The Guardian (USA)

The biggest win for the working class in generation­s is within reach

- Bernie Sanders

Now is the time. At a time when the gap between the very rich and everyone else is growing wider, when two people now own more wealth than the bottom 40% and when some of the wealthiest people and biggest businesses in the world pay nothing in federal income taxes, the billionair­e class and large profitable corporatio­ns must finally start paying their fair share of taxes.

Now is the time.

At a time when real wages for workers have not gone up in almost 50 years, when over half our people live paycheck to paycheck, when over 90 million Americans are uninsured or underinsur­ed, when working families cannot afford childcare or higher education for their kids, when many Americans no longer believe their government represents their interests, the US Congress must finally have the courage to represent the needs of working families and not just the 1% and their lobbyists.

Now is the time.

At a time of unpreceden­ted heatwaves, drought, flooding, extreme weather disturbanc­es and the acidificat­ion of the oceans, now is the time for the US government to make certain that the planet we leave our children and future generation­s is healthy and habitable. We must stand up to the greed of the fossil fuel industry, transform our energy system and lead the world in combating climate change.

As chairman of the US Senate budget committee I fought hard for a $6tn budget which would address these and other long-neglected needs. Not everyone in the Democratic caucus agreed with me and, after a lot of discussion and compromise within the budget committee, an agreement was reached on a smaller number. (Needless to say, no Republican­s will support legislatio­n which taxes the rich and protects working families.)

While this budget is less than I had wanted, let us be clear. This proposal, if passed, will be the most consequent­ial piece of legislatio­n for working people, the elderly, the children, the sick and the poor since FDR and the New Deal of the 1930s. It will also put the US in a global leadership position as we combat climate change. Further, and importantl­y, this legislatio­n will create millions of good-paying jobs as we address the long-neglected needs of working families and the planet.

Why is this proposal so significan­t? We will end the days of billionair­es not paying a nickel in federal income taxes by making sure the wealthy and large corporatio­ns do not use their accountant­s and lawyers to avoid paying the massive amounts that they owe. This proposal will also raise the individual tax rate on the wealthiest Americans and the corporate tax rate for the most profitable companies in our country. Under this proposal, no family making under $400,000 a year will pay a nickel more in taxes and will, in fact, receive one of the largest tax cuts in American history.

We will aggressive­ly reduce our childhood poverty rate by expanding the child tax credit so that families continue to receive monthly direct payments of up to $300 per child.

We will address the crisis in childcare by fighting to make sure that no working family pays more than 7% of their income on this basic need. Making childcare more accessible and affordable will also strengthen our economy by allowing millions more Americans (mostly women) to join the workforce.

We will provide universal prekinderg­arten to every three- and fouryear-old.

We will end the internatio­nal disgrace of the United States being the only major country on Earth not to guarantee paid family and medical leave as a right.

We will begin to address the crisis in higher education by making community colleges in America tuitionfre­e.

We will address the disgrace of widespread homelessne­ss in the United States and the reality that nearly 18m households are paying over 50% of their incomes for housing by an unpreceden­ted investment in affordable housing.

We will ensure that people in an ageing society can receive the home healthcare they need and that the workers who provide that care aren’t forced to live on starvation wages.

We will save taxpayers hundreds of billions by having Medicare negotiate prescripti­on drug prices with the pharmaceut­ical industry and use those savings to cover the dental care, hearing aids and eyeglasses that many seniors desperatel­y need.

We will rebuild our crumbling roads, bridges, water systems, wastewater treatment plants, broadband and other aspects of our physical infrastruc­ture.

We will take on the existentia­l threat of climate change by transformi­ng our energy systems away from fossil fuels and toward renewable energy.

This effort will include a nationwide clean energy standard that moves our transporta­tion system, electrical generation, buildings and housing and agricultur­e sector toward clean energy.

Through a Civilian Climate Corps we will give hundreds of thousands of young people good-paying jobs and educationa­l benefits as they help us combat climate change.

We will fight to bring undocument­ed people out of the shadows and provide them with a pathway to citizenshi­p, including those who courageous­ly kept our economy running in the middle of a deadly pandemic.

In the midst of the many longignore­d crises that this legislatio­n is attempting to address, we will not have one Republican senator voting for it. Tragically, many Republican leaders in Congress and around the country are just too busy continuing to lie about the 2020 presidenti­al election, underminin­g democracy by suppressin­g voting rights, denying the reality of climate change and casting doubts about the efficacy of the Covid-19 vaccines.

That means that the 50 Democrats in the US Senate, plus the vice-president, will have to pass this most consequent­ial piece of legislatio­n alone. And that’s what we will do. The future of working families is at stake. The future of our democracy is at stake. The future of our planet is at stake.

Now is the time.

Bernie Sanders is a US senator, and the ranking member of the Senate budget committee. He represents the state of Vermont, and is the longestser­ving independen­t in the history of Congress

In the midst of the many long-ignored crises that this legislatio­n is attempting to address, we will not have one Republican senator voting for it

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 ?? Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA ?? ‘This legislatio­n will create millions of good paying jobs as we address the long-neglected needs of working families and the planet.’
Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA ‘This legislatio­n will create millions of good paying jobs as we address the long-neglected needs of working families and the planet.’

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