Not exact matches
«We know that our system right now encourages the
wealthiest Canadians to set up a private
corporation so they can pay a lower tax rate than middle - class Canadians.
About half my monthly disability goes for rent on a 12 x 20 efficiency apartment... I am frightened, in the light of what's going on politically, that I will be cut off, even though I paid in my entire working life,
so that some
wealthy Floridian, or
corporation - they're people now, thanks, Supreme Court - can have a tax cut.
As government's capacity to constrain
corporations and the
wealthy has declined,
so has the economic well - being of workers.
«We can raise hundreds of billions of dollars by closing corporate tax loopholes and assuring that the rich pay their fair share,
so that big
corporations and the
wealthy take responsibility for contributing to building strong communities,» the party's draft platform says.
The party is unlikely to accept a # 5,000 cap on donations because it is
so reliant on
wealthy individuals and
corporations for its funding.
Tax returns of major
corporations and
wealthy elites should be made publicly available
so that public sunshine may persuade some to end their darker practices.
He's made passing references to «
wealthy donors» three times in his past five addresses, but goes all - in with that line of reasoning this time around: we have contribution limits to make sure elections «are not captured by
wealthy public interests,» he says; «
wealthy individuals and
corporations are able to use Limited Liability Companies» to avoid these limits,
so reform is needed «to even the playing field
so that rich and poor New Yorkers alike have their voices heard.»
Republicans are
so devoted to providing tax giveaways to the
wealthy and big
corporations, that they go searching for pay fors in the pockets of the middle class.
So whether you come from the t - party, Occupy, or someplace else, you might harbor resentment against the status quo: big government in league with big
corporations, and
wealthy people.
The
wealthiest corporations on Earth have the power to help solve the crisis they have done
so much to create, and from which they have profited — and continue to profit —
so richly.
These deals are not
so much about trade as they are about deregulation and forcing governments to pay
corporations and
wealthy investors for the cost of complying with environmental and other public interest safeguards.