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Democrats’ constituents would bear the brunt of Biden’s taxes Peter Cohn © Provided by Roll Call The president’s tax proposals would hit Nancy Pelosi’s and Charles E. Schumer’s respective home states of California and New York especially hard.
The late, great Jessica Walter once said in her “Arrested Development” role as matriarch of the fallen-from-grace Bluth family: “I’d rather be dead in California than alive in Arizona.”
President Joe Biden’s tax proposals are about to put Lucille Bluth’s maxim to the test, as the White House pushes the biggest tax increases since President Lyndon B. Johnson was waging dual wars in Vietnam and on domestic poverty. It’s happening amid the thinnest of partisan margins for Democratic leaders and a midterm cycle some say is the GOP’s to lose, given redistricting and historical headwinds facing a president’s party.
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Presented by Coalition for App Fairness
With Daniel Lippman
HOW THE FEC IS CONSIDERING FIGHTING SCAM PACS: The FEC on Thursday weighed its options aimed at fighting the rise of so-called scam PACs, which steer donations from unwitting donors typically into the pockets of those running the fundraising operation rather than the candidates contributors think they’re supporting, and which have been on the rise in recent years.
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Todd C. Frankel and Jena McGregor, The Washington Post Get the weekly rundown Email Submit
Hundreds of major companies and corporate leaders signed a statement released Wednesday that opposes laws that restrict voting rights, the latest step in an escalating battle over election laws being debated nationwide.
The letter included support from recognizable corporate names such as Target, Netflix, Bank of America, Facebook, Cisco, Twitter, Microsoft, Starbucks, Amazon, Mastercard, American Airlines, United Airlines and Vanguard, as well as prominent people such as investor Warren Buffett, law firms and nonprofit organizations.
But the statement was also notable for the names that were missing, including Delta Air Lines and Coca-Cola - two companies that earlier this month were among the first to oppose new voting rules in their home state of Georgia.
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