It's eitehr funny or annoying that the DLC talks about the need for a bold new vision to counter the GOP, but offers the same old, same old warmed over three day oatmeal as a "vision."
IMO, some of these ideas are fine on their own terms, but skirt the fundamental and real issues facing average and poor Americans, and the basic fabric of the nation. There is no "there" there in the DLC vision.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000103&sid=aV0dIY0nSc3U&refer=usDemocratic Centrists Plot Path to Counter Republican Dominance
July 25 (Bloomberg)
-- Top national Democrats, including several of the party's likely 2008 presidential contenders, are returning to the well of ideas from the centrist group that helped fashion President Bill Clinton's agenda in the 1990s.
The Democratic Leadership Council's two-day session in Columbus, Ohio, which opened yesterday, features speeches by New York Senator Hillary Clinton, Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack, Indiana Senator Evan Bayh and Virginia Governor Mark Warner, all potential presidential nominees.
Titled ``Heartland Values, Bold Solutions: An American Reform Agenda,'' the gathering comes at a time when Democrats find themselves with political opportunities, mostly because of President George W. Bush's difficulties on Social Security, the economy and Iraq rather than greater public acceptance of Democratic ideas.
<CUT>
The DLC's blueprint for change, distributed in Columbus, includes proposals for:
-- Increasing the size of the U.S. military by 100,000 personnel and assuring the services can recruit on college campuses.
Taxes, Energy
-- Altering the tax code to provide a $3,000-a-year college tax credit, a universal home mortgage deduction for people who don't itemize their taxes, an expanded family tax credit for couples with children and a universal pension that replaces 16 existing IRA-style accounts with one portable retirement account.
-- Cutting oil imports by 25 percent by 2025 and converting government vehicles to the use of hybrid engines by 2010.
-- Reducing congressional and non-defense federal government staff by 10 percent, cutting government consultants by 150,000, slashing ``excessive'' highway spending 50 percent and bringing back limits on discretionary spending.
-- Enacting tax cuts that encourage investment and setting up a Corporate Subsidy Reform Commission that cuts $30 billion in business subsidies at year for the next decade.
-- Lowering health care costs by investing in technology and research to find cures for diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.
-- Adopting a uniform ratings system for ``entertainment media'' that market products to children.
-- Cracking down on government corruption by forbidding members of Congress and administration officials from becoming lobbyists when they leave office.