Tag Archives: divisive

Manchin Denounces Billionaires Tax as Divisive

Senate Democrats’ plan to extract hundreds of billions of dollars from the wealth of billionaires hit a major snag on Wednesday when Senator Joe Manchin III, Democrat of West Virginia, denounced it as divisive.

The billionaires tax, officially unveiled early Wednesday morning, may have died before the ink was dry on its 107-page text. Mr. Manchin, speaking with reporters, said, “I don’t like the connotation that we’re targeting different people.” People, he added, that “contributed to society and create a lot of jobs and a lot of money and give a lot of philanthropic pursuits.”

“It’s time that we all pull together and grow together,” he said.

The proposed tax would almost certainly face court challenges, but given the blockade on more conventional tax rate increases imposed by Senator Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, Democrats have few other options for financing their domestic agenda. Finance Committee aides expressed surprise at Mr. Manchin’s position, insisting that he had expressed at least mild support to the committee’s chairman, Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon.

If the proposal can be enacted over Mr. Manchin’s concerns, billionaires would be taxed on the unrealized gains in the value of their liquid assets, such as stocks, bonds and cash, which can grow for years as vast capital stores that can be borrowed off to live virtually income tax free.

The tax would be levied on anyone with more than $1 billion in assets or more than $100 million in income for three consecutive years — which applies to about 700 people in the United States. Initially, the legislation would impose the capital gains tax — 23.8 percent — on the gain in value of billionaires’ tradable assets, based on the original price of those assets.

For people like the Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, the Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and the Tesla founder Elon Musk, that hit would be enormous, since the initial value of their horde of stocks was zero. They would have five years to pay that sum.

After that, those billionaires would face an annual capital gains tax on the increase in value of their tradable assets over the course of the year.

The legislation was also drafted to allow billionaires to continue their philanthropy without any tax penalty for money given away.

Democrats say the billionaires tax could be one of the most politically popular elements of their social safety net and climate change bill, which is expected to cost at least $1.5 trillion.

But implementation could be tricky. Billionaires have avoided taxation by paying themselves very low salaries while amassing fortunes in stocks and other assets. They then borrow off those assets to finance their lifestyles, rather than selling the assets and paying capital gains taxes.

The plan already faced resistance from some House Democrats who worry that it may not be feasible and could be vulnerable to legal and constitutional challenges. The Constitution gives Congress broad powers to impose taxes, but says “direct taxes” — a term without clear definition — should be apportioned among the states so that each state’s residents pay a share equal to the share of the state’s population.

The 16th Amendment clarified that income taxes do not have to be apportioned, and proponents of the billionaires tax have been careful to portray it as a tax on income, not wealth.

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Olympics chief warns against ‘divisive’ athlete protests in Tokyo

The president of the International Olympic Committee has warned athletes against political protests at the upcoming Tokyo games, calling on them to avoid “divisive” statements that could overshadow the world’s biggest sporting event.

Thomas Bach told the Financial Times that the games, which begin next Friday, would be “by far the most complex and most difficult ever,” having been delayed a year due to the pandemic and only taking place with strict coronavirus-related restrictions. 

But the IOC boss, a former Olympic fencing champion for Germany, also wants to avoid controversies, saying he would not support athlete activism during the games’ most high-profile occasions.

“The podium and the medal ceremonies are not made . . . for a political or other demonstration,” Bach said. “They are made to honour the athletes and the medal winners for sporting achievement and not for their private [views].”

Japan’s Naomi Osaka wears a face mask during the 2020 US Open drawing attention to the shooting of African-American Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia © Al Bello/Getty Images

Over the past year, amid a global reckoning over racial and social injustice, athletes have been at the forefront of protest movements.

European footballers and US basketball players have “taken the knee” before matches in a gesture against racism. Naomi Osaka, the Japanese tennis star who the Tokyo organisers hope to present as the global face of the games, has also been a vocal critic of police brutality.

In recent weeks, the IOC has amended its rules to allow for some dissent, such as at press conferences and on social media. But protests remain forbidden on the field of play, in particular on medal podiums where one of the most famous athlete protests of all time — the raised fists of US sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 games — took place.

“The mission is to have the entire world together at one place and competing peacefully with each other,” Bach said. “This you would never manage if the games [became] divisive.” 

International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach is a German former fencing champion © Behrouz Mehri/Pool/AFP via Getty Images

Olympic officials say privately that curtailing dissent will be impossible to enforce. Such acts have already taken place in the run-up to Tokyo, such as during an US Olympic trials last month when hammer thrower Gwen Berry turned her back on the US flag and draped a T-shirt over her head which read “Activist Athlete.”

This week, the British women’s football team said they would take the knee before Olympics matches.

Political protests are just one of the difficult issues facing the organisers. The event is deeply unpopular with Tokyo’s citizens, according to recent surveys. There has been public outrage at apparent instances of Olympic officials breaking mask-wearing rules in a city under a state of emergency for the Games.

About 11,000 Olympic and 4,400 Paralympic athletes will travel to the Japanese capital in the coming weeks, alongside 41,000 coaches, judges and other officials. They will be stay in a “bubble” away from the city’s public. Overseas visitors are banned and the action will take place without spectators in Tokyo’s expensively constructed stadiums.

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Bach defended the decision to continue with the games with such restrictions, saying it would be a “tremendous showcase for Japan” to the billions watching on television, as well as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for many of those competing.

He rejected the notion that the games were going ahead to protect broadcasting and sponsorship income, which was worth $5.7bn in the four years running up the 2016 games in Rio de Janeiro. 

The IOC president said it would have been financially prudent to cancel the games and rely on its pandemic insurance policies, but “we would not abandon the athletes”. 

In recent weeks, other big sporting events, such as the European football championships, the Wimbledon tennis tournament and even baseball matches in Japan have been played in front of large crowds. 

England football players take the knee before a Euro 2020 match © Justin Tallis/EPA/Shutterstock

Bach admitted he was “not happy” that Japanese authorities have decided to ban spectators but added: “we supported this decision . . . because we think it’s a responsible decision to ensure safe Olympic Games.” The event consists of 28 different sports taking place in 17 days across Japan. 

To help reduce the chances of a coronavirus outbreak, the IOC struck deals with pharmaceutical company Pfizer and the Chinese government to ensure about 85 per cent of athletes, coaches and team officials will be vaccinated ahead of their arrival in Tokyo. Organisers also plan to conduct hundreds of thousands of daily Covid-19 tests on athletes.

Bach said there was a complex plan in place that could mean multiple medals being handed out in an event disrupted by positive tests. In the scenario in which an athlete was unable to compete in a final after testing positive or who was forced into self-isolation, they would receive the lowest rank achievable in that final.

In combat sports such as boxing and karate, that could mean two athletes receiving a silver medal — one for the person who qualified for the final but could not compete, and the other to the athlete who actually lost the gold medal bout. This would “do justice to [both] athletes as one must be isolated,” he said.

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First on CNN: Cheney gets boost from McConnell amid divisive intraparty battle over Trump’s impeachment

On Monday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell was the latest Republican to give her a boost, saying in a statement to CNN that she had “the courage” to act on her convictions in the aftermath of her vote to impeach Trump last month on a charge he incited the deadly insurrection that ransacked Capitol Hill on January 6.

“Liz Cheney is a leader with deep convictions and the courage to act on them,” McConnell said. “She is an important leader in our party and in our nation. I am grateful for her service and look forward to continuing to work with her on the crucial issues facing our nation.”

The statement comes as a cross-section of GOP lawmakers — from top Republicans in Senate leadership like fellow Wyoming Republican Sen. John Barrasso to some conservative House Freedom Caucus members like Rep. Chip Roy of Texas — have publicly defended Cheney in the face of the onslaught from Trump defenders eager to see her defeated. Last week, Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, a close Trump ally, traveled to Wyoming to rally against Cheney, with the former President’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., calling into the event and demanding she be defeated in next year’s primary.

The former President is focusing his political energy on targeting Cheney. According to one source, Trump has repeatedly questioned his Republican allies about efforts to remove Cheney from her leadership position and run a primary candidate against her. He has also been showing those allies a poll commissioned by his Save America PAC that purports to show that Cheney’s impeachment vote has damaged her standing in Wyoming, even urging them to talk about the poll on television.

On Capitol Hill, some Trump defenders are trying to oust her from her leadership, though it’s far from clear they have a majority in the House Republican conference to succeed in that quest. Cheney’s vote to impeach Trump, along with the votes of nine other House Republicans, is expected to be a topic of conversation when the House GOP meets behind closed doors on Wednesday. Already, some Republicans who supported Trump’s impeachment have been subject to intense backlash back home, including South Carolina Rep. Tom Rice, who was censured by his state party over the weekend.

McConnell, who voted last week along with 44 of his Senate GOP colleagues to keep alive an effort to dismiss the Senate impeachment trial on constitutional grounds, has privately told associates he believes Trump committed impeachable offenses, according to sources familiar with the conversations.

When asked by CNN last week if he believes Trump’s actions ahead of the riot amounted to impeachable conduct, McConnell sidestepped the question — and later said he was a juror and would assess the arguments. But unlike House Republicans, most Senate Republicans are distancing themselves from Trump’s actions, even though they’re signaling they’ll vote to acquit on the grounds that they believe the Senate shouldn’t be trying a former president.

Cheney has also received support from beyond Capitol Hill. Former President George W. Bush has made it clear that he supports her, with his chief of staff, Freddy Ford, telling CNN on Friday that Bush planned to praise her during a Saturday call with his former vice president, her father, Dick Cheney.
McConnell’s statement defending Cheney is more of a full-throated defense than the one offered by House Republican leader, Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, who said he backs Cheney but said she would have to answer to their conference for her vote.

“Look, I support her, but I also have concerns,” McCarthy said last month, days before he jaunted down to South Florida to visit the former President and claimed the two were united in attempting to take back the House next year.

McConnell hasn’t spoken to Trump since December 15.

This story has been updated with more information.

CNN’s Caroline Kelly and Michael Warren contributed to this report.

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