Monday, June 15, 2020

RATING TRUMP'S KUSHNER-WRITTEN SECRET OPEN BORDERS AGENDA - ONLY NANCY PELOSI WORKS AS HARD TO FLOOD AMERICA WITH MORE 'CHEAP' LABOR



Washington, D.C. (June 15, 2020) – After an April presidential proclamation suspending some immigrant entries, the White House will soon issue a second presidential proclamation to address the large number of non-immigrant (i.e. temporary) work visas. The Center for Immigration Studies has outlined 20 lawful executive actions President Trump could include in the upcoming proclamation, along with several regulatory changes – changes that would help American workers by reducing work visas and work permits to open up more than a million job opportunities.

To help observers compare the content of the upcoming proclamation with our recommendations, the Center has produced a scorecard, which is included below.

Download Scorecard

Mark Krikorian, the Center's executive director, said "The first presidential proclamation on the suspension of immigrant entries was a disappointment that did little to curtail immigration. President Trump has the opportunity with this upcoming proclamation to be bold, keep his campaign promises, and stimulate a return to employment for American workers over temporary foreign workers. The Center's scorecard will help assess how serious the president is in promoting the interests of American workers."

Jessica Vaughan, the Center's director of policy studies, said "With decisive executive action, Trump could potentially reduce the number of temporary foreign workers by 1.2 million, or nearly 50 percent, providing employment opportunities for a significant number of American workers who have been harmed by the coronavirus shutdown. The ideal scenario would be to suspend the entry of these foreign workers until our economy has recovered, and then phase programs back in, if they're actually needed, once the situation stabilizes."

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$14 Million: Campaign Smashes Online Fundraising Records for Donald Trump’s Birthday

Trump Happy
JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images
1:23

President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign and the Republican National Committee announced Monday they had raised $14 million in online fundraising in just 24-hours on the president’s birthday.
“Quite a birthday gift for Donald Trump yesterday!” Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale wrote on social media, sharing the numbers from a Fox News report. “Biggest single-day ONLINE fundraising total ever – $14 million.”
Trump turned 74 on Sunday.


The Trump Make America Great Again Committee (TMAGAC) also participated in the fundraising effort.
The Biden campaign continues struggling to close the funding gap with President Trump.
Biden and the Democratic National Committee raised more than $60 million in April but were bested by the Trump campaign and the RNC which raised $61.7 million in the same month.
Republicans have over $255 million in cash on hand, nearly $187 million more than Biden and the DNC.
“That’s grassroots support that Sleepy @JoeBiden can only dream of,” Parscale wrote. “The enthusiasm gap is real and it is wide!”



Trump to Pelosi: I’ll Help GOP Governors If You Cut Taxes on Rich

Photo: Doug Mills/Pool via Bloomberg/Getty Images
More than 36 million Americans have lost their jobs since March. Unemployment in the United States is now (almost certainly) above 20 percent. The Republican chairman of the Federal Reserve says that further stimulus spending is required to avert “long-term economic damage” and hasten the onset of recovery. Across the country, GOP governors are calling on Congress to approve (at least) $500 billion in fiscal aid to states, warning that in the absence of such support, they will be forced to make draconian cutbacks to public investment and employment, thereby deepening the recession. All historical evidence suggests that if the economy is not rebounding strongly by Election Day, undecided voters will swing against the incumbent president and his party.
Yet Donald Trump and the congressional GOP have apparently convinced themselves that enacting any further stimulus somehow qualifies as a gift to Democrats, and including aid to states in such a stimulus would constitute an act of historic generosity. Or at least the White House believes that it can convince Nancy Pelosi to believe such absurdities.
Last week, the Trump administration announced that it had no interest in passing another coronavirus relief package this month. After all, Congress had already pumped roughly $3 trillion into the coffers of corporations, small businesses, and households, White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow reasoned. And now that states were beginning to reopen their economies, it wasn’t clear that any further federal largesse would be needed.
It’s hard to say whether this argument was offered in earnest, or merely as a negotiating tactic. Either way, it is indicative of the GOP’s ideological delusions. All available evidence — both domestic and international — suggests that you cannot restore economic normality in the middle of an uncontained pandemic by revoking formal shutdown orders. As long as people know that eating in a restaurant means accepting a heightened risk of contracting a deadly virus, demand for dining out will remain at a fraction of what it was four months ago.
In case you were wondering how the reopening is going down south. pic.twitter.com/xneL4Pelci
— Jordan Weissmann (@JHWeissmann) May 11, 2020
The same can be said for air travel, retail shopping, and a whole host of other consumer goods and services. And fewer flights and commuters means tepid demand for the fossil fuels that power the economies of red petro-states. Meanwhile, even when the public-health threat posed by the coronavirus is fully eliminated, Americans are unlikely to resume their old consumption patterns — both because the trauma of the present economic shock is all-but certain to increase savings rates, and because many households and firms will need to devote a higher share of income to their accumulated private debts (assuming the federal government does not step in and enact a debt jubilee). The private sector is not going to heal itself, and the longer congressional Republicans delay in dispensing further aid, the less likely a preelection recovery becomes. Even as a tactical pretense, the GOP’s stalling on new stimulus is indicative of either self-delusion or a privileging of conservative orthodoxy over political self-interest (which arguably amounts to the same thing).
Regardless, now that last week’s (bizarre) market rally has begun to fade, Republicans seem ready to concede the necessity of congressional action. But the White House still doesn’t seem to understand that, electorally, it needs stimulus much more than Democrats do. In fact, according to a new report from the Washington Post, the president believes that he is in a position to offer Nancy Pelosi a tiny fraction of her desired fiscal aid to states — a policy objective endorsed by just about every GOP governor in the country — in exchange for regressive tax cuts and liability reforms that just about every Democrat in Congress opposes:
White House officials have privately signaled that they are willing to provide tens of billions of dollars in relief to states as part of a bipartisan deal with Democrats in the coming weeks, despite President Trump’s reluctance and strong opposition from conservative groups, according to seven people familiar with the internal deliberations who were granted anonymity to discuss the matter.

Although that position is likely to anger some Republicans, who have warned that Democrats want “blue state bailouts,” many White House officials now believe that providing new funding to states to deal with challenges related to the coronavirus will be necessary if they want to secure their own priorities, such as tax breaks and liability protections for businesses, the people said …

Two White House officials said they have made it clear to business leaders and conservative allies in recent days that Trump is “not willing to provide a blank check” to states, but is “open” to negotiating whether he can win concessions from Democrats on taxes in exchange for an influx of cash — and they have told conservative leaders that they will make sure any new cash is directed only toward problems sparked by the pandemic. An unveiling of the White House’s tax proposals is expected in the coming days.
House Democrats’ latest coronavirus relief bill allocates nearly $1 trillion in fiscal aid to states and cities. As already mentioned, Republican governors have suggested that at least $500 billion in such aid is warranted. It’s insane that “not forcing states to slash jobs and public services in the middle of a historic economic crisis for literally no reason” is considered an exclusively Democratic objective. But even if it made sense to describe aid to states as a concession to liberals, offering them “tens of billions” in many-strings-attached funding would be a joke. By contrast, the concessions the White House is demanding — a capital gains tax cut for the Americans least harmed by the present crisis, and legal immunity for employers who operate unsafe workplaces — are not only wholly partisan demands, but ones exceptionally distasteful to the Democratic Party’s left wing. Trump’s proposal is analogous to Pelosi offering to support a small increase in aid to small businesses in exchange for a federal repeal of right-to-work laws and a pathway to citizenship for the undocumented.
In my view, Democrats should be prepared to make some distasteful concessions to Trump if doing so allows them to secure $1 trillion in unconditional aid to states, the indefinite extension of enhanced unemployment benefits, hazard pay for front-line workers, monthly cash support for households, and other measures that would dramatically soften the economic blows that are coming. But Democrats can’t let the GOP’s delusions become contagious. Pelosi must understand that her party has all the leverage here. If Congress does nothing — and enhanced unemployment benefits expire in July, while state governments liquidate their rainy-day funds — millions of ordinary Americans will suffer; but so will Donald Trump’s campaign. Politically, Democrats don’t need any kind of deal, let alone a wildly unbalanced one. If the president would rather seek reelection in a historic depression than make workers and cities whole, Pelosi should grant him that concession.

'Our middle class is dying': Tucker Carlson blames 'advisers' in Trump orbit for 'tidal wave' of immigration

Fox News host Tucker Carlson ripped some within President Trump's "orbit" for attempting to place corporate interests ahead of American workers' welfare during the coronavirus pandemic.

On his Tuesday night show, Carlson critiqued Trump advisers, who he alleges crafted a temporary suspension of immigration without addressing key concerns of the working class.
"The president is worried about preserving American jobs," Carlson said. "Unfortunately, and this seems to be the key, some in his orbit are not as concerned. Their main worry is making donors happy. And if there's one thing that donors love always, it's cheap employees. Yes, our middle class is dying at a faster clip than ever before."
Carlson said the suspension doesn't address the hundreds of thousands of temporary and guest workers who vie with Americans for industrial and agricultural jobs.
The Fox News host claimed the suspension was written by out-of-touch staff members who are "more worried about what their friends think" of the immigration measures instead of protecting the jobs of citizens.
Carlson noted the suspension does not apply to a massive section of immigrants who fight with Americans for working-class jobs.
"The new moratorium on immigration will last for 60 days," Carlson said. "The ban will apply only to individuals seeking permanent residency into this country."
Carlson said Trump's ban, which could be extended after the two-month period ends, does not apply to hundreds of thousands of temporary and guest workers who vie with Americans for industrial and agricultural jobs.

"The purpose of this tidal wave of immigration has nothing to

do with what advocates of immigration claim immigration is 

for," added Carlson. 
"These visas do not 

improve American society in any way. 

We have no moral obligation to give 

them. There is no mention of guest 

workers on the Statue of Liberty."


“Our entire crony capitalist system, Democrat and Republican alike, has become a kleptocracy approaching par with third-world hell-holes. This is the way a great country is raided by its elite.” --- Karen McQuillan  


While many small businesses haven't been able to get one of the federal government's Paycheck Protection Program loans, a Chicago company with close ties to the White House has. 

Continental Materials Corporation is majority owned by the family of Ronald Gidwitz, who is now the U.S. ambassador to Belgium. During the 2016 election campaign, Gidwitz was the Trump campaign's Illinois finance chair. The heating and cooling company, which had sales of more than $100 million last year, 
got a $5.5 million loan at 1% interest. That’s much larger than the typical PPP loan, which is usually just over $200,000. 

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Peter Schweizer, author of “Secret Empires: How the American Political Class Hides Corruption and Enriches Family and Friends,” 

Bailout of US corporations expands while workers see little relief

 

Two weeks after the passage of the $2.2 trillion coronavirus pandemic corporate bailout bill, grotesquely misnamed the CARES Act, it is clear that it was only the initial shot in the funneling of countless trillions of dollars to the corporate-financial aristocracy that rules America.
While billions have already flowed to the corporations and banks, the limited provisions of the act that were touted by both parties as a boon to working people hit by the shutdown of much of the economy have yet to kick in, and for millions they likely never will.
The act includes $454 billion as a Treasury backstop to enable the Federal Reserve to provide some $4 trillion in cheap loans to major corporations and banks, meaning the real scale of the bailout—thus far—is more than $6 trillion.
The vast bulk of the money allocated goes to covering any losses suffered by major corporations and fueling a new surge in the stock market. That it has succeeded, at least for the present, in lifting the markets is seen in more than 10 percent surge in the Dow over the past several trading days. This has occurred in the midst of an ever-rising toll of death and suffering from the pandemic and grim projections by bankers and economists of a depression-level contraction in the economy and a catastrophic growth of unemployment.
The expanding scale of the bailout and euphoria on the financial markets, alongside the economic and social catastrophe facing the broad mass of the population, demonstrates that the interests of the ruling class and those of the working class are diametrically opposed. The response of the ruling elite and its two political parties to the crisis has from the onset been single-mindedly focused on defending the economic interests of corporate-financial oligarchy, no matter the cost in human life.
In just the last several weeks, the Federal Reserve Board has announced at least 12 major measures to rescue the financial markets and backstop big business. These include:
·         Two emergency interest rate cuts, bringing the benchmark lending rate back down to near-zero
·         A pledge to purchase at least $500 billion in Treasury securities and $200 billion in mortgage-backed securities and to continue the program for “as long as needed”
·         Nearly unlimited sums in short-term loans to 25 large financial institutions that control the market for repurchase agreements, or repos, including $1.5 trillion in the days following the announcement
·         Foreign exchange swap lines, the purchase of short-term loans to US corporations in the commercial paper market, short-term loans to 24 large financial institutions, and, for the first time ever, direct purchases of corporate bonds and direct loans to corporations.
The Wall Street Journal quoted Jean Boivin, head of BlackRock Investment Institute, as saying, “The amount of measures taken in a short amount of time is surreal and unprecedented.”
“It’s kind of crazy how they’ve almost done as much in this week as they did in several months in 2008,” JPMorgan’s chief US economist Michael Feroli said last month. “Now they do have the advantage of just being able to dust off [former Fed Chairman] Bernanke’s playbook.”
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell gave a blanket 
guarantee of unlimited funds to corporate 
America, telling the “Today” show this week, 
“Where credit is not flowing, we have the 
ability in this unique circumstance to step in 
and provide those loans.”
Now both the Trump administration and the Democrats have committed to provide an additional $250 billion to the so-called “Paycheck Protection Program.” That is the Orwellian name given by the two parties to the $350 billion program ostensibly established to provide government-backed loans to small businesses, many of which face bankruptcy as a result of the shutdown of much of the economy, and save the jobs of their workers over the next eight weeks. (That this is farcically inadequate, even if implemented in full, in the midst of the greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression, is self-evident).
The program is designed to provide a windfall for the big banks, which actually extend and administer the loans that are backed by the Small Business Administration (SBA). This ensures that Wall Street receives billions of dollars in fees and other charges.
On the eve of the official launching of the program last Friday, the law was amended, under pressure from the banks, to double the interest rate from 0.5 percent to 1.0 percent. Now the banks are demanding that the Fed buy any loans they extend to small businesses so as to remove them from their balance sheets. This will allow them to more freely engage in financial speculation and parasitic activities such as stock buybacks.
Moreover, the great bulk of the money will go not to mom-and-pop groceries, gas stations or eateries, but rather to large corporations that are included in the program. Thus, for example, the program was amended to include billion-dollar restaurant and hotel chains.
Small businesses desperate for cash are finding it difficult if not impossible to actually find lenders who will provide the loans, even if their applications are approved by the SBA. Banks, intent on maximizing profits, are turning down applications right and left.

Citigroup is refusing to participate. Bank of America is not accepting applications from companies that have borrowed from other banks. Wells Fargo says it has already reached “capacity.”
Hundreds of thousands of businesses have applied under the program, but to date only a handful have received any money.
Meanwhile, congressional Democrats are pressing the Trump administration to expand the $50 billion bailout of the airlines included in the CARES Act. This is, supposedly, another “jobs-saving” effort. Delta, for its part, has already laid off thousands of its employees.
There are no real restrictions in the law on how the corporations use the money they are given by the government. No one should doubt that the airline carriers, which spent some $16 billion over the past three years to purchase their own stock—in order to further enrich their top executives and major investors by driving up the stock price—will use their bailout money to do more of the same.
The Trump administration, for its part, is reportedly considering such additional “stimulus” measures as a payroll tax cut—which would starve Social Security of funding—a capital gains tax cut, 50-year Treasury bonds and a waiver that would relieve businesses of liability for employees who contract the coronavirus on the job.
Trump has moved to negate even the token congressional oversight of the bailout program mandated in the law. On Monday, he named a White House lawyer and Trump loyalist, Brian Miller, as inspector general of the Treasury Department’s $350 billion small business (“Payroll Protection Program”), and on Tuesday he removed Glenn Fine as head of the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee, tasked with monitoring the entire $2.2 trillion program. Trump replaced him with a “senior policy adviser” at US Customs and Border Protection, Jason Abend.
Workers are finding that the promised relief from the bailout law—which accounts for only a small fraction of the total cost of the measure—is uncertain if not entirely illusory.
The New York Times reported Monday that many Americans will not receive the promised relief check of $1,200, plus $500 for each child, until August or September. As many as 10 million low-income, childless adults who are eligible for the stimulus payment program may receive nothing because they have not filed tax returns. Millions more, including undocumented workers, prisoners, students and adult dependents are excluded.

As for the $250 billion expanded jobless benefit part of the law, which is supposed to extend state benefits for 13 weeks and add $600 a week in federal funds for up to four months, workers are finding it all but impossible to apply. Multiple state unemployment websites have crashed under the crush of millions of applicants, and scenes of hundreds of workers lining up, in the midst of a pandemic lockdown, to apply in person are proliferating around the country.

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