The Sanders Argument for Spending $3.5 Trillion

The Wall Street Journal ran an op-ed by Sen. Bernie Sanders today arguing for the passage of his proposed $3.5 trillion American Rescue Plan. Here’s the kernel of his argument:

We need structural reforms to improve the lives of U.S. families. If Democrats can’t get Republican support for these reforms, then we have to do it alone through the reconciliation process.

In recent years, Republicans used reconciliation to pass trillions in tax breaks, which primarily benefit the rich and large corporations, and they used it to try to repeal the Affordable Care Act and throw some 32 million people off the healthcare they had. We are going to use it too. But we will use it to support the middle class and struggling families and, in the process, create millions of good-paying jobs.

Here is some of what is in the $3.5 trillion reconciliation package that the Senate Budget Committee agreed to:

We are going to end the days of billionaires not paying their fair share of taxes by closing loopholes, while also raising the individual tax rate on the wealthiest Americans and the corporate tax rate for the most profitable companies in our country.

We will take on the greed of the pharmaceutical industry, which charges U.S. residents the highest prices in the world by far for prescription drugs. Under our proposal, Medicare will finally be allowed to negotiate prescription drug prices with the industry.

We will end the absurdity of the U.S. having the highest levels of childhood poverty of almost any major nation by extending the Child Tax Credit so families continue to receive monthly direct payments of up to $300 a child. We will radically improve our dysfunctional child-care system so that no working family pays more than 7% of its pretax income on child care, and we will provide universal pre-K to every 3- and 4-year-old.

We will expand higher education and job-training opportunities for students by making community college tuition-free for all Americans.

We will end the international disgrace of the U.S. being the only industrialized country not to guarantee paid family and medical leave. Women shouldn’t have to return to work a week after giving birth because they have no paid leave and can’t afford to stop working.

We will expand Medicare for seniors to cover dental needs as well as hearing aids and glasses. We will also make sure that we have enough doctors, nurses and dentists in underserved areas, while expanding Medicaid to provide healthcare to the uninsured.

We will give hundreds of thousands of seniors and people with disabilities the ability to get the care they need in their own homes instead of in expensive nursing facilities.

We will also address homelessness and the national housing crisis by making an unprecedented investment in affordable housing.

Further, we will provide undocumented people living in the U.S. with a pathway to citizenship, including Dreamers and the essential workers who courageously kept our economy running in the middle of a deadly pandemic.

I don’t know how long that link will be good for so read it quick. The WSJ says it’s free.

I will limit my remarks to one, what do you mean by “we”? Sen. Sanders with all due respect you’re not a Democrat. You may caucus with the Democrats but you’re not a Democrat.

1 comment… add one
  • Drew Link

    In The Departed Jack Nicholson’s character, effectively Whitey Bulger, comments “they say you can be cops or criminal, but when you’re staring down the barrel of a loaded gun, what’s the difference?”

    You continue to cling to the notion and tell us Democrats are not Sanders progressives. But when legislation, spending, regulation and executive orders are progressive in effect, what’s the difference?

    Does anyone believe the CDC eviction restrictions are not authoritarian dictates intent on the destruction of bedrock capitalist principles? Where are Nancy, Chuck or Joe?

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