Yesterday, Rush made comments about tax increases that
supposedly went into effect on Jan 1, 2015,
tax increases he attributed to ObamaCare; tax increases that were embedded in that
law. His theme was this: the following tax increase are the work of
the Democrat majority. “Not one
Republican voted for any of these increases.” I don't like having to correct the man who was "teaparty" before anyone was teaparty, but I am left with no choice.
Apparently, his
comments came from an email that is making the rounds for the second or third
time in the last two years. I say this, because his listing is exactly that of the email as I remember his comments on yesterday's program.
Here is that email:
Top
Medicare tax went from 1.45% to 2.35%
Top
Income tax bracket went from 35% to 39.6%
Top
Income payroll tax went from 37.4% to 52.2%
Capital
Gains tax went from 15% to 28%
Dividends
tax went from 15% to 39.6%
Estate
tax went from 0% to 55%
Remember
this fact:
These
taxes were all passed only with democrat votes, no republicans voted for these
taxes.
These
taxes were all passed under the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare.
If you
think that it is important that everyone in the U.S. should know
this,
pass it on. If not, then delete it.
Politifact, here, often leaning Left in its reviews, seems to have gotten this one right, which means, our favorite Conservative icon is wrong, bringing his accuracy rate down to a dismal 99.3% "of the time " . . . . . . . . seriously, his accuracy rate is 99.3% (correct).
So, before you libs hit the comment line on this blog, don't bother. Your comments will be extremely predictable, as vile as your little minds can create, and filled with your own brand of inaccurate "facts," as well. In other words, no comments will be allowed.
From Politifact:
To the extent
that these tax rates were changed -- and as we’ll see most of them didn’t
change in the way the email says -- the changes didn’t take effect on Jan. 1,
2015 (or, for that matter, on Jan. 1, 2014). They took effect on Jan. 1, 2013.
That may
seem like a minor difference, but in this case, it makes all the difference.
The tax
rates that changed on Jan. 1, 2013, were all passed as part of the American
Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012. That was a bipartisan deal -- we’ll discuss
just how bipartisan in a bit -- that passed after the 2012 presidential
election to avoid the "fiscal cliff." The "cliff" refers to
the expiration of tax cuts originally passed under President George W. Bush.
The law
made permanent many but not all of the Bush-era tax cuts that were set to
expire anyway. So some people did see their tax rates go up, primarily
upper-income taxpayers. That’s what the email is attempting to spotlight, but
it does so in a way that introduces a host of inaccuracies.
"Top
Medicare tax went from 1.45% to 2.35%"
This tax
hike, unlike the others, did indeed stem from the Affordable Care Act, and the
tax rates listed in the email are accurate. (Oddly, this line wasn’t included
in the previous version of the email.) However, this hike, like the others, took
effect on Jan. 1, 2013, not on New Year’s Day 2015. It’s also worth noting
that most Americans won’t be affected -- it hits individuals earning $200,000
annually or married couples earning $250,000.
"Top
Income tax bracket went from 35% to 39.6%"
The
timing is wrong, but the numbers are correct. For
2015, the 39.6 percent rate is for individuals earning over $413,200 in
taxable income or married couples earning at least $464,850.
"Top
Income payroll tax went from 37.4% to 52.2%"
Usually,
people think about income taxes and payroll taxes separately. But it’s not
uncommon for tax experts to look at the combination of income and payroll taxes
together, because they give a sense of the overall burden of direct taxation on
individuals. That’s what the email did here.
On Jan.
1, 2013, the top combined rate for the income and payroll tax went from 37.9
percent to 42.5 percent, or 43.4 percent due to the additional Medicare tax in
the health care law.
So if you
just look at the federal rates, the email overstates the current top rate.
If you
take state taxes into account, the email is closer, but still inaccurate. The
Tax Foundation, a business-backed group, calculated 2013 combined tax rates for
each state. The group found that the top marginal tax rate, averaged across all
states, is 47.9 percent.
Of
course, any state taxes would have been imposed by state governments, and thus
were not part of the Affordable Care Act. And this would not be an
apples-to-apples comparison; to make the comparison fair, the initial tax rate
would need to be adjusted upward for state and local taxes as well.
"Capital
Gains tax went from 15% to 28%"
On Jan. 1,
2013, the highest capital gains tax rate rose from 15 percent to 20 percent.
The Affordable Care Act’s additional 3.8 percent Medicare tax for high-income
earners can be added to make it 23.8 percent. Either way you calculate it, the
email exaggerates the amount of the increase. (And most households still pay
nothing or 15 percent for capital gains, depending on their income.)
If you
add in state and local capital gains taxes, the Tax Foundation says the current
rate, averaged across the 50 states, is 28.7
percent, but Tax Foundation economist Kyle Pomerleau told us this is
"sort of an apples-to-oranges comparison."
"Dividends
tax went from 15% to 39.6%"
This line
would have been correct if the Bush tax cuts had expired the way they were
initially supposed to. But the December 2012 deal ended up going with a top
marginal tax rate of 20 percent on dividend income instead of the pre-Bush rate
of 39.6 percent on dividend income. It rose to 23.8 percent due to the
high-income added Medicare tax under Obamacare.
So the
final rate cited in the email is far higher than the current rate.
"Estate
tax went from 0% to 55%"
Both ends
of this claim are wrong. The estate tax was gradually wound down by the
Bush-era tax cuts, disappearing entirely, for one year, in 2010. For 2011 and
2012 it was reimposed at 35 percent, then raised to 40 percent on Jan. 1, 2013
as part of the "fiscal cliff" bill.
Also,
it’s worth noting that the estate tax is heavily targeted at the very richest
Americans. According to theUrban
Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center, in recent years, the top
10 percent of income earners paid virtually all of the tax, with over half of
that paid by the richest 0.1 percent. Indeed, estates with a gross value under
$5.25 million don’t even need to file a form with the Internal Revenue Service,
and typically more than half of those who do have to file one are ultimately
determined not to owe any estate tax.
"These
taxes were all passed only with democrat votes, no republicans voted for these
taxes. These taxes were all passed under the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare."
Most of
these changes were passed as part of the 2012 fiscal cliff deal, which was
enacted with bipartisan support. Facing expiration of the Bush tax cuts, which
would have meant a massive tax increase up and down the income scale, both
parties felt compelled to strike a deal that neither side was really
enthusiastic about.
In the
Senate, the measure passed by an 89-8
margin. Forty Republicans voted for it, and just five Republicans voted
against it.
In the
House, it passed by a 257-167
margin. While a majority of Republicans (151) voted against the bill, 85
Republicans did vote for it. So the email is flatly wrong to say that no
Republicans voted for these taxes.
It’s also
incorrect to say that these taxes were all raised by Obamacare. The health care
law did add marginally to three of the five taxes -- it was the source of the
Medicare tax hike from from 1.45 percent to 2.35 percent, and it added 0.9
percentage points to the top payroll tax rate and 3.8 percentage points to the
the capital gains and the dividends tax. But the bulk of the increases came
from the fiscal cliff deal. Less than a third of the total percentage-point
increases cited by the email came from Obamacare.
Our
ruling
The chain
email said that new tax increases went into effect on Jan. 1, 2015,
"all passed under the Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare."
The email
gets many things wrong, most notably scaring people by saying their tax rates
will go up on New Year’s Day 2015. In addition, most of the rates cited are
wrong in some way, and are uniformly higher than the actual rates. And the
email is flat-out wrong when it blames Democrats, and Obamacare for the
increases. The bulk of the tax hikes stem from a different bill entirely -- one
that received support from a large majority of Senate Republicans and a
significant minority of House Republicans.
Despite
some minor changes since the last version of the email that circulated, this
one is so riddled with errors -- and gets so few things correct -- that we
continue to rate it Pants on Fire.
Alright. You won't allow the truth about Rush. How about this: one of the terrorists shot and killed, today, is on record for blaming his actions on Abugrav or however you spell the damn word. That prison was all about George Bush and his idiotic war in Iraq. HAHAHAHAHA.
ReplyDeleteNever mind the fact that the prison punishment was nowhere close to what the Muslim savages do to their victims; never mind the fact that it was the NY Times, the LA Times, the WaPost and other left wing media who published the prison pictures. When was the last time you saw pictures in those papers of the broken and lifeless bodies of the the 3,000 to 6,000 pedestrians killed in Obama's drone bombing or pictures of the 14 members of a Muslim wedding, killed by mistake by Obama's drone? You are the worst kind hypocrite, and your buds in the media have done nothing but incite riot, in this country and to this country, for decades. What an amoral bunch of fools you people are.
DeleteBTW, its Abu Ghraib
DeleteAnd where in the hell do you get the 99% thing with Limbaugh? You have some sort of truth meter attached to his fat ass?
Delete“If Obama’s re-elected, it will happen. There’s no if about this. And it’s gonna be ugly. It’s gonna be gut-wrenching, but it will happen. The country’s economy is going to collapse if Obama is re-elected. ... I know mathematics, and I know economics. I know history. I know socialism, statism, Marxism, I know where it goes. I know what happens at the end of it.” - Rush Limbaugh, 2011.
ReplyDeleteSince that statement, the stock market is up several hundred points, GDP highest since '06, unemployment down 3%, US deficit as % of GDP cut in half ... and this week, one of the leaders of the most obstructionist congress in US history, Mitch McConnell steps up and claims the credit for the success of the US economy.
Rush Limbaugh, certainly has proven his accuracy.
This is the slowest "recovery" in Modern day history, and you know it. You all pretend to hate to the Street, except when you propping it up with "free" taxpayer money. Take QE away, and you have a collapse. You pretend that a 6% unemployment rate with a workforce that is at its smallest in 34 years (154 million) is the same as a 6% rate with a workforce the size of Clinton's or Bush's (163 million). And it was not McConnell who hid 367 House bills in Reid's desk drawers. It was not McConnell who refused to pass a budget for six years running.
Delete