President Donald Trump ran on and was purportedly elected to deliver good jobs. So far, however, his jobs agenda has amounted to little more than threats to strip workers’ health care and promises to slash corporate taxes and reward companies shipping jobs overseas. His budget is the latest in a series of attacks on workers. Not only does it fail to deliver jobs; it also decimates programs designed to help workers.
President Trump’s newly released “skinny budget” would make disastrous cuts to vital programs that have a real impact on the lives and pocketbooks of families across the country. If implemented, the cuts would reduce wages, hollow out protections that keep Americans safe on the job and ensure they are paid the wages they earn, and gut worker training programs that help workers secure good jobs and raise their wages.
Showing posts with label job creation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label job creation. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 28, 2017
Thursday, March 20, 2014
Cameron Smith: Five questions to ask Alabama’s state candidates for elected office
Although Alabama’s primary elections are held in June, the political season is well underway. Positions on religious liberty, gun rights and abortion remain a virtual litmus test for Alabama’s more-conservative voters, but most state politicians are well versed at navigating them every four years.
Even the clearest answers on those issues leave unanswered questions about critical issues facing the State of Alabama. Here are five additional questions that Alabama’s voters should ask candidates for state office this year:
Even the clearest answers on those issues leave unanswered questions about critical issues facing the State of Alabama. Here are five additional questions that Alabama’s voters should ask candidates for state office this year:
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Adam Hersh: Most new jobs don’t pay a middle-class wage
Last week the Bureau of Labor Statistics released new data about the October employment situation that show the surprising resilience of U.S. labor markets—even as extreme conservatives in Congress risked economic calamity by hijacking the political debate. The U.S. economy added 204,000 net new jobs in October, even with the loss of 12,000 federal workers from the public service. Although the government shutdown disrupted administration of these economic surveys, the data do not appear to be systematically affected, according to the BLS.
Monday, August 5, 2013
David G. Bronner: Eight insights on Medicaid expansion in Alabama
1. Georgia is projected to create 70,000 new jobs
from Medicaid expansion. Since Alabama has half the population of Georgia,
Medicaid expansion could possibly generate 35,000 new jobs for Alabama. Even if
expansion of Medicaid only created 17,500 jobs, that would still be the largest
influx of new jobs in Alabama’s history.
2. Adding $15-17 billion per year, about $1.5
billion per year, to Alabama’s economy is a big deal that helps all 67 counties
with the federal government paying 90% of it.
Thursday, August 1, 2013
Cameron Smith: The crisis of government cronyism
For the last several election cycles, Democrats have
successfully branded Republicans as the protectors of corporate greed,
companies that are too big to fail and the much maligned “one percent.”
This branding strategy succeeds because it resonates
on some level with most Americans. The policy and political arguments of an
executive whose annual compensation is more than many of us will make in our
entire lives fails to draw sympathy regardless of political leanings.
Monday, July 30, 2012
Adam Hersh: Conservatives undermining our economic recovery
The latest weak economic growth numbers were as
predictable as they are disheartening, and the blame lies squarely with those
who opposed the president’s American Jobs Act nearly a year ago—and have in
fact opposed an array of sensible economic policies to expand public
investments that create jobs and economic growth ever since President Barack
Obama took office.
But first the “news.” The $15.6 trillion U.S.
economy slowed in the three months through June 2012. U.S. gross domestic
product, or GDP—the sum total of all goods and services produced by workers and
equipment in the United States—grew at 1.5 percent in the second quarter of
2012. We are growing, but slowing. And this must renew policymakers’ urgency
for action to prevent our economy from dipping further.
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