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Today, Republican Budget Committee Chairman Ryan makes his return back to Washington and Republicans are holding a welcome back party to celebrate this afternoon. Speaker Boehner was even so excited about his pending return the truth slipped out during an unscripted moment before House Republicans earlier this week. Speaker Boehner announced the GOP’s obstructionist, do nothing agenda was “validated” by the selection of Ryan by former governor Romney.

The House Democratic Leader’s press office released this YouTube video featuring Ryan’s greatest hits. It highlights the Ryan Republican Congress’s efforts to end Medicare as we know it, Ryan’s plan to give more tax breaks to millionaires, and the GOP’s efforts to walk away from their vote for the sequester. Watch it:

Indeed, this is the Paul Ryan Congress. Only 10 percent of Americans in August approve of the job the Ryan Congress is doing. Americans also overwhelmingly disapprove of the GOP plan for ending the Medicare guarantee:

poll

Welcome back, Mr. Ryan!

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MEMORANDUM

To: Interested Parties
Fr: Democratic Leader’s Press Office
Dt: September 10, 2012
Re: GOP “Do Nothing” Congress Doing What They Do Best – Nothing

After a five week summer break, the GOP-led Congress finally is back in session… for just eight legislative days this month. That’s right – a week and a half to do, or not do as the case is with this Congress, the businesses of the American people.

While House Republicans have found the time to vote to end Medicare as we know it and increase costs for seniors while giving tax breaks to millionaires and companies that ship jobs overseas, they have failed to address the two things that matter most to the American families: creating jobs for workers here at home and tax cuts for middle class families and small businesses. This month, the GOP Do Nothing Congress is doing more of what they do best – nothing.

Reuters: Returning Congress faces big tasks, likely to do little

One of the most unpopular and unproductive Congresses in modern history returns on Monday from a five-week recess, facing a crush of big tasks, few of which will likely get done.

Lawmakers are expected to be in Washington for only about two weeks between now and the November 6 election, making their return to the capital little more than a pit stop…

Unfinished business on Capitol Hill includes bills to overhaul the massive farm law, improve cyber security for the nation’s critical infrastructure, downsize the ailing postal service, and normalize trade with Russia.

The most urgent item — making sure Congress does not trigger a recession early next year — is by all accounts on hold until after the election, when lawmakers will attempt to head off trouble of their own making: tax increases and automatic spending cuts that threaten to send the United States over what’s been called “a fiscal cliff.”

Corporate leaders say the uncertainty surrounding this single issue is already weighing on business decisions, particularly in the defense industry.

A preventable recession, induced by a forewarned Congress, would be a first… [9/9]

Politico: Fiscal Cliff: Congress Weighs Another Round of Kick the Can

For all the hype surrounding the dreaded fiscal cliff on taxes and spending, an increasing number of lawmakers are starting to push for Congress to do what it does best when faced with a difficult decision: punt…

Congress doesn’t have plans to do much legislating in the highly political pre-election season before November other than keeping the government running past Sept. 30. And after September, lawmakers will mainly be campaigning rather than dealing with the major fiscal questions that must be resolved before Jan. 1… [9/10]

Associated Press: Congress Set to Pass on Big Issues

When lawmakers return to Washington on Monday, they face big issues, including taxes, spending cuts and the prospect of a debilitating “fiscal cliff” in January. Yet Congress is expected to do what it often does best: punt problems to the future.

With Election Day less than two months away, their focus seems to be on the bare minimum — preventing a government shutdown when the budget year ends Sept. 30…

What may be most noteworthy then about the abbreviated pre-election session is not what Congress is doing but the stack of must-do work that lawmakers are leaving unfinished until a postelection lame-duck session. [9/10]

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Democrats have been united in fighting back against Republicans’ efforts to end the traditional Medicare guarantee. Watch:

Rep. Paul Ryan has led House Republicans in voting to end the Medicare guarantee, which increases costs on seniors in order to give tax breaks to millionaires, Big Oil, and corporations that ship jobs overseas.

As Democrats have noted, the Ryan budget would increase costs by about $6,400 for a typical Medicare beneficiary in a decade.

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House Republicans rang the recess bell earlier this month and left behind a long list of unfinished business including a jobs agenda, middle class tax cuts, and the farm bill. Their unwillingness to work with President Obama and their failure to get things done for the American people is par for the course for the deeply unpopular, do-nothing GOP-led 112th Congress.

On the other hand, House Democrats during the 110th Congress worked in bipartisan way with President Bush and passed major bipartisan legislation on innovation, jobs, energy, education and other critical issues for the American people.

There is just no comparison.

USA Today: This Congress could be least productive since 1947

Congress is on pace to make history with the least productive legislative year in the post World War II era.

Just 61 bills have become law to date in 2012 out of 3,914 bills that have been introduced by lawmakers, or less than 2% of all proposed laws, according to a USA TODAY analysis of records since 1947 kept by the U.S. House Clerk’s office.

In 2011, after Republicans took control of the U.S. House, Congress passed just 90 bills into law. The only other year in which Congress failed to pass at least 125 laws was 1995.

These statistics make the 112th Congress, covering 2011-12, the least productive two-year gathering on Capitol Hill since the end of World War II. Not even the 80th Congress, which President Truman called the “do-nothing Congress” in 1948, passed as few laws as the current one, records show. [8/15]

The Fiscal Times: Do Nothing Congress Did Something: Named Buildings

… Of the 65 bills that cleared both chambers this year, 19 – or about 30 percent – attached someone’s name to a government office building. Over the course of the 112th Congress that started last year, that would be slightly more than one out of every five bills that Obama signed.

“They [the bills] stand out this year because little else got done,” said Thomas Mann, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and co-author of the new book, It’s Even Worse Than It Looks: How the American Constitutional System Collided with the New Politics of Extremism. “And that, in turn, is a result of divided party government at a time of deeply polarized parties engaged in a permanent war. Only the public can change the situation.” [8/15]

And this isn’t the first time we’ve seen this headline:

CNN: Congress: Same hours, half the work
Washington Post’s WonkBlog
: 14 reasons why this is the worst Congress ever
Billings Gazette: What’s worse than the Do Nothing Congress?
Tampa Bay Times
: Congress takes a vacation from nation’s problems
CBS News
: Schieffer: Do-nothing Congress begins five-week vacation with not much done
AP
: Congress Takes 5 Weeks Off With Much Still Left To Do

How many headlines will it take before House Republicans change their ways and stop failing at their jobs?

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77 years ago, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Social Security into law. As a result, seniors were rescued from poverty and the middle class was strengthened.

Congressman Xavier Becerra’s office put together this helpful timeline to remind us of Social Security’s achievements:

As Leader Pelosi said today, “Democrats reaffirm our commitment to Social Security and the promise to strengthen it for future generations.” Meanwhile, Republicans like Congressman Paul Ryan have advocated for privatizing the program and jeopardizing the security of our seniors.

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Congressional Republicans have been making the rounds in their districts, but there is one topic that they can’t run away from: their vote for the Ryan budget to end Medicare as we know it while shifting costs to seniors.

While the GOP tries to distract from the facts about the Ryan budget, the American people have plenty of other trustworthy sources when it comes to Medicare:

AARP: “By creating a ‘premium support’ system for future Medicare beneficiaries, the proposal is likely to simply increase costs for beneficiaries while removing Medicare’s promise of secure health coverage — a guarantee that future seniors have contributed to through a lifetime of hard work.”

Congressional Budget Office: Health costs for seniors increase by $6,400 under the Ryan budget.

The Hill: “CBO: Policies Would Cut Medicare Benefits”

Republicans don’t want the American people to know they are working to end Medicare’s guarantee to reward millionaires, Big Oil, and companies that ship jobs overseas with more tax breaks:

Tax Policy Center: Chairman Ryan’s budget gives those making over $1 million per year an average tax cut of $394,000.

Joint Economic Committee: “…the Ryan plan gives the largest tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans and will pay for those tax cuts by raising the tax burden on middle-class workers.”

Instead of being honest with their constituents, House Republicans are trying to distract them by telling tall tales about the Affordable Care Act and pointing fingers at Democrats who are fighting to protect Medicare.  The Affordable Care Act:

Reduces prescription drug costs for seniors – and more than 5.2 million seniors in the Medicare Part D ‘donut hole’ coverage gap have already saved $3.9 billion on prescription drugs, with an average savings of $600 per senior, because of it.

Strengthens Medicare and extends the solvency of the Medicare Trust Fund by 8 years – from 2016 to 2024 – by squeezing waste out of the system and it does so without reducing benefits.

Provides a free Annual Wellness Visit under Medicare and free Medicare coverage of key preventive services, such as mammograms and colonoscopies.

House Republicans can run, but they can’t hide from the truth.

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ryan

Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) has proposed a House Republican budget which achieves many terrible results for the nation. Among them, here are three important facts you need to know:

1. Ryan’s Budget Ends The Medicare Guarantee And Shifts Costs To Seniors. The Congressional Budget Office has said his Ryan’s policies would cut Medicare benefits. [The Hill]

AARP: “By creating a ‘premium support’ system for future Medicare beneficiaries, the proposal is likely to simply increase costs for beneficiaries while removing Medicare’s promise of secure health coverage — a guarantee that future seniors have contributed to through a lifetime of hard work.” [AARP]

2. Ryan’s Budget Rewards Wealthiest At Expense Of Everyone Else. Those making over $1 million per year would receive an average tax cut of $394,000, while the middle class would see its taxes go up. [Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; Joint Economic Committee]

3. Ryan’s Budget Destroys 4.1 Million American Jobs Through 2014. [EPI]

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Yesterday, House GOP leaders rang the recess bell and rushed to leave town for a five-week vacation. As one GOP member said on the House floor, “Let’s just go home!”

The House Democratic Leader’s press office produced a video to highlight the GOP walking out on a job that’s not done:

What did the GOP-led Congress leave behind? The American people and a laundry list of unfinished business.

NO JOBS AGENDA
NO TAX CUTS FOR MIDDLE CLASS
NO FARM BILL
NO VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN ACT
NO CYBER SECURITY
NO BIPARTISAN PLAN TO PREVENT SEQUESTER

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In just 3 days, or even 2 days, House Republicans will recess for summer vacation leaving a long list of unfinished business behind. Instead of working with Democrats and President Obama to find solutions for the middle class, House Republicans have kept busy with repeated votes on message bills to nowhere. Even members of their own party are lamenting the House GOP’s failure to get to work on the priorities of the American people:

Congressman Steve LaTourette (R-OH), who yesterday announced he would not seek reelection citing increased polarization and partisanship in Congress, said this:

“So we now we’ve voted 33 times to repeal Obamacare…anybody in our district who doesn’t know where we are on the Second Amendment and right to life and Obamacare is not paying attention…It’s time to quit making political statements and posturing and get something done.” [8/1]

Rep. Mary Bono Mack (R-CA) went straight to Majority Leader Cantor on the floor last night after yet another vote to restrict women’s rights:

“Are you kidding me? How many times are we going to vote on this?” [7/31]

And Rep. Richard Hanna (R-NY) voiced his frustrations to a local editorial board:

“I have to say that I’m frustrated by how much we — I mean the Republican Party — are willing to give deferential treatment to our extremes in this moment in history… We render ourselves incapable of governing when all we do is take severe sides… I would say that the friends I have in the Democratic Party I find … much more congenial — a little less anger.” [7/30]

The GOP’s list of unfinished business is long:

NO JOBS AGENDA
NO TAX CUTS FOR MIDDLE CLASS
NO FARM BILL
NO VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN ACT
NO CYBER SECURITY
NO BIPARTISAN PLAN TO PREVENT SEQUESTER

Politico reports, “The new Republican majority came in with a roar, but it’s crawling into the August break with a whimper.”

What exactly do the House Republicans need a vacation from? All the hard work remains undone…

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saluting

The House will soon vote on H.R. 8, a Republican-sponsored measure which would end vital expansions of the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Child Tax Credit and ends the American Opportunity Tax Credit (which helps make college more affordable for middle class families). The effect would be to raise taxes on 25 million families by an average $1,000. As Rep. Joe Crowley (D-NY) said on CNN this week, military families will be among those impacted by the Republican tax hike.

The Center for American Progress produced an analysis showing 3 illustrative examples of military families whose tax bill would be raised. Examples:

MARINE CORPORAL (E4), Four years’ service, married with two children

– Military basic pay: $27,660
– EITC under current tax policy and Democratic plan: $4,326
– EITC under Republican plan: $3,878

TAX INCREASE UNDER GOP BILL: $448

AIR FORCE STAFF SERGEANT (E5), eight years’ service, married with three children

– Basic pay: $34,723
– EITC under current tax policy and Democratic plan: $3,508
– EITC under H.R. 8: $2,390

TAX INCREASE UNDER GOP BILL: $1,118

U.S. ARMY PRIVATE (E1), first year of service, married with one child

– Basic pay: $18,196
– Child Tax Credit under current tax policy and Democratic plan: $1,000
– Child Tax Credit under H.R. 8: $727

TAX INCREASE UNDER GOP BILL: $273

The competing Democratic tax proposal would ensure that taxes are not raised on these military families or any other middle class families.

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