Clinton proposes tax credit for family caregivers
This fall, Keith F. Thompson met Hillary Clinton and told her his story.
When respondents were asked to identify the most important concern facing America today, “terrorism” was number one at 24%, followed by “the economy and jobs” at 21%. “I think we are smart enough to figure in that out”. Sanders spokesman Michael Briggs criticized Clinton’s tax proposals Sunday in a statement, calling them “tentative half-steps that sound Republican-lite”.
Clinton will outline the details of the proposal on Sunday at a town hall in Iowa.
Democratic presidential candidate Martin O’Malley took aim at frontrunner Hillary Clinton’s comments during the debate invoking 9/11 to explain her closeness to Wall Street, saying on CNN’s New Day that her response was just a “smokescreen” to avoid the issue.
The proposal is part of a series of tax proposals that Clinton plans to roll out in the coming weeks. In 1999, President Clinton – with his First Lady by his side – proposed a package of tax incentives to assist pay for long-term care, together with a $1,000 tax credit for a few family caregivers. “Many family members, most often spouses and adult daughters, spend time out of the workforce, cut back on hours, or use personal days, vacation, and family time to provide needed care”, said Clinton’s campaign prior to the meeting, according to Politico. “These are all fixable problems”, she said.
Sanders says his plan would incorporate Medicare into a broader system intended to cover all Americans and wouldn’t mean the government would stop paying for seniors’ health care. “You don’t need tax credits if you have a cost-effective health-care system….” This measure also would need approval from Congress.
Clinton has said she supports paid family leave but has not embraced a bill introduced by Kirsten Gillibrand, Clinton’s successor as a senator from NY, that dozens of progressive lawmakers have lined up behind in both chambers of Congress.
Clinton says that she is the only primary candidate committed to holding current tax rates on average workers.
The poll reveals that Sanders had made gains with Democrats and Democratic leaners under age 50. Sen.
In addition, the majority of Democratic voters say they would accept a few differences with their preferred candidate on handling ISIS, whereas at least two-thirds of Republican voters in early states say a candidate must share their view on the issue. “And we are not such a poor party that we can’t afford to have three choices”.