Wednesday, September 05, 2007

A new special interest group: The Working Poor

Of all the dumb comments I've heard from politicians, State Sen. Nancy Cassis wins the prize. Cassis wants to delay the onset of a promised earned income tax credit meant to give relief to Michigan's lowest-paid workers until the state's rainy day fund is restored to $250 billion, which last happened in 2001.

Why did Cassis zero in on the working poor? From the
Flint Journal:
[...] Cassis cynically refers to these working poor as just one more "special interest" among many seeking relief.
Special interest? Cassis must be confusing the working poor with Dick DeVos and his All Children Matter PAC. They're throwing around some serious money in Utah trying to win their voucher referendum.

In a post titled,
Why Is Michigan Money Coming Here?, Accountability points to the DeVos family who, "has spent a good chunk of their fortune on the PAC. Along with them, Wal-Mart heirs Jim and John Walton are frequent donors, giving more than $3 million to the PAC in 2004."

Utah isn't the sole beneficiary of their influence, Florida, Louisiana, Ohio, Missouri, Virginia, Wisconsin and Michigan have all received funds too.


Why is DeVos' PAC spending money in Utah?
Accountability sees it this way:
[...] it makes it clearer to me why Utah was picked for this voucher plan: It's considered a "small state" by the people who fund All Children Matter, so it would be cheaper here to run a voucher plan through the legislature and past Utah voters, and then use that victory to build momentum for campaigns in bigger states. It means this a national campaign, not just an idea that grew from Utah voters or lawmakers.

And what does this say about our legislature, that this organization targeted us -- a small, cheap state -- to pour money into some legislative campaigns in order to protect or win enough votes to get a voucher plan through the assembly? What does it say that for a few million dollars, these people from Michigan got exactly the bill they wanted, House Bill 148, by a one-vote margin in the House this winter?
Nancy Cassis knows the answer to those questions. She's a Republican. Cassis knows that money talks and money buys influence.

The special interest working poor? They don't have a chance as long as people like Cassis remain in government.

3 comments:

Referendum One said...

Kathy, thanks for the nod to my weblog (http://accountabilityfirst.blogspot.com/). I'm continuing to study -- and be amazed by -- the river of Michigan money pouring into Utah. If you have any insight that would help explain the history of this ACM phenomenon, please drop me a note. Thanks!

Larry said...

She knows in this day and time that money will never be restored so she is trying to get political cover for being cold hearted.

Cartledge said...

I have a theory that the economy at the margins determines election outcomes. It proved true in the 2006 mid terms and looks to be online with our soon to happen Australian election.
So perhaps people like that ensure they won't remain in government.