Rep. Katie Porter, who was a vocal supporter of Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren s progressive campaign for president in 2020, are among those running to replace retiring California Sen. Dianne Feinstein next year.

In Arizona, Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego, a progressive 43-year-old Iraq war veteran and Spanish speaker who represents much of downtown Phoenix, is trying to unseat Sen. Kyrsten Sinema. She left the Democratic Party last year and, if she seeks reelection, would run as an independent.

Working-class Democrats are getting elected, and corporate Democrats are not, said Chuck Rocha, a key architect of Sanders 2016 campaign who heads Nuestro PAC, which has endorsed Gallego. But Rocha was quick to caution that Gallego isnt running as a progressive or liberal savior.

Hes going to run as I was an enlisted Marine who had to sleep on my mamas couch until I got a bed in college and has been a champion of working-class folks in the state of Arizona, Rocha said.

Questions about a resurgent Democratic left come as Biden prepares to formally kickoff his reelection campaign and will have to decide how to frame his political vision and ideology to appeal to swing voters. After besting Sanders and Warren in the 2020 primary, Biden embraced major progressive goals, promoting expanding social programs and climate-change fighting green energy.

Biden eventually oversaw passage of dramatic federal spending increases, including on health care and green technology. He tried to forgive student loans for millions of Americans, but saw the plan challenged in court.

On other issues, however, Biden has been more moderate. After major legislation to curb police brutality and institutional racism stalled in Congress, the president signed an executive order to make modest reforms. He also has said repeatedly that, rather than heed calls by some progressives to cut funding for law enforcement, the answer should be more police funding.

More recently, the president angered liberal Democrats by failing to veto Republican-championed legislation reversing new, local crime regulations in the nations capital and approving a major oil drilling project in Alaska.

Biden campaign aides say hes shown flexibility to best respond to ongoing political and policy challenges. And Rocha said that Gallego will benefit from Bidens 2024 campaign, which should rely heavily on promoting his administrations legislative accomplishments and how they benefited working-class families in swing states like Arizona.

But some progressives say the White House should take notice of the movements down-ballot wins.

I hope hes paying attention, said Hannah Riddle, director of candidate services for the activist group the Progressive Change Campaign Committee. Running on economic populism is a winning strategy. And that model can be replicated all over the country.

___ Weissert reported from Washington.

See more here:
Progressives focus on local-level wins to counter setbacks - The Associated Press

Progressives Fear Business Interests Have Dominated a Key Tax Policy Group Guiding Future Budgets – Washington City Paper

A big-time developer, a fiscally conservative former mayor, a few well-connected lobbyists, and some economists walk into a conference room. Is there any reason to think theyll walk out with an equitable tax plan for D.C.?

Thats what a growing swath of D.C.s left-wing groups are wondering as they keep tabs on the citys Tax Revision Commission, a specially assembled panel of experts meant to guide D.C.s future tax policy. The groups recommendations wont be ready before the Council passes the 2024 budget that lawmakers are debating now, but they will surely have an outsize influence on leaders long-term plans for coping with the myriad ways COVID has reshaped the economy.

And thats why the recent rhetoric of some of the TRCs 11 members has become so concerning to D.C.s more progressive budget watchers. Lawmakers are unlikely to take up any major tax changes this year, but if commercial real estate values keep declining and eating away at the citys property tax revenues, theyll likely need to do something to reorient how D.C. funds its government. But the TRC, stacked with representatives of the business community and political establishment and chaired by mayor-turned-business booster Anthony Williams, could recommend against any tax hikes that would impact big companies or wealthy residents and provide cover for Mayor Muriel Bowsers recent turn toward austerity.

In spite of the clear mandate to center racial equity in the TRC purposes and outcomes, commissioners have made concerning public comments that demonstrate an unwillingness to increase taxes on the wealthy, antipathy for business regulations, and contempt for D.C. residents that struggle to make ends meet, a coalition of 35 of the Districts leading progressive groups, including the Fair Budget Coalition, Empower DC, and Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless, write in a letter to the TRC released Tuesday. Labor and grassroots organizations are missing completely from representation on the commission, while powerful business interests are at the table and overrepresented.

A variety of D.C. progressives watching the commissions meetings have been noting commissioners comments with alarm for months before this Tax Day missive and forwarded them to Loose Lips. For instance, in March, Gregory McCarthy, the top lobbyist for the Washington Nationals and a former Williams aide, said outright that I dont have any appetite for raising taxes and wondered whether the city could target some relief to those sectors that we think would be the job drivers. David Catania, the former councilmember and current lobbyist, similarly mused at an October meeting that we need to spend as much time trying to create wealth as we do trying to redistribute it, not exactly the most subtle way to argue against a progressive tax structure.

Unlike other cities and states, the competition is so close by, Jodie McLean, the politically connected head of Union Market developer Edens, said at the TRCs March meeting, raising the distinctly dubious threat of tax flight. Is it a foregone conclusion we have to raise revenues?

Its probably no great surprise to see this kind of talk among commission members considering its composition; Bowser got to appoint five members, and she picked Catania, McLean, Williams, attorney James Hudson, and Carolyn Rudd, a past board chair of the D.C. Chamber of Commerce. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson picked the others, and while his selections were slightly more ideologically diverse, he only picked one true progressive in Erica Williams, head of the DC Fiscal Policy Institute. Mendo also named McCarthy; Rahsaan Bernard, president of Building Bridges Across the River; Yesim Taylor, executive director of the DC Policy Center; and Rashad Young, Bowsers former city administrator and current Howard University lobbyist. D.C. Chief Financial Officer Glen Lee rounds out the group as an advisory member.

The question is what kind of report theyll ultimately deliver to Bowser and the Council; Nick Johnson, the TRCs executive director, tells LL the current plan is to have something ready by the end of the year.

They could either pass a conservative fever dream report that has the wish lists of these big business lobbyistsor they could try to do something more tempered that strikes an even-handed approach of looking to create equity in the tax code and not trying to put the finger on the scale for certain industries or businesses, says Sam Rosen-Amy, who has been watching the TRC closely and was chief of staff to former At-Large Councilmember Elissa Silverman, a leader among the Councils left wing when she served.

Commission members insist that even-handedness is their goal, and that tax increases are far from off the table. Taylor, a former staffer in the CFOs office before launching the D.C. Policy Center with the influential Federal City Councils backing, tells LL she expects a combination of revenue raisers where the economic base is strong and revenue reductions where the economic base is weak among the groups final recommendations. (Williams is the executive director of the Federal City Council.)

In fact, Taylor expects the citys economic situation will grow so precarious in the coming years that some tax increases will likely be unavoidableMetros looming $700 million budget deficit alone will require the city to collaborate with the other jurisdictions to find some funding, which could come in the form of new regional taxes, she says. Add in a loss of federal COVID relief funding and further declines in property tax collections, and Taylor expects the city will have to get creative.

Were talking about big, big, big dollar amounts here, Taylor says. Its not $30 million here, $20 million there, its hundreds of millions of dollars disappearing.

Johnson notes that the commission has already drafted up a broad range of ideas for the group to consider, and those include everything from tax breaks to tax hikes (even more progressive ideas like increasing the capital gains tax rate and a tax on extreme wealth made the list). His ultimate goal is to see a report that is something that lots of folks across the spectrum can buy into, focusing more on what is the right mix of taxes? for the city to assess versus how high rates must be.

He also cautioned that the group wont be touching thorny, yet related questions about things like government spending or regulations (and thats probably good news for nervous lefties, considering that Catania, McLean, Rudd, and Williams all railed against the dangers of overregulation in the commissions October meeting, which helped set off alarm bells among the progressive set).

Still, some activists cant help but wonder if this group will really take the prospect of tax hikes on the wealthy seriously, considering it would directly affect many of their clients (not to mention their own pocketbooks). Some of the TRCs dismissive attitude toward hearing from the public has also rubbed advocates the wrong way. In October, Williams complained of the de rigueur process of seeing the regular suspects come in with their pre-scripted remarks, while Catania referred to the prospect of allowing public comment as part of the citys rich tradition of open-mic nights where no good deed goes un-waterboarded. Johnson observes that the TRC has outlined plans for a series of public hearings through the summer, including one specifically for progressive groups on Friday, but those previous comments have spurred fears that the group wont take criticism seriously.

We raised revenue two years ago from our highest-income earners, individuals who make a quarter-million dollars or more a year, and some folks screamed bloody murder about a really modest increase, says Mat Hanson, chief of staff for DC Action, one of the groups to sign the letter to the TRC. And so I think we have to be prepared for something like that, even when were asking folks to pay their fair shares.

Theres nothing binding the Council to listen to the commission, of course, and the bodys leftward tilt over the past few years suggests it might not be the most receptive audience to more conservative recommendations. Once the TRC delivers its report, its completely up to the mayor and Council to take its recommendations or discard them.

But past experience suggests that leaders will give serious deference to the TRC as they craft the fiscal year 2025 budget and more. The city has established four such commissions dating back to 1977, and all of them have been generally embraced by past mayors and Councils; the most recent commission, which wrapped up in 2014 and was also chaired by Williams, inspired changes like cuts to the income tax for middle-income earners and a higher threshold for the imposition of the estate tax. Even the hotly debated yoga tax, an increase in the sales tax rate for gyms and health clubs that Mayor-for-Life Marion Barry once confused for a yogurt tax, was included among the commissions recommendations.

This latest edition of the TRC has already earned plenty of public deference too. In the debate over the tax on high-income residents that Hanson references, detractors like Ward 2 Councilmember Brooke Pinto urged her colleagues give the Tax Revision Commission a chance to do its job before making any tax changes. D.C. Chamber of Commerce CEO Angela Franco made a similar plea in a March op-ed, citing the citys uncertain financial situation, while Mendelson told reporters in April that hed be hesitant to fiddle with tax policy until the commission issues its report.

That rhetoric could evaporate in a flash, of course. Rosen-Amy notes that Mendelson proposed a tax on digital ad sales late in the budget process a few years back, only to withdraw it under intense pressure. But progressives see every reason to start gearing up for a fight now so as not to be caught off guard.

Its going to be really important to see how the Council reacts to these recommendations, Hanson says. And thats what theyll ultimately be: recommendations.

See the original post here:
Progressives Fear Business Interests Have Dominated a Key Tax Policy Group Guiding Future Budgets - Washington City Paper