Jun. 5—GROTON — Imagine leaving your home in Groton, Massachusetts, to spend some time at a summer home in Groton, Connecticut. Shane Dawson, Owen Torgersen, Max Battles and Jack Battles, all of Groton, Mass., are staying at the Battles family summer home in Groton Long Point. On Friday, they were playing a game of spikeball together. (c)2021 The Day (New London, Conn.) Visit The Day (New .
what all have you learned? as impeachment has ramped up, the tax battles which we spent much of the past year discussing, have gained momentum as well. we saw this past week that the president changed his residency from new york to florida, and i saw that on this network yesterday. governor cuomo speculated that some of the tax cases might have something to do with that. but essentially, the president is arguing in about four or five legal cases that prosecutors have no ability to not only prosecute a sitting president, but investigate him while he s in office, and that congress has no legitimate oversight authority on the president, unless there s a legitimate legislative task attached to it. so, he s basically plugging all of these holes to keep those returns private, to keep them from coming into any democratic hands. and he s got a number of cases he s got to keep plugged in order to do so. constitutional law experts i spoke with thought there was not a good chance of even justic
let s be clear from the beginning. his two major priorities are to make sure that tax cut benefits the middle class and to reduce the corporate tax rate. those are the job creators. the president wanted 15%. it s now at 20% but no longer at 35%. bill: kellyanne conway touting the tax idea earlier today. president trump pressuring congress to get it done by tend the end of the year. governor sununu. happy monday to you. good back in the time machine, 1989, 1990. are there comparisons you could make now with what you went through during your tax battles? the devil is always in the details. that s what they are going through. they are trying to deal with the pressure that comes at the end of writing a major bill like this.
personal returns. joining us now live, congressman steve king, a republican from iowa and member of the tea party caucus. good morning. good morning. the president wants to keep lower taxes for 97% of americans, the treasuries department s office of tax analysis for the tax year 2007, under bush, 3% of all tax returns were for incomes over $250,000. explain the view that obama s proposal would hurt. walk me through it. i recall back when the bush tax brackets were first implemented, a decade ago. the argument was how do you give tax breaks to people not paying taxes that s a number approaching or exceeding 50%. the lowest bracket would receive a 50% tax increase if the bush tax brackets were allowed to expire. i think this is just another one of the class pieces the president has done, dividing people along whatever lines he can demographically to how is that class envy? i m sorry. you say this is a class envy play by the president. what do you mean? if you