Common Dreams NewsCenter

 

 Home | NewswireAbout Us | Donate | Sign-Up | Archives

Common Cause
Home > Progressive Community > NewsWire > For Immediate Release     

 

 
Send this page to a friend
   
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
OCTOBER 25, 2001
3:05 PM
CONTACT:  Common Cause
Jeff Cronin or Susan Quatrone, 202/736-5770
Political Donors Profiteering in the Name of Economic Stimulus
Stimulus Legislation Is Lobbying Opportunity Of A Lifetime, Says Common Cause
 

WASHINGTON - October 25 - As debate on economic stimulus legislation moves from the House to the Senate, a relatively small number of large soft money donors is poised for a significant windfall, according to a Common Cause analysis.

“Regular Americans are being told to go out and spend more to do their part to stimulate the economy,” Common Cause President Scott Harshbarger said.  “Big campaign donors, though, are being told that ‘the check’s in the mail.’

“It’s easy for proponents of some of these measures to dress them up as credible remedies to the economic downturn brought about by the terrorist attacks.  But there’s nothing patriotic about profiteering in a time of national crisis.  We have to distinguish between items that genuinely stimulate the economy and items that are just special-interest perennials that rear their head year after year.”

What follows is the Common Cause analysis of some of the items in the legislation the House narrowly passed on Wednesday, and of the campaign donations of many of the legislation’s potential beneficiaries.

Demolishing The AMT

The corporate Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) was enacted as part of the 1986 Reagan tax reform package in order to prevent profitable corporations from escaping all tax liability.  Companies were required to compute the taxes they owed under regular tax rules, and under AMT rules, which were stricter about certain tax deductions, such as depreciation.  Companies had to use the calculation method that required them to pay the most in taxes. 

Since it was enacted, major corporations have lobbied to gut or kill it the AMT.  Over the years, these companies have succeeding in persuading Congress to weaken the law.  Now that the House-passed bill eliminates the AMT entirely, these companies have taken a major first step towards AMT repeal.

Moreover, there are really two tax breaks here.  The first is the repeal of the AMT tax.  The second is making that repeal retroactive to 1986.  That means that corporations now are immediately entitled to a refund on the alternative minimum tax they’ve paid over the past 15 years.  That refund will total about $25 billion.  This victory, noted the Wall Street Journal, was the result of “quiet and effective lobbying by U.S. multinational companies.”

Just 14 corporations alone would get $6.3 billion of that rebate, according to Citizens for Tax Justice. IBM alone gets $1.4 billion, followed by General Motors, receiving $833 million, and General Electric, entitled to $671 million.  Over the past 10 years, those 14 corporations gave nearly $15 million to the national party committee in huge soft money contributions.  Supporters say that the AMT repeal and rebate will give an infusion of cash to struggling manufacturing firms and rev up the economy, but critics charge that the tax break will do little or nothing to encourage new business investment.

Total Soft Money Contributions From Select Companies To National Party Committees

From January 1, 1991 To December 31, 2000

Donor

Democrats

Republicans

Total

*Estimated Refund

Enron Corp

$990,690

$2,718,699

$3,709,389

$254,000,000

Chevron Texaco Inc

1,048,310

2,605,848

3,654,158

572,000,000

American Airlines

885,228

1,019,169

1,904,397

184,000,000

General Electric Co

524,409

793,378

1,317,787

671,000,000

United Airlines

671,777

516,377

1,188,154

371,000,000

Phillips Petroleum Co

147,075

728,800

875,875

241,000,000

General Motors

78,500

605,625

684,125

833,000,000

TXU Corp

40,000

365,000

405,000

608,000,000

CMS Energy Corp

105,300

275,635

380,935

136,000,000

DaimlerChrysler Corp

18,700

263,765

282,465

600,000,000

IBM Corp

150,000

85,000

235,000

1,424,000,000

IMC Global

10,000

67,500

77,500

155,000,000

Comdisco Inc

5,000

45,000

50,000

144,000,000

Westvaco

0

5,000

5,000

112,000,000

Total

$4,674,989

$10,094,796

$14,769,785

$6,305,000,000

*Source: Citizens for Tax Justice

Easing The Tax Burden For Multinationals

Banks, investment firms and insurance companies have a temporary tax break that allows them to defer paying federal taxes on some profits from their foreign operations until those profits are returned to their home offices in the U.S.  The tax break is scheduled to expire at the end of 2001, and President Bush had proposed extending the tax break for just one year.  The House package makes this tax benefit permanent.   Congress was particularly prodded on this by General Electric, which has foreign subsidiaries able to take advantage of this provision. 

The long-term cost of making this tax break permanent is substantial. For example, over the course of a decade the repeal will cost the government more than $21 billion.

This tax break, supporters claim, will help U.S. businesses compete abroad. But critics, like Representative Pete Stark (D-CA), declared that the provision was downright “unpatriotic” because it would encourage companies to invest in foreign countries, to the detriment of their domestic operations. 

Top 10 Soft Money Contributors From The Banking, Investment, And Life Insurance Industries To National Party Committees

From January 1, 1991 To December 31, 2000

Donor

Democrats

Republicans

Total

Merrill Lynch & Co Inc

$425,775

$1,836,525

$2,262,300

Citigroup Inc

919,340

1,242,564

2,161,904

Prudential Insurance Co of America

852,616

1,090,790

1,943,406

Lazard Freres & Co

1,372,882

529,200

1,902,082

Goldman Sachs

933,250

900,790

1,834,040

MBNA Corp

200,500

1,600,905

1,801,405

PaineWebber Group Inc

538,800

1,187,040

1,725,840

CS First Boston Corp

405,325

1,293,109

1,698,434

Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co

491,300

1,120,326

1,611,626

Bond Market Assn

622,152

986,427

1,608,579

Donor

Democrats

Republicans

Total

Banks, Investment & Life Insurance Industry Total

$51,970,624

$80,093,243

$132,063,867

Speeding Up The Clock: High-Tech’s Gain vs. Government’s Loss 

Under current tax laws, when a business invests in new equipment, it depreciates the cost of that investment over anywhere from three to 25 years, depending on federal tax rules. The House-passed bill would give all businesses the chance to write off nearly one-third of their investment during the first year they own it.  This temporary tax benefit is set to expire after three years.

For example, if a business acquired certain types of new equipment and software, sometime between September 11, 2001 and September 11, 2003 that cost $1 million, it could take a $300,000 depreciation deduction during the first year. 

Representative Jerry Weller (R-IL), who arranged for 15 high-tech officials to meet with Ways and Means Chairman Bill Thomas (R-CA) on October 9, said that the 30 percent write-off will “be a big incentive to allow a business to recover the cost of investing in technology.”

Supporters contend that this depreciation provision should encourage businesses to buy major equipment, benefiting both the companies that make the equipment and those who buy it.  Supporters point out that its help to the technology industry, which has been the engine creating a large portion of jobs in the past decade, is vitally needed.  This tax break will cost nearly $40 billion in 2002 alone.

But according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, 44 states and the District of Columbia will also be hurt by this tax break, because they have tax rules that conform to federal rules on depreciation.  Accelerating deprecation changes will cost states an estimated $5 billion a year in corporate tax revenues over the next three years. 

Top 10 Soft Money Contributors From The Computer Industry To National Party Committees

From January 1,1991 to December 31, 2000

Donors

Democrats

Republicans

Total

Microsoft Corp

 

1,274,792

1,975,895

3,250,687

AOL Time Warner

 

782,750

821,455

1,604,205

Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers

 

944,722

404,440

1,349,162

Gateway Inc

 

378,000

705,141

1,083,141

Oracle Corp

 

454,485

552,475

1,006,960

Sterling Software

 

0

938,050

938,050

Northern Telecom Inc

 

344,300

479,487

823,787

Cisco Systems

 

213,500

545,633

759,133

Shimmon, David J

CEO, Kinetic Systems

740,000

705

740,705

Kirsch, Steven & Michele

CEO, Propel & Spouse

619,000

0

619,000

   

Democrats

Republicans

Total

Computer Industry Total

 

$18,973,981

$18,591,576

$37,565,557

How’d This Get Into A Stimulus Package?  

A funny thing happened to a Medical Savings Account (MSA) extender on its way to a health care bill.  It got stuck in the economic stimulus package. 

Golden Rule Financial Corp. and a number of other health insurance companies stand to benefit from a small provision in the stimulus package that extends for yet another year the life of a complex alternative to traditional health insurance. Medical Savings Accounts are tax-free savings accounts linked to high-deductible health insurance policies.  (Ways and Means Chair Thomas is an MSA supporter and offered an amendment in August to patient protection legislation strongly endorsed by MSA interests.)

Consumer groups charge that if MSAs are allowed to exapand, only healthy people could take advantage of them, leaving more vulnerable individuals – the working poor, low-income elderly and chronically ill – to rely on traditional health insurance plans.  If traditional health insurers can’t spread the risk among healthy and chronically ill premium holders, health care costs will go up for most Americans. 

Total Soft Money Contributions From MSA Interests To National Party Committees

From January 1, 1991 to December 31, 2000

Donor

Democrats

Republicans

Total

Golden Rule Financial Corp

$61,250

$1,230,720

$1,291,970

New York Life Insurance Co

303,800

604,575

908,375

Mutual of Omaha Insurance Cos

78,800

418,477

497,277

American Medical Association

127,468

276,023

403,491

Health Insurance Association of America

47,900

184,815

232,715

Blue Cross of California

0

182,375

182,375

Fortis Inc

0

159,500

159,500

Trustmark Insurance Co

0

14,000

14,000

Central States Health & Life Co of Omaha

0

3,500

3,500

Total

$619,218

$3,073,985

$3,693,203

Methodology

Soft money contribution figures in this report are based on national political party committee reports of their non-federal, or soft money, accounts filed with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) covering the period January 1, 1991 through December 31, 2000.

Under current law, corporations and labor unions are prohibited from making contributions in connection with a federal election, while individuals and political action committees (PACs) are subject to federal limits.  The term ‘hard money’ refers to contributions that are legal under federal law for federal elections, while ‘soft money’ refers to contributions made outside the limits and prohibitions of federal law, including large individual or PAC contributions and direct corporate or union contributions.

National political party committees were required to disclose their soft money contributions beginning in 1991, after Common Cause filed a petition with the FEC challenging the way in which it was treating soft money.

For more information on the Economic Security and Recovery Act, contact the Common Cause Press Office at 202/736-5770

 

###

 
Common Dreams NewsCenter is a non-profit news service
providing breaking news and views for the Progressive Community.

The press release posted here has been provided to Common Dreams NewsWire by one of the many progressive organizations who make up America's Progressive Community. If you wish to comment on this press release or would like more information, please contact the organization directly.
*all times Eastern US (GMT-5:00)

Making News?
Read our Guidelines for Submitting News Releases

Tell Us What You Think: editor@commondreams.org

© Copyright 1997-2003 Common Dreams.
www.commondreams.org