1. what did mccain promised us?
2.how is he gonna be a better president than obama?
3.why did obama decided to run for presidency?
4.will obama really going to do what he promised us?
Update:it'll be better if you give me the websites too thanks
Copyright © 2024 Q2A.ES - All rights reserved.
Answers & Comments
Verified answer
1. what did mccain promised us? - More of the same, only angrier.
2.how is he gonna be a better president than obama? - Well, he'd be great for defense contractors.
3.why did obama decided to run for presidency? - The Lord Jesus Christ called him to public service.
4.will obama really going to do what he promised us? - No one can say. I think it's worth a shot at change.
1. they all make promises empty promises
2. no
3.because power is awesome
4. no
Bob Barr look for the Libertarian near you
1.)John McCain (R-Ariz.) plans to promise on Monday that he will balance the federal budget by the end of his first term by curbing wasteful spending and overhauling entitlement programs, including Social Security, his advisers told Politico.Republican John McCain is making promises that would cost billions of taxpayer dollars, yet he is vague about how he would pay for them. McCain is handing around a campaign grab bag of goodies. There are little treats like a summer gas-tax holiday and new mortgages for struggling homeowners, and there are big plums like tax breaks for corporations and families with children.
The expected GOP presidential nominee has nothing on the Democrats. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama would spend billions of dollars themselves on things like paid family leave, universal health insurance and preschool for kids.
The difference? Unlike the Democrats, McCain has made a career of trying to cut spending. He rails against spending in nearly every speech. McCain gets laughs by singling out silly sounding projects like a federal DNA study of bears in Montana: “I don’t know if that was a paternity issue or a criminal issue.”
And he gets attention when he says it was spending, not the war in Iraq, that cost Republicans their control of Congress in 2006.
“The reason why we lost that election, my dear friends, was because we let spending get out of control,” he said recently. “We came to power in 1994 to change government, and government changed us.”
Now McCain is promising ambitious cuts in spending to pay for his ideas. The cuts would not pay for all his promises, but McCain says they needn’t.
“I strongly disagree with the view that just because you reduce the tax burden, just because you let people save and invest more of their money, that therefore there’s less money that goes into government,” he told reporters last week in Alabama.
McCain said he is not exactly a supply-sider — someone who subscribes to the idea that some tax cuts can pay for themselves by encouraging economic growth. But he certainly leans that way.
“I believe there’s more money, because of the increase in economic activity and growth,” he said.
Regardless of who wins the November election, it is vital to find a way to pay for new spending or tax cuts, because the next president will face a budget deficit of more than $400 billion. And the deficit will keep mounting as baby boomer retirements swell Social Security and Medicare.
McCain has pledged to balance the federal budget, although he has backed off an earlier promise to do so in his first term and now says he would do it within eight years.
McCain’s tax cuts would be double the size of President Bush’s:
–First, he wants to extend Bush’s tax cuts, which cost an estimated $228 billion annually and are set to expire after next year, according to congressional analysts.
–On top of that, he seeks new tax cuts of about $225 billion a year, according to his own estimate. He would slash the corporate tax rate, eliminate the alternative minimum tax and double the tax exemption for dependent children.
–And the cost of his tax breaks could rise even higher. McCain has proposed two business tax breaks, a credit for research and first-year expensing of equipment; his campaign says they essentially would cost nothing, but the Treasury Department has estimated they could cost more than $140 billion annually.
Those are just the tax cuts. McCain also proposed a new mortgage refinancing program for struggling homeowners that could cost the government $3 billion to $10 billion. He proposed to suspend federal gas taxes for the summer months at a cost of $8 billion to $10 billion.
And McCain has several proposals whose costs are unknown, such as his pledge to give all veterans a plastic card to get medical treatment anywhere they choose, a new student loan program and tax write-offs for companies that provide Internet service to rural areas.
How would he pay for it? New user fees could pay for the gas-tax holiday, McCain adviser Doug Holtz-Eakin said.
Ironically, McCain said those kinds of fees were essentially tax increases when former rival Mitt Romney imposed them on businesses as governor of Massachusetts. Yet McCain has said he doesn’t want to raise taxes.
McCain also has sketched out ideas for covering the costs of his $225 billion in new tax cuts, saying he would cut spending, eliminate corporate tax loopholes and spark economic growth by that amount of money.
Yet for all the numbers he has provided, McCain has been reluctant to say exactly which programs he would cut.
He criticizes “earmarks,” pet projects tucked into spending bills, like the bear study. He said Wednesday that the bridge collapse in Minnesota last year would not have happened if Congress had not wasted so much money on pork-barrel spending, despite the suspicion of federal investigators that the problem may have been design-related, not spend