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Deficit Reduction Cave Should Have Ended, But President Offers Up Social Security Again

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The Congressional Budget Office has spoken. Starvation politics and policies hurt the economy. But the starve-the-beast partisans (and Blue Dogs) are still at it trying to carve out greater austerity, which will be costly and hurtful to most Americans.


Slow growth reflects a combination of ongoing improvement in underlying economic factors and fiscal tightening that has already begun or is scheduled to occur — including the expiration of a 2 percentage-point cut in the Social Security payroll tax, an increase in tax rates on income above certain thresholds, and scheduled automatic reductions in federal spending. That subdued economic growth will limit businesses’ need to hire additional workers, thereby causing the unemployment rate to stay near 8 percent this year, CBO projects.

Economists such as Joseph Stiglitz, Paul Krugman, and Robert Reich have been warning that this was the case. So too have 350 others last fall.

Few argue that the debt is unimportant or that deficits don’t matter at all. But waiting till the economy includes more jobs would solve part of the deficit by itself, thus reducing some of the need for cuts in the first place. Why not wait to put first things first?  Heck, not even the king of austerity Peter Peterson apparently believes that austerity timed during a recovery is a good idea. So why are all his minions out in force chanting budget cuts when we still need jobs?  

Might we not also point out that the President has also shrunk the deficit, but at a great cost (see the link in the first paragraph). Building the job sector would enable people to recover from the misdeeds of the enabling politicians, the financial sector and the corporate sector, which crashed the economy in the first place.  And it would also provide a context in which surpluses could finally be grown and the debt paid down. What’s the chance of the GOP or our beleaguered and bullied president waiting for a more auspicious time? Zero.  

Yesterday the President put Social Security and medicare back on the table in a misguided effort at “compromise,” now redefined to mean the American people get trashed again. Today’s seniors on average were hammered by the recession with no or little time to recover. Near-zero interest rates punish seniors, many of whom who cannot entrust what little they have in the stock market. This assures that most cannot keep up with inflation. Medical care soars and costs more than Medicare will pay. Property taxes strain the average senior’s ability to afford his or her home. The current COLA underestimates inflation. Yet the President thinks cutting COLAs (or worse) is a good thing?  

BREAKING: Speaker Howell Rules Massive Redraw of Districts Not Germane

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Regarding House Bill 259, the massive voting district redraw bill crossing over from the Virginia Senate, Del Mark Cole moved to accept the Senate amendment.

Speaker Howell invoked the single object rule (no law shall embrace more than one object), but said it doesn’t apply. This amendment is to the same purpose.  So it doesn’t violate the single object rule.  Senate districts were added that were not in the title, but we have done that many times before, he said.

But the germaneness issue is much more problematic. It means that the issue is in close relationship, appropriate, and relative.  It’s a parliamentary principle used since 1789 and in the Va House for centuries to produce orderly legislation. It prevents legislation not reasonably anticipated and for which legislators were not properly prepared, he said.

House Bill 259 was introduced to make certain technical amendments, but not to completely re-do, the redistricting plan.  It strays dramatically.  This vast rewrite goes well beyond the usual precinct tweaks and the usual purpose of 259.  Some think germaneness is in the eyes of the beholder.  I think it is much more important for the integrity of the speaker’s chair.  And with that, Speaker Howell declared the vast, expansive redraw not germane.

Eric Can’t-or’s Terrible, Horrible, No-Good, Very Bad Day

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US Rep Eric Cantor was everywhere yesterday trying to put a new face on the obstructionist, 99%-hating, xenophobic, “let-them-eat-cake” wrecking crew (aka the US Majority House Leadership). All it cared about in the past four years was thwarting Obama at every turn and making sure the economy didn’t heal too well to enable the President’s re-election. Guess what?

He (and his fellow members of the GOP leadership) may have gerrymandered their way into continued presence in the nation’s capitol for now, but the electoral handwriting is own the wall for the future. The GOP will have to either cheat their way into continued domination of one House of Congress, change or fool Americans into thinking it has changed.  Unwilling to actually change, Can’t-or will try to put a pretty face on himself and itself. But messaging won’t solve what is systemically wrong with today’s Republican Party.

Cantor and the GOP leadership don’t actually listen to the American people anymore, only the Tea Party. They doesn’t even listen to those who used to be masters of packaging the nasty GOP and turning it into “sunshine.”  Yep, even Karl Rove is in exile. Instead the re-packager of vermin, Frank Luntz keeps keeping on. And he’s fed Can’t-or a mouth full.

The media response was often hilarious. John Stewart trounced both Cantor and Luntz. Ed Shultz, Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O’Donnell had a field day with Cantor.  And the rest of the media pretended re-branding would help.

If only the US could see how very caring Erick Can’t-or and his followers “are.” But Can’t-or evidently trained at the Wooden School of Mitt-Romney-Fake-Caring, where the 99%, not to mention the 47%, are seen as just so very undeserving. Did I mention his rich bailed-out banker wife?  And he claimed yesterday to understand the difficulty of saving for college. Not quite. The rest of us are just so very bourgeois.

Before the American Enterprise Institute yesterday, Can’t-or used the words “health, happiness and prosperity” to define the future (fictitious) GOP agenda. Since when has the GOP cared about such things?  A pretense now is too late. He’s given too much effort trying to sabotage the economy, sacrifice job growth, public education, health care, Medicare, Social Security, Medicaid, and jobless benefits.

Still, Cantor thinks he’s ID’d the Republican version of dream. And he hopes Americans forget his Ayn Rand policies betraying his radical and extreme version of “everyone for himself and God help us all.” Underneath it all, it’s just more Peter Peterson-inspired engineered austerity to advantage hedge fund investors, Wall Street, and the Fortune 500 CEOs.

HINT: Eric, you give yourself away with the lip curl. Looking down on Americans isn’t a very good idea, especially when it is written all over your face and in the tone of your voice. And it makes you wonder how many other “Virginia Gentlemen” pols are waiting in the wings with their dripping insincerity and vicious contempt for the American people. No wordsmith and re-branding will do it. Nor will pretending to care about immigrants now that electoral handwriting is on the wall.It would have helped if your party hadn’t engaged in multi-tiered vote suppression. But, too late. The Can’t-or is out of the bag. Your GOP is not interested in “advancement the happiness of man.” Not even close.

 

Virginia News Headlines: Wednesday Morning

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Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Wednesday, February 6. Also, check out the video of Jon Stewart ripping “Ferret News” and “Republican Batman” Frank Luntz, “well known for changing language in order to make conservative policies sound better to the public.”

*Asian paper giant agrees to stop cutting Indonesia’s natural rain forests (Just to show the level of “intelligence” of Bob McDonnell and Bob Goodlatte: “At first APP and its defenders pushed back: Virginia Gov. Robert F. McDonnell (R) and Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) defended the right of Mercury Paper to manufacture the toilet paper Paseo with APP’s raw materials.”)

*Obama seeks to delay sequester with budget cuts

*Eric Cantor’s empty happy talk

*The GOP ‘makeover’ is purely cosmetic

*8 Reasons Why Cantor’s Rebranded GOP Looks Just Like The Old GOP (“House Republicans are still more interested in sounding compassionate than ensuring economic advancement for middle and lower income voters.”)

*Virginia Dems pressure Bob McDonnell to kill redistricting plan

*Va. House speaker expected to kill GOP redistricting plan (“Howell…is expected to rule that the new Senate map radically altered the legislation to which it was attached, according to three legislators and a Capitol staffer who spoke on condition of anonymity to speak candidly about private discussions involving the speaker.”)

*Sources: Va. House Speaker to nix Senate redistricting (“Speaker William Howell is likely to nix the new map as not germane to the underlying legislation”)

*Bolling sides with GOP in tie-breaking spree (So much for being an “independent!”)

*Sen. Tim Kaine optimistic for an alternative to sequestration (Of course, Tim Kaine’s always optimistic about everything, so…)

*Virginia House OK’s letting state take over failing schools

*Virginia Senate OKs A-to-F grading scale for schools (I’d say the Virginia Senate gets an “F” on this one.)

*Photo ID for voters advances in Virginia Senate

*Virginia Dems mock alternative currency study

*Gun Debate: Two Democrats Join Two Republicans on Gun Bill

*Norfolk senator treats elderly man injured at Capitol (Is there a doctor in the House…or in this case Senate? Thankfully, yes there is!)

*Tim Carney: Ken Cuccinelli thinks drivers should pay for roads

*Cuccinelli undermines Va. transportation plan

*Cantor urges GOP focus on schools, health, family (How many times is Can’tor going to try and put lipstick on the Teapublican “pig?” It hasn’t worked previously, doubt it will work this time either, but whatever…)

*Senate to choose between two GOP roads plans

*A Progressive Transportation Plan From Ken Cuccinelli (Seriously? Progressive? I don’t think so…)

*House, Senate approve tougher penalties for texting behind the wheel

*Senators pull plug on prayer amendment

*Del. Habeeb outs fellow legislator over traffic stop

*Senate passes Smith’s budget transparency bill

*Senate passes bill allowing ‘free association’ for campus groups

*Va. House passes series of conservative legislation (Seriously crazy stuff…Jon Stewart should have a field day!)

*Virginia Becomes First State to Pass Drone Regulations

*D.C. area forecast: Nicest day of the work week today; late-week wintry mix?

Del. Keam Explains His Thinking on Transportation

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From Del. Mark Keam’s Facebook page, thanks for the thorough explanation of your thinking on transportation, and on the current status of transportation funding in the Virginia General Assembly.

Here’s my latest constituent email (very long!) about transportation:

It’s “Crossover” day, which means that each Chamber of the Virginia legislature has to complete all work on its own bills by midnight tonight.

Yesterday and today, the House of Delegates held marathon sessions to debate and vote on dozens of bills, including the most controversial issues of this year. The one bill that continues to attract the most public attention is Governor Bob McDonnell’s transportation funding bill.

GOVERNOR’S TRANSPORTATION BILL

House Bill 2313 was introduced by Speaker of the House Bill Howell, which is a clear signal to everyone that the transportation bill is a priority for the Governor and the Republican Majority in the House. As a tradition, the Speaker of the House does not file bills under his name, as he needs to oversee every aspect of the Chamber’s operations instead of spending a lot of time on his own legislative agenda.

Following two intense days of debates and amendments, the House today voted to approve the Speaker’s bill on a 53-46 vote, with one member missing who would have voted for it. Among those who supported the bill were four Democrats, while 18 Republicans joined the remaining Democrats in opposition.

I voted against this bill today and I also voted against the floor substitute offered on the floor last night which became the basis for this bill. However, because I voted for a similar bill last week in the House Finance Committee, some have asked me why I voted differently on the floor today.

I realize the following description may be way too long, but given the attention this bill is receiving, I thought I would take some time to explain the substance of various pieces in the legislative package as well my thoughts on the policies.

1. The Gasoline Tax

The centerpiece of House Bill 2313 is the elimination of the current 17.5 cents per gallon motor fuels tax (for passenger cars but not for diesel used by heavy trucks).

Currently, every state and the federal government collect taxes on each gallon of gas we buy, and apply this revenue to fund transportation needs. With this bill, Governor McDonnell would make Virginia become the first state in the nation to get rid of this tax.

His “policy” reason for the proposal is that he believes gas tax is a declining revenue source due to increasing mileage (CAFE standards) in modern cars and the popularity of alternative fuel vehicles like hybrids and electric cars that use less gas. By continuing to rely on this source, the Governor believes that we cannot pay for all of the transportation needs that are outpacing the revenue received.

The Governor additionally believes that if we get rid of this tax, consumers should see a “significant break in the price of gasoline at the pumps.”

I completely disagree with Governor McDonnell on this proposal, and I have told him so personally.

While I agree that gas tax is a declining source of revenue (thanks to President Obama’s action to require increased CAFE standards for cars!), this tax is one of the very few user-fees that make sense to pay for our road repairs. Gas tax is the only stream of dedicated funds that we can rely on for transportation, so the Governor’s proposal would be killing the goose that lays the golden egg.

Instead of getting rid of the gas tax, I believe we should increase it. Virginia’s rate is the 40th lowest among states. Our 17.5 cents per gallon is less than the 23.5 cents that Maryland charges, or 20.5 cents in West Virginia or the whopping 38.9 cents per gallon charged by North Carolina.

Virginia last set the gas tax at 17.5 cent in 1986. It has not been touched since then. I support increasing the amount – either in cents or in percentages – and also indexing it to inflation so the amount would rise automatically depending on the economy.

2. Sales Tax Increase

In place of the lost revenues that would result by getting rid of the gas tax, Governor McDonnell would raise the sales tax by 0.8 cent from 5 to 5.8 cents per dollar, and apply the increase to pay for transportation maintenance.

Obviously, nobody likes to see their taxes increase and no politician wants to vote to raise taxes. However, if new revenues are needed to provide a core function of the government and we’ve exhausted all other options, than a tax increase could be necessary.

I don’t have a philosophical or political problem with voting to increase the sales tax if this new revenue will indeed help fight our traffic congestion in Northern Virginia. But I do have a concern that this tax would be replacing the gas tax which is a dedicated stream of transportation revenue.

And I am also concerned that low income Virginians who might not own cars will have to pay more sales taxes when they won’t be receiving a gas tax relief. A better trade for me would have been to keep the gas tax, and instead, get rid of the 2.5% tax on grocery store food that everyone – including low income Virginians – have to pay.

3. Dulles Metro Expansion

Currently, transportation receives 0.5 cent of every dollar in sales tax that the state collects. Governor’s bill would divert an extra 0.25 cent from the sales tax to transportation, in addition to the new 0.8 cent sales tax increase, to ensure that a significant portion of the state’s sales tax will be dedicated to transportation.

To sweeten the pot for Northern Virginia, Governor McDonnell proposes to apply the first $300 million collected from this shift in funds to pay for the Dulles Metrorail Extension Project. Naturally, this funding would help ensure that the Metro is completed on time and potentially keep the toll amounts to an affordable level.

My concern about this provision is that these moneys would be coming out of the state’s General Fund which is the same pot used to fund our public schools and higher education, healthcare, public safety, environmental compliance and other core functions of government.

While transportation is important and is also a core function of government, the legislature decided long ago to create a separate “lock box” so that transportation could be funded out of a special Trust Fund that would not impact the General Fund. By diverting more money out of the General Fund to pay for traffic issues in addition to the funds in the Transportation Trust Fund, we would leave less for education and other priorities.

4. Vehicle Registration Fee

As a conservative Republican, Governor McDonnell has surprised many by not only proposing to increase the sales tax, but by also offering to increase fees to pay for transportation. He proposes to raise the vehicle registration fee by $15 per car, and dedicate the new funds to intercity passenger rail and transit.

I support this part of the Governor’s bill as it would help offer mass transit and other public transportation options, especially in fast-growing population centers of Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads.

5. Alternative Fuel Vehicle Fee

Another fee that Governor McDonnell has proposed is not as positive for me. He wants to impose a new $100 fee for every alternative fuel vehicle to be placed into the Commonwealth Mass Transit Fund to help fund transit options.

While I applaud the Governor for his political courage to propose new fees, I believe this is a completely upside down approach to policymaking. Alternative fuel cars such as hybrids, electric, natural gas and clean diesel, are the types of innovations that will help our nation wean off of fossil fuels and lead us toward energy independence from overseas suppliers.

Yet, if a consumer chooses to invest in these environmentally-sensible vehicles, they should not be punished by our state. The Governor’s proposal does exactly that, by imposing a new fee that owners of less fuel-efficient cars, minivans, SUVs and trucks would not have to pay.

6. Internet Sales Tax

Finally, the Governor’s proposal anticipates millions of new revenues to be brought into Virginia to pay for transportation once Congress passes the “Marketplace Equity Act,” which would allow states to collect out-of-state sales taxes on purchases made online.

Governor McDonnell’s bill proposes to allocate potential revenues from this new legal authority to transportation, public education and local governments in a ratio, which could raise hundreds of millions of new funds for transportation.

My problem with this provision is that this is speculation at best as because this is phantom money we’re talking about.

I happen to know a little bit about this issue as I spent several years working on this bill as a Congressional staffer. Based on my personal experiences and from discussions with experts who are working on this issue in Washington, DC, there is little chance that this bill will become law.

Here is how I summed up my view in a press interview about the inclusion of this far-fetched issue in the Governor’s transportation package: “It’s almost legislative malpractice for us to be relying on what Congress may or may not do to solve our transportation problems.”

GOVERNOR’S BILL IN HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE

As one of 22 members of the House Finance Committee, I had the privilege of being able to debate and vote on House Bill 2313 before the other 78 Delegates. The bill as introduced was 38 pages long with extremely complex provisions and cross references to multiple code sections.

When we sat as the House Finance Committee, a substitute amendment was offered which made a few changes to the bill, but the basic outlines were the same as described above. Some of my Democratic and Republican colleagues had prepared amendments to improve the bill, such as keeping the gas tax in place and replacing the gas tax cut with a food tax cut.

Another amendment would have added a new provision to create a Northern Virginia taxing authority that would raise and spend transportation funds within our own region. Another amendment would have proposed a new wholesale tax for gasoline so that distributers of gas, instead of the end user (consumer) would pay for this tax.

I would have happily supported any of these amendments which I believe would raise more revenues for transportation in a sensible way and without creating the problems I mentioned above.

Unfortunately, the Chairman of the House Finance Committee ruled that all of these other amendments were not germane to the bill, so the only amendment that was accepted was the Committee substitute, which was nearly identical to the introduced bill.

However, the Chairman as well as the Speaker of the House who introduced bill committed to entertaining all of these amendments on the House floor once the bill was moved out of Committee.

When the bill was introduced, I told the Governor that I would keep an open mind and look for ways to make the bill better from my perspective.

That is why, although I opposed the bill on the substance, I voted to move the bill out of the Finance Committee and onto the House floor. I thought it was my duty to keep the process moving forward so that everyone in the House could weigh in with their concerns and have a robust debate with amendments being offered.

Yesterday and today, the full House – with all 100 Delegates present – had the opportunity to debate, amend and vote on the Governor’s bill on the floor.

Through the process, a few minor amendments were made to improve the bill slightly, such as to strip out the hybrid fee and to add language that would allow for the consideration of a Northern Virginia taxing authority.

Even with these changes, however, my main concerns with the bill remained. That is why, when the vote was called to accept the substitute and to vote it out of the House, I voted against this bill.

House Bill 2313 is now before the State Senate, and it is unclear what will happen there.

Interestingly, however, late this evening the Senate was unable to vote out its version of the Governor’s transportation bill from the Senate floor. Instead, the Senate debated two varying substitutes to the Governor’s bill, but neither received enough votes to pass. Both Senate substitutes would have kept the gas tax intact, in opposition to the Governor’s proposal.

Now that the House bill has survived but the two Senate bills have been blocked, it is anyone’s guess as to how the process moves forward. We will know soon enough as we have only three more weeks left in this legislative session.

I will be sure to update you on all the details. In the meantime, please let me know if you have any questions about this or any other issue pending in Richmond.

Sincerely,

Mark

VA Senate Democrats Reject Transportation Plans that Raid Education and Public Safety Funding

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This just in from the Virginia Senate Democratic Caucus. All I have to say is “good riddance,” now kill the monstrosity that came out of the House today.

RICHMOND, VA — Today, Senate Democrats rejected transportation plans that took significant money away from education and public safety and did not raise enough revenue to solve Virginia's transportation crisis. Senator Newman's plan to transfer money from the general fund was defeated on a vote of 22-18. Senator Wagner's plan to raise the gas tax was defeated 27-8. The Governor's plan was sent back to committee, taking it out of consideration for the session.

Senator A. Donald McEachin (D-Henrico) said, "I go home deeply disappointed tonight. Although we saw three different transportation plans on the Floor, all were woefully inadequate to the transportation challenges Virginia faces. I cannot vote for a plan that does not raise sufficient revenue to repair Virginia's roads, bridges and tunnels; start long-delayed, needed new construction; and invest in mass transit. I also cannot vote for a plan that raids hundreds of millions of dollars from education and public safety."

Senator Richard L. Saslaw (D-Fairfax) said, "I wish we could have reached agreement tonight, but none of the transportation proposals we saw tonight were anything close to the long-term comprehensive solution Virginia needs. The Governor's bill has been fatally flawed since day one."

Regarding Senator Wagner's proposal, Senator Saslaw continued, "The average price of a gallon of gas last night was probably close to $3.15. That would have likely only raised about 25 cents per gallon. That's nothing — not enough. And he gambles the other half of his plan on the Marketplace Equity Act passing Congress? This bill was poorly conceived."

Regarding Senator Wagner's proposal, Senator Chap Petersen (D-Fairfax) said, "This is a 53-page proposal that was put on our desks today. This is the biggest issue of the Session, and maybe of the last ten years. We haven’t been at the table. This has a lot of good parts to it, but this process is not the process that you go through if you’re serious about passing statewide law." 

On Untolled Congested Highways, Every Day is Free Cone Day

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zakimGreat analogy from Matt Yglesias to explain why congested roads should be tolled:

Build a useful road and you’ll find that space on the road at peak times is a valuable commodity. And yet it’s also a commodity that’s generally either available for free or else available for a price that’s unrelated to the demand for space on the road. Naturally an underpriced valuable commodity leads to overconsumption. Traffic jams, in other words.

Every once in a while Ben & Jerry’s holds a “Free Cone Day” that invariably leads to long lines. Roadways in dynamic metro areas are basically holding Free Cone Day five days a week. Charge people enough money to eliminate routine congestion and you’ll find yourself with fewer traffic jams and an enormous pool of revenue that can be used to maintain your basic infrastructure and upgrade your bus service.

Virginia is experimenting with congestion-priced HOT lanes, but only as additions to free congested roads. And instead of looking for solutions that would actually cut traffic and raise desperately-needed transportation revenue, Gov. Bob McDonnell is instead playing political games (read much more from Jim Bacon here and here).

Watch Jonas Eliasson, Director of the Centre for Transport Studies at Sweden’s Royal Institute of Technology, explain how congestion pricing can improve traffic patterns – and drivers may not even realize they’ve been nudged out of their congested routine:

If you can’t watch the video, read about it here.

Northam Delivers 14,000 Signatures Urging McDonnell to Veto GOP Redistricting

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Richmond, VA-Today Dr. Ralph Northam, a Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor, delivered more than 14,000 petitions gathered by his campaign to Governor Bob McDonnell, to urge the Governor to veto the mid-decade redistricting bill, should it end up on his desk.

“This powergrab puts 46% of Virginians in a new district and is nothing more than an effort to pass a radical agenda that the majority of Virginians do not want,” said Northam. “The Senate should be the place where both parties come together to find solutions-not the place where one side will stop at nothing to mandate things like a medically unnecessary ultrasound for Virgina’s women. It’s borderline corruption, and I urge the Governor to listen to his constituents and veto the bill, if it ends up on his desk.”

House Republicans Want Study on Virginia Establishing Its Own Currency

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In the latest attempt to push right-wing legislation through the General Assembly, the House of Delegates passed a bill this morning that would establish a panel to research the possibility of Virginia creating its own currency. The bill, which basically passed along party lines, authorizes almost $18,000 to be spent on establishing a 10 person panel that would “study the feasibility of a metallic-based monetary unit.”

In other words, it would require the state to spend financial resources on studying whether or not we want to return to the gold standard. On top of that, it would require state employees to spend countless hours on the project — time that staff members simply don’t have due to all the cuts Republicans have made to the public workforce.

Since the ultimate goal of the measure is something that’s only supported by the extreme right flank of the GOP, it shouldn’t be too surprising that the measure was sponsored by Bob Marshall — a delegate from Prince William County who has earned the reputation of being extremely conservative and more than a little odd. Marshall has tried to pass similar legislation since 2008 and has tried to use it as a way to discuss his opposition to the Federal Reserve and the policies it promoted during the economic recovery process.

While many of his fellow Republicans might have joined in his opposition to a large centralized governmental agency like the Federal Reserve, he had a difficult time getting any support for the measure before this year. Governor Bob McDonnell, for instance, has publicly said that he doesn’t think Virginia should print its own money. And the idea was once considered such an absurdity that a lobbyist handed out fake coins at a dinner in February of 2011 for the Virginia Capitol Correspondents Association that read “In Bob We Trust.”

The measure will probably have a hard time surviving both the Senate and McDonnell’s veto pen, but it does force you to look at how conservative the House Republican caucus has become recently. I mean, the legislation has gone from being considered an absurdity being promoted by a lone ultra-conservative member to making it’s way through the House.

Governor’s Hybrid Car Tax Proposal: Examining the Math

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Last night, the House of Delegates voted on a version of Governor McDonnell's transportation plan that excludes his proposed $100 annual tax on hybrid and electric vehicles.  I was surprised to see the amendment attributed to a Republican, Delegate Chris Jones.  The Senate is expected to vote on its bill reflecting the governor's transportation plan today- SB1355.  

My organization, Chesapeake Climate Action Network, opposes the hybrid tax because we believe we should be rewarding solutions to climate change, not punishing them.  But the proposal simply doesn't make sense, especially when you examine the math. Check out our infographic below for details.

Governor McDonnell's proposed hybrid tax - Examining the math 

Want to call your elected officials to ask them oppose the hybrid tax? Look them up here. Many of them may have already caught wind of our hybrid parade protesting the tax proposal last week. It was covered by a number of media outlets, including NBC Washington, the Virginian-Pilot and the Washington Post.

Want to keep updated on what you can do on climate change and clean energy in Virginia? Check out the Chesapeake Climate Action Network website.