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Edited on Mon Oct-27-03 02:30 PM by Feanorcurufinwe
DEAN: I'm a strong supporter of Medicare. It's a sound contract between the seniors of this country and Lyndon Baines Johnson.
The rest of our Social Security is not on the table. I'm a strong supporter of Social Security. And those programs need not be cut.
We can balance the budget. But if those programs are in trust funds and the trust funds are reasonably solvent -- Medicare until 2023, Social Security until about 2043 -- what you need to do is get rid of every dime of the Bush tax cuts.
Some up here say we should keep the middle-class tax cuts. What middle-class tax cuts? On the average, 60 percent of the people in this country got a $304 tax cut. One percent, which are rapidly writing $2,000 checks to George Bush, got a $26,300 tax cut.
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And in the meantime, think of what's happened to your college tuition or your kids' college tuition. What about your property tax? Has that gone up more than $304 in the last 2 1/2 years?
We need to get rid of every dime of the president's tax cuts, begin to start balancing the budget and restore things like Pell grants and full funding of special education...
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... so we can pay to have a good college education and balance the budget.
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IFILL: Excuse me just one moment. Did you say Medicaid was off the table, as well?
DEAN: I'm sorry, what?
IFILL: Did you say Medicaid was off the table, as well?
DEAN: Well, I plan to add $87 billion to Medicaid so we can have universal health insurance for everybody.
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PERKINS: Senator Kerry, your plan to balance the budget?
KERRY: Well, let me just say that, last week in Iowa, Governor Dean said that entitlements were on the table. Now, if he just took Social Security and Medicare off the table, the question is, what entitlements are on the table? Veterans' pensions, food stamps, Medicaid, Social -- disability? He can't answer that question.
Now, I'm going to do exactly what Bill Clinton did. I'm going to cut the deficit in half in the first four years. Bill Clinton's plan was to balance the budget in 10 years, not the five Governor Dean says.
The reason we decided not to do it in five was because it required extraordinary cuts in the things we just talked about doing: investing in the city of Detroit, investing in our schools, investing in health care, making our economy move.
KERRY: When Governor Dean just said, "What middle-class tax cut," let me tell him what middle-class tax cut.
The Burnett (ph) family in Colfax, Iowa, earned $70,000. But under his plan, they are going to pay $2,178 more in taxes because they lose the child credit to raise their children, they pay a penalty for being married again because he puts it back, and they lose the 10 percent bracket, as everybody else here does. So you begin to be taxed at 15 percent, not 10 percent.
Those aren't Bush Republican cuts, those are the Democrat cuts that we worked hard to put in place to protect the middle class.
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Bill Clinton protected the middle class; we grew the economy. If you liked Bill Clinton's economy for eight years, you're going to love John Kerry's for the first four years. http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A21551-2003Oct26?language=printer So, the question is, what entitlements are on the table? Veterans' pensions, food stamps, Medicaid, Social -- disability?
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