Poythress hits Republican “secession candidates”

May 20, 2009 by Ken Edelstein · 5 Comments
Filed under: ARTS & EVENTS 
GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATE DAVID POYTHRESS: See his anti-secession video after the jump.

GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATE DAVID POYTHRESS: See his anti-secession video after the jump.

Democrat David Poythress may be an underdog in the 2010 governor’s race, but he put a video on YouTube today that does a pretty good job of showing how silly — perhaps even vulnerable — Republicans are sounding as they leap all over each other to appeal to the far right.

The subject: Noises the GOP candidates have been making about seceding from the good ol’ U.S. of A.

Poythress, who flaunts the fact that he’s a retired Army Reserve general, expresses his “outrage” in the video that four of six Republicans in the governor’s race are “embracing secession.”  Photos of candidates Ray McBerry, Eric Johnson, John Oxendine and Karen Handel appear on the screen.

Poythress’ claim is only a bit of a stretch. He falsely states that the candidates said they’d “support secession from the United States of America.”

On the other hand, McBerry, whose photographer should appear next to the entry for “fruitcake” in the latest edition of Webster’s, has indeed announced that he’s running as a “States’ Rights”candidate. He also has less of a chance of winning the Republican nomination as Cynthia McKinney would were she running for the Democratic nomination.

OK, so Johnson, Oxendine and Handel — three of the GOP field’s four frontrunners — stopped short of declaring war on Fort Sumter. But they’ve been only a tad less direct than McBerry. Read more

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Recession is Georgia lawmakers’ Trojan Horse for special interest tax breaks

February 19, 2009 by Ken Edelstein · Leave a Comment
Filed under: POLITICS 

Compare the proposed Georgia statehouse Republican “economic recovery plan” to Barack Obama’s stimulus package and you get an idea how disinterested GOP politicians are over the needs of average families.

The only part of their proposal remotely designed to help create jobs is described by the AJC as “a $2,400 income tax credit for each unemployed person that businesses hire before July 2010 and keep on the job for at least 24 months.”

Now, I’m trying to imagine the business owner who would make a decision to hire an unemployed person (and to exclude from consideration any employed candidates) so that two years down the road, if that unemployed person stayed in that job, the business would get a $2,400 tax credit.

“It wouldn’t change how many jobs were created, it would only change who gets the jobs,” one economist was quoted as saying.“You are giving taxpayer money to things that would have happened anyway.” And the recession will be over by the time the businesses will get the credits anyway..

The unemployed-hire’s tax credit is actually just cover for the bill’s more substantive measure: A $1 billion giveaway to businesses, starting in 2012, with the phaseout of the state corporate income tax.

That’s unlikely to do anything to ease the recession (which hopefully will be long past by then), but it will make it much more difficult for future lawmakers to balance the budget without cutting big-ticket items like schools, health care and transportation.

Senate Majority Leader Chip Rogers, R-Canton, and House Majority Jerry Keen, R-St. Simons Island, are all gungho about it, so it seems likely to pass. Ah, well. That’s the way the sausage gets made in Georgia — sort of like the peanut butter.

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