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Fiscal Cliff

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Paycheck A Little Smaller? Here's Why...

You may have been spared from paying more in income taxes, but there still could have been a hit to your paycheck after the Fiscal Cliff Tax Deal was reached earlier this month. Here's all you need to know...

If you take a close look at your first 2013 paystub you will probably notice that Uncle Sam took a bigger chunk of your pay for Social Security. Taxpayers got a temporary holiday from paying the full 6.2 percent beginning in 2011, but that is over thanks to the fiscal cliff tax deal reached earlier this month. That legislation stopped the income tax hikes for most Americans, but the Social Security payroll tax holiday was allowed to expire. AOL explains it like this: Social security is financed by a 12.4 percent tax on wages, with employers paying half and workers paying the other half. During the temporary holiday, the employee contribution was reduced to 4.2 percent in 2011 and 2012, saving a typical family about $1,000 a year.  To see …

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Sen. Ron Johnson: Comments on the Fiscal Cliff Vote

Sen. Ron Johnson is Wisconsin's Republican senator in Washington, D.C. This commentary is taken from his weekly e-newsletter to constituents.

Although I strongly prefer extension of current tax rates for all Americans, I supported the compromise bill that protects 99% of Wisconsinites from an income tax increase, limits the death tax, and prevents a dramatic increase in milk prices. It is by no means a perfect piece of legislation. The revenue raised by this legislation will equal approximately 7% of projected deficits. It is now time for President Obama and his Democrat colleagues to show the American public their plan to close the other 93% of the deficit. Our nation's debt now stands at $16.4 trillion, and has reached its statutory limit. We blew through the $2.1 trillion increase in the debt ceiling granted in August 2011 in only 17 months. This is clearly unsustainable, and…

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Walker

8:05 am on Tuesday, January 8, 2013

47% . . . wasn't that Mitt's final vote tally? How ironic.   more ›

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Wisconsin Lawmakers Not Thrilled with Bill That Averted Fiscal Cliff

None of the U.S. elected officials from Wisconsin particularly cared for the deal hammered out to avoid the "fiscal cliff" — and that includes those who voted for it.

The "fiscal cliff" was averted Tuesday when the U.S. House handily passed a bill approved a day earlier in the U.S. Senate that raised taxes on the wealthy and staved off a tax increase for the middle-class. The bill passed 257-167 in the House, a comfortable 40 votes more than what was needed to become law. Among the congressmen serving southeastern Wisconsin, U.S. Reps. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI 5th District) and Tom Petri (R-WI 6th District) voted "no" on the measure, while U.S. Reps. Paul Ryan (R- WI 1st District) and Gwen Moore (D- WI 4th District) cast "yes" votes. U.S. Rep. Sean Duffy (R-WI 7th District), who now serves the Hudson area, voted no. The U.S. Senate passed the bill 89-8 on Monday with Republican Ron Johnson and Democrat …

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Randy1949

11:21 am on Friday, January 4, 2013

Patriot's post was unclear when he spoke about the large percentage who don't pay a single dime in federal income tax and then went on to speak about people on the dole although they could work. He failed to acknowledge the group of working people who because of low income and the use of tax deductions, exemptions and credit end up owing no federal income tax yet are taking no government aid. …   more ›

Monday, December 31, 2012

Cliffhanger: How Far Will You Fall if There's No Deal in Washington?

It should be a drinking game for as much as we've heard the term 'fiscal cliff' since the polls closed in November, but what does it mean for your paycheck?

With hours left in 2012, it's still uncertain whether an agreement will be reached between Republicans and Democrats that would avoid having the country go over the dreaded "fiscal cliff" tax increases for just about everyone. An impasse between congressional Republicans and the White House centers over just whose taxes will go up — with the president indicating those who make $400,000 or more should see their tax rates go up, while Republicans are pushing for no increases at all, or hikes for just those making more than $1 million. Spending cuts have also remained a sticking point between the two parties. The hike will come at midnight as tax cuts from the Bush administration set in 2001 and 2003 will expire, increasing everyone's income …

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Bob McBride

1:29 pm on Tuesday, January 1, 2013

We aren't exactly swimming in extra bucks. I say, yes, freeze all pay increases until we start getting our house in order. If we're not running efficiently as a whole then no one should be getting raises just because they've managed to stay OTJ for a certain amount of time. Develop some efficiencies, start saving the taxpayer some money and show some movement in the right direction and maybe we …   more ›

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Gov. Walker: Federal Government Needs to Avert Fiscal Cliff

For more than a decade, the federal government has been spending a lot more money than it has been taking in. Because critical debt benchmarks were surpassed, in the near future our nation is facing what often is referred to as the fiscal cliff.

Editor’s Note: Each week Gov. Scott Walker delivers a weekly radio address. This week he addresses the Fiscal Cliff.  Hi, this is Scott Walker.    This week, I had the honor of joining a bipartisan group of Governors to meet with President Obama about the fiscal challenges facing our federal government.  For more than a decade, the federal government has been spending a lot more money than it has been taking in.  Because critical debt benchmarks were surpassed, in the near future our nation is facing what often is referred to as the fiscal cliff.  If our federal government fails to take action to avert this fiscal cliff, we could experience a massive economic downturn, which would affect states all across the nation.  I joined other …

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Craig

9:11 am on Monday, December 10, 2012

And how many millions is Obama spending by going off to Hawaii?   more ›

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Will Washington Be Able to Avert the Fiscal Cliff?

The spending cuts and tax cuts set to begin Jan. 1 provide the promise of recession. Can lawmakers find a solution before it happens?

National news outlets are now providing blow-by-blow accounts of Washington’s management — or lack thereof — of a looming “fiscal cliff.” On New Year’s Day, a series of tax hikes and spending cuts are set to trigger. Experts suggest allowing changes would contract the economy in the first half of 2013 — a recession — but also slice the federal deficit in half. Lawmakers have other options, which include canceling some or all of these changes — which would send the debt higher — creating stopgap measures to delay the impacts, or developing a compromise solution. There’s still a month, but compromise seems a long way off. President Obama’s administration delivered a proposal late last week that wasn’t much different from one offered earlier…

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Richard

6:41 pm on Thursday, December 13, 2012

Really, Obamas approval rating up 11 points hmmm, wonder where they rounded up the people who took that survey, sure didn't talk to me or any of my friends. Probably all were vetted for their political beliefs first or maybe they went to the zoo, that's a good place for polling candidates, you can lead them to the promised land.   more ›

Friday, November 30, 2012

Gov. Walker: Higher Taxes on Wealthy Could 'Slow Things Down'

Wisconsin's Republican governor says political leaders in Washington should look to states like Wisconsin to fix the federal government's fiscal problems.

As partisan politics have taken center stage in the “fiscal cliff” discussions, Gov. Scott Walker on Friday said the federal government could find solutions to some national problems if they looked to state leaders for examples of sound policy. “Washington would be a lot better off — regardless of party — if they just acted more like states like Wisconsin,” Walker said. President Barack Obama has called for increased tax rates on the rich to allow for a tax freeze on the nation’s middle class, according to The Washington Post. Republican leaders are in strong disagreement, leading to House Speaker John Boehner to declare that negotiations are at a “stalemate” between the GOP and the Democrats, according to the newspaper. Not all …

morninmist

12:05 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012

KarlRoves Brain ‏@KarlRovesBrain Pres Obama is shrewd...getting GovWalker "on the record" as supporting GOP in #fiscalcliff talks, when 53% of public blames GOP, #wiunion   more ›

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