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Published: February 1, 2009

The broad outlines of how the Obama administration’s near-trillion dollar stimulus package may change in the Senate began to become visible on Sunday, with Democratic senators indicating that they would be open to considering Republican amendments to the bill, particularly in the areas of housing and infrastructure spending.

 Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, said that Senate Democrats were interested in considering Republican proposals to do more to help the sputtering housing market, including instituting a $15,000 tax credit for all home buyers.

“One of the Republican proposals is to raise the $7,500 tax credit we give to new home buyers, raise it to up $15,000 and do it for all home buyers,” Senator Schumer said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.” “That’s something that we look favorably upon.”

Mr. Schumer, who is a member of the Finmance Committee, also said he was also interested in passing legislation aimed at getting mortgages down to 4.5 percent, althought he said he thought that might go in the next part of the bailout measure approved by Congress last year, not the stimulus package.

He added, “I think we will get real agreement on the housing part..

Senators of both parties also said on Sunday that they expected a significant amount of additional money — up to some $20 to $30 billion — to go toward infrastructure spending on such things as roads and bridges. Senator Schumer also said he supported an additional $5 billion for mass transit spending.

But there was significant disagreement along party lines over whether the additional spending should add to the bottom line dollar figure of the bill. With interest, the bill would actually cost as much as $1.3 trillion dollars, senators of both parties have said.

Senator John Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, speaking on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” said that he would be willing to “raise the total price tag” of the bill to include get the additional spending sought by the Republicans.

But Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader in the Senate, said, “There’s going to have to be a lot taken out of this bill for Republicans to support it.”

The Senate version of the bill is already substantially different from the House package, including a provision to protect millions of middle-class Americans from having to pay the alternative minimum tax in 2009 that brings the total cost of the Senate bill to nearly $890 billion. Reconciling the two versions will require further negotiations with House leaders after the Senate acts. Floor debate is expected to last through next week.

Indicating the types of cuts the Republicans would like to see to the bill, Senator Jon Kyl, Republican of Arizona, said on “Fox News Sunday” that he took issue with the Obama administration’s signature $500 tax rebate to working families — which some economists have said will not result in significant additional spending — as well as with the creation of dozens of new government programs and the transfer of billions of dollars to the states.

Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson, Republican of Texas, said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that she wanted cuts to the bill’s “social spending provisions” — like health care support and other aid to the states — that total about $200 billion in the bill. Additional tax cuts, Ms. Hutchinson and other Republicans said, would be more effective than large-scale government spending programs.

“The whole idea is to stimulate the economy immediately,” she said. “I think we can do it more effectively with less money. Lets do something timely, temporary and targeted, and do it on an overwhelmingly bipartisan basis. It still can be done.”

Senators from both parties also disagreed over how much of an overhaul the bill needs. Democrats continued to defend the measure in its broad outlines, with Senator Schumer indicating that four Republican senators have already indicated they will support the bill. Democrats, who control 58 seats in the House, need to pass the fillibuster-proof majority vote of 60 to get the legislation approved.

“The overall bill is the right bill,” Senator Schumer said. While there are certain spending programs that will come out of the current bill, “the changes will be small,” he said. “We will make some changes around the edges.”

But Senator Kyl, the Republican whip, warned they would withhold support for the bill unless there were “major structural changes to it.”

“I see support for this legislation eroding,” he said. “I think the more people around the country see of it, the angrier they get, because it’s very wasteful. It spends way too much money.”

The Obama administration and Democrats have already cut two provisions in the bill passed by the House of Representatives last week without a single Republican vote. Dropped from the bill was $200 million to fix up the National Mall and millions for family planning that Republicans said would finance contraceptives.

As Mr. Schumer put it on “Face the Nation, "This will pass with Republican votes, because it’s a good package, and because we will make some changes around the edges."

 



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Home arrow Blog arrow Congress Invites Court Challenge With AIG Taxation Plan, Lawyers Say
Congress Invites Court Challenge With AIG Taxation Plan, Lawyers Say PDF Print E-mail
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Wednesday, 18 March 2009

Legal scholars warn that Congress could have a tough time defending itself in court if it tries to tax away the AIG bonuses. 

Lawmakers outraged over the AIG bonuses have told the people who got the money to watch out -- the government will get it back one way or the other, even if it means taxing the heck out of their paychecks. 

But legal scholars say Congress will have a tough time defending itself in court if it goes down that road. 

Not only would Congress be retroactively meddling with contractual agreements, they say, but it would be passing laws that would essentially target a specific group of employees. 

Jonathan Turley, George Washington University law professor, said targeting those employees through taxes would invite a valid court challenge. 

"It could well trigger years of litigation," he said. "Just because a company or individual is unpopular does not mean the government can retroactively impose punitive measures against them. ... There's a host of difficult contractual and constitutional and statutory barriers that would have to be overcome by Congress." 

Two of those difficulties, lawyers say, lie in Article I of the U.S. Constitution -- a section stating Congress cannot pass any "Bill of Attainder" or "ex post facto" law. 

A Bill of Attainder is an act of the legislature that singles out and punishes a group or individual without trial. An ex post facto law retroactively changes the legal consequences of an act. 

"It's a Bill of Attainder. It can't be done," Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., told FOX News when asked about proposals in the Senate to tax AIG. 

President Obama even warned Wednesday about the possibility of a costly court battle over the $165 million in bonuses. 

"We are exploring every possible avenue, as is Congress, to see what we can do. But what we need are tools that allow us not to find ourselves in a situation where we only have two options," Obama said. "One is to withhold money from AIG that could potentially lead them into a spiral that could affect the entire financial system. Or, on the other hand, having folks get bonuses and at least have the capacity to sue the government and get not only their bonuses but potentially even more out of the legal system." 

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner wants to require AIG to pay back the money to the government and deduct that amount from the $30 billion bailout commitment, as well as subject future bonuses to tough restrictions. 

Click here for a PDF of the AIG bonus plan, from Findlaw.

Democrats on the Hill, though, have discussed a range of options for recovering the money that involve heavy taxes. 

Ten House Democrats introduced a bill Tuesday to tax all bonuses above $100,000 at 100 percent to recoup all the "outrageous" AIG bonuses. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement that recouping a "substantial portion" through taxation is one of several viable possibilities. 

And Rep. Charlie Rangel, the Democratic chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, authored a resolution that would place a 90 percent income tax on bonuses above $250,000 for firms, like AIG, that received at least $5 billion in bailout money. 

Initially, Rangel said he was uncomfortable with the idea of meddling with the tax code as a solution to the AIG problem, but he told FOX News he "had an obligation to respond to the fears and anger of the people."

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid also said Tuesday that legislation being crafted by Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., would subject the bonuses to a tax of more than 90 percent. 

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said, "If (AIG CEO Edward) Liddy does nothing, we will act and will take this money back and return it to its rightful owners, the American taxpayers. We will take this money back by taxing virtually all of it.

"So let the recipients of these large and unseemly bonuses be warned. If you don't return it on your own, we will do it for you." 

Liddy told a House committee Wednesday that some employees have volunteered to give some of their bonus money back. 

But he reminded lawmakers that the employees have a legal right to keep the bonuses. 

Robert Sedgwick, an executive compensation attorney, told FOX News he doubts the government could successfully tax all that money back. 

"There'd be a series of constitutional issues in attempting to do it in that way," he said. 

Meanwhile, the Connecticut state legislature is dealing with another legal conundrum, as AIG apparently claims it is legally obligated to pay its bonuses because of provisions in the Connecticut Wage Act. 

AIG cites Connecticut law because the company's Financial Products division, the embattled unit that is receiving the bulk of the money, is located in the state. Part of the Wage Act states that employees who are improperly denied their wages can recover twice that amount in court. 

Connecticut lawmakers slammed AIG for citing the law -- Gov. M. Jodi Rell called it "contemptible" -- but said they would change the act in response. A draft proposal, pushed by House Republican Leader Larry Cafero and other lawmakers, would add provisions exempting companies that receive bailout money. 

Cafero spokeswoman Pat O'Neil said they'll try to take up the bill next week, but it's unclear whether it could have any effect on past contracts. He said lawmakers want at least to prevent AIG from using Connecticut law as an excuse for paying bonuses in the future -- since another $230 million in bonuses is in the pipeline for this year, though Liddy has said he will reduce those. 

"We want to remove from their quiver this argument that they have no choice but to use Connecticut law against us as justification for this reprehensible behavior," O'Neil said. 

Turley said Connecticut, like Washington, would probably have a tough time trying retroactively to apply the new standards to an old AIG contract. 

Turley said the AIG employees who received bonuses have every incentive to keep the money by whatever means possible -- even if that means exposing their identities to public scorn in the courtroom. 

"Their prospect of gainful employment is virtually nil, so these people are not going to go quietly into the night," Turley said. "These people are already as popular as Ebola. They have little incentive to return a million dollars or more."



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