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Conrad Wants All Tax Cuts Extended While Congress Works On Broader Reform

First Posted: 11/10/10 10:11 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:10 PM ET

Kent Conrad

WASHINGTON -- Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), one of the most important voices in the ongoing tax cut debate, is supporting a proposal pushed by a prominent conservative economist.

The North Dakota Democrat announced on Tuesday that he personally favors using the coming expiration of the Bush tax cuts as a catalyst to overhaul the entire tax system. If that couldn't be done in time, he added, he would favor extending the current rates for all incomes, temporarily.

"Frankly, it makes a great deal of sense to go to tax reform," Conrad said, at an event sponsored by the fiscally conservative Peter G. Peterson Foundation. "What is really needed, I believe, is fundamental tax reform and maybe it would help incentive the movement in Congress, in the White House, towards fundamental tax reform if we were to let all the tax cuts expire... I believe in a perfect world we will go to fundamental tax reform. I have argued that both privately and publicly. I think that would be the best course."

"If I were able to make the decision, I would go for changing the tax system fundamentally and I would have an extension until that is accomplished," he added.

Conrad's proposal, he acknowledged, is a reflection of that offered earlier in the week by Kevin Hassett, a fellow at the conservative think tank, the American Enterprise Institute, and a one-time adviser to Sen. John McCain. The country, Hassett argued, would benefit by a tax structure that would advance its competitive advantage. And the best way to achieve that would be to take advantage of this moment -- with the Bush tax cuts expiring -- to push Congress to scrap the current system.

It is, if nothing else, a bold suggestion. But it fails to account for Congress' general reluctance to tackle anything other than non-incremental reform. A group of senators have been pushing broad tax reform for months if not years, without getting much of an audience.

Rather, the path forward on the Bush tax cuts seems more likely to be the one articulated by Conrad's co-panelist at the event, Sen. Evan Bayh (D-Ind.)

"I think for the next couple of years we need to err on the side of growth, not adding to the burdens of people making the hiring and investing decisions," said the Indiana Democrat who, before retiring, will likely have to vote on a tax cut proposal. "But after that we need to quickly pivot and begin reducing this debt. So I would favor a two-year extension... of all of them."

Should Democrats follow the Bayh and Conrad route -- and even the Obama White House has indicated that it's willing to talk about such a proposal -- it will be labeled capitulation. Not only does extending rates for the wealthy have little economic impact, the Democratic base has argued, but it also invites lawmakers to continue pushing the tough pill of tax increases down the road. That said, in an email to the Huffington Post, a party operative laid out a fairly straightforward way that, in the long term, the party could take advantage of the current conversation. .

"I wonder if Democrats have considered passing a temporary extension of all tax relief to pacify Republicans, only to re-introduce a bill immediately after the fact to make the middle class relief permanent. This would force Republicans to vote against tax relief without the fall back that Democrats are raising taxes on anyone during a recession. Plus, it would allow Democrats repair their appeal to progressives who want them to take a stand. It's worth asking."

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WASHINGTON -- Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), one of the most important voices in the ongoing tax cut debate, is supporting a proposal pushed by a prominent conservative economist. The North Dakota Democ...
WASHINGTON -- Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), one of the most important voices in the ongoing tax cut debate, is supporting a proposal pushed by a prominent conservative economist. The North Dakota Democ...
 
 
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01:08 AM on 11/12/2010
The Bush Tax cut expiration is now juxtaposed against the deficit commission, however there seems to be little connection between the issues by the political class. Can we really afford the tax cuts and legislative spending of both parties?

Please read my blog:

http://www.wealthvest.com/blog/wade-dokken/expiration-of-the-bush-tax-cuts-and-the-great-recession/

Wade Dokken
President, WealthVest
03:03 AM on 11/11/2010
Conrad is a Republican, I mean a Blue Dog Democrat that is, a Republican in Democrat clothing. It it Democrats of his ilk why the Democrats look like they cannot govern and are not for liberal and progressive issues, but for Wall Street and therefore no different from the Republicans. We need to purge out these Blue Dogs out of the party and vote for more progressives. They are taking down the Democratic bran.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KarenT
The crazies on the right are driving me crazy!
02:57 AM on 11/11/2010
Please call your Senators, your Congressperson and the WH tomorrow armed with this info:

This is what the GOP is fighting for in taxcuts for the rich. There is very little difference in what they are proposing vs. what Obama is proposing until you get to an individual making over $500,000 per year. That represents less than 1% of our population yet will add $700 billion to the deficit over the next ten y...ears! Obama's plan simply takes taxcuts back to the Clinton years for the wealthy...we did quite well then didn't we?

http://www­.washingto­npost.com/­wp-dyn/con­tent/graph­ic/2010/08­/11/GR2010­081106717.­html?refer­rer=emaill­ink
02:54 AM on 11/11/2010
Have we already lost the battle with the rich? The middle class are the oppressed. It's just a game of Monopoly. We do not pass go and we do not collect $200. We do not own Boardwalk and Park Place, that is for sure.
02:49 AM on 11/11/2010
Just let it expire. Then come out and tell the people the deficit has been cut by about a trillion dollar because we are going back to Clinton level and the wealthy tax cuts were not extended. Plus it probably want be as much of a tax increase then the tax cuts only about 10% of the American people knew they got anyway.
01:23 AM on 11/11/2010
America,

We the People are
F
U
C
K
E
D
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Mikeeee
conservatism = "low-effort" thinking.
12:55 AM on 11/11/2010
shvt the f*&^%k up.
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drwtsn
Could I please get an upgrade to a macro-bio?
10:35 PM on 11/10/2010
"What is really needed, I believe, is fundamental tax reform and maybe it would help incentive the movement in Congress, in the White House, towards fundamental tax reform if we were to let all the tax cuts expire...If I were able to make the decision, I would go for changing the tax system fundamentally and I would have an extension until that is accomplished," he added.
______________________________

He can't go two minutes without contradicting himself. First he says letting all the tax cuts expire would be best for true reform, and then he says to extend them all. There should be a minimum IQ level requirement for the US Senate to keep people like this out of there.
09:26 PM on 11/10/2010
This is not the climate to tackle revamping the federal tax code. It can only result in furthering what Reagan started shoveling more and more of the tax burden onto what remains of the middle class.

There are a lot more pressing issues like energy, the economy, defending social security, and weaning the war machine from murder and destruction to the creation of a sustainable world. Expending political capital shuffling these cards would be a fatal mistake for the Obama Administration. Makes you question Sen. Conrad's loyalties. And once again proves that those that whine the loudest about paying taxes are those most able to pay.
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drwtsn
Could I please get an upgrade to a macro-bio?
10:45 PM on 11/10/2010
Most able, and least likely, to pay.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jbvbwysu
I actually read the article before I comment on it
10:56 PM on 11/10/2010
"It can only result in furthering what Reagan started shoveling more and more of the tax burden onto what remains of the middle class."

But that's exactly what the Blue Dogs, DINOs, and Republibaggers want!
09:22 PM on 11/10/2010
Sign the petition to tell Congress to end the Bush Tax Cuts.

http://act.credoaction.com/campaign/bushtaxcuts/?r_by=-3263525-AoNP8kx&rc=confemail
02:45 AM on 11/11/2010
Thank you. i did
08:54 PM on 11/10/2010
Sen. Conrad's plan appears to be a thinly disguised attempt to continue tax breaks for the wealthy at the expense of everyone else.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jbvbwysu
I actually read the article before I comment on it
10:55 PM on 11/10/2010
Just another DINO at work...
08:42 PM on 11/10/2010
This guy has to be targeted for an election loss. He worked against us on Health Care and now he's for tax breaks for people who don't need them...........Sounds a little too republican to me and he's got to go ASAP. Maybe, he could just be honest and move to the dark side(redumblican) already, his voting record sure indicates his true alliances.
08:25 PM on 11/10/2010
Let it expire and then revamp the tax codes. NO EXTENSION.
07:20 PM on 11/10/2010
Oops. Make that bushtaxcutscompromise.blogspot.com
07:20 PM on 11/10/2010
If Republicans are really concerned with extending the top 2% tax cuts in order to help small businesses create jobs, there's an obvious compromise. See bushtaxcutscompromise.com