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Reza Aslan (Photo: AP)

Reza Aslan (Photo: AP)

CNN dumped Reza Aslan and his show “Believer” that launched earlier this year amid outrageous he called President Donald Trump “a piece of s—” on Twitter. This is the second firing action the network was forced to take after a host or partner made offensive over the line comments about the President.

“CNN has decided to not move forward with production on the acquired series ‘Believer with Reza Aslan,’” the network said in a statement. “We wish Reza and his production team all the best. “

Aslan’s profanity came in the wake of remarks President Trump made after the terrorist attacks on London. The Iranian-American author and so-called religious scholar later apologized.

“I should have used better language to express my shock and frustration at the president’s lack of decorum and sympathy for the victims of London,” he said. “I apologize for my choice of words.”

Now, “Believer” won’t even see a second season.

“Obviously I am very disappointed in this decision. ‘Believer’ means a great deal to me and to the countless viewers it’s reached. Its message of religious tolerance and exploration is extremely important right now. I am deeply grateful to CNN for giving me the opportunity to launch the show and to amplify my voice on their network. I am especially grateful to the legion of people within the Turner organization who worked so hard to make the show a hit series,” said Aslan, in a prepared statement.

CNN recently cut ties with comedian and New Year’s Eve host Kathy Griffin after she took photos in an ISIS-like pose holding the severed head of the President. Barron, President Trump’s younger child, was watching television at the time and believed his father had been decapitated.

”However, in these politically charged times, the tenor of our nation’s discourse has become complicated, and I recognize that CNN needs to protect its brand as an unbiased news outlet. Similarly, I need to honor my voice. I am not a journalist. I am a social commentator and scholar. And so I agree with CNN that it is best that we part ways. I look forward to partnering with another platform in the future to continue to spread my message. I wish CNN all the best.”

CNN dumped Reza Aslan and his show

James Comey, left, testifies during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on July 8, 2015. Robert Mueller, right, testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee on June 19, 2013. (Photos: Reuters)

James Comey, left, testifies during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on July 8, 2015. Robert Mueller, right, testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee on June 19, 2013. (Photos: Reuters)

When liberal law professors are likening the Special Counsel investigation to Stalin’s secret police, fair-minded Americans should still be able to agree: Enough is enough.

In light of James Comey’s testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee on Thursday, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein should immediately revoke the mandate given to Special Counsel Robert Mueller.

Our patience to entertain conspiracy theories has expired. The charge President Donald Trump colluded with Russia to influence the outcome of the 2016 presidential election has completely collapsed. After months of selectively disclosing information to the public that benefits him politically, Mr. Comey finally admitted what we have been reporting for months–President Trump was never under investigation.

As People’s Pundit Daily has repeatedly reported, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) before Mr. Mueller was appointed Special Counsel was focused on Michael Flynn, not President Trump.

Investigators were digging into the relationship between Lt. Gen. Flynn and a Turkish businessman to determine whether it played any role in his decision-making during the brief time he served as President Trump’s national security advisor. The FBI is quite capable of handling that case and other potential acts of wrongdoing that may arise in the process of the investigation.

What Americans don’t need is the fired former FBI director’s friend and mentor, honest or not, leading an investigation that Mr. Comey himself admitted was his motive for leaking government documents to the media.

America, that is a crime.

“The problem is that Comey’s description of his use of an FBI computer to create memoranda to file suggests that these are arguably government documents,” liberal law Professor Jonathan Turley noted. “Assuming that the memos were not classified, there is 18 U.S.C. § 641 which makes it a crime to steal, sell, or convey ‘any record, voucher, money, or thing of value of the United States or of any department or agency thereof.’”

Astonishingly, Mr. Comey claimed under oath that he decided to leak to the media after President Trump sent out a tweet insinuating that he had tapes of the director assuring him that he was not under investigation. Worth noting, “friends” of Comey cited in reports disputed that he ever did or would ever do such a thing.

Mr. Comey is a liar.

President Trump’s tweet was sent out on May 12, but the New York Times article containing the content of the so-called obstruction-proving memo was published on May 11. Further, another story citing “friends” of Comey claimed President Trump asked for a loyalty pledge. It was published on May 9.

Are we really to believe Mr. Mueller will hold his buddy and prodigy accountable? The former FBI directors’ closeness gives more than just the appearance of bias, it flat-out stinks.

Special Counsel investigations historically take on a mind of their own, something liberal Harvard Law Professor Emeritus Alan Dershowitz said “raises great concerns about civil liberties.” We agree with Mr. Dershowitz’s assessments and share his concerns.

From the beginning, the Russia probe was “being done backwards” and it’s accurate to liken it to Stalin’s secret police, as Professor Dershowitz has done.

“Show me the man and I’ll find you the crime,” Stalin’s secret police chief, Lavrentiy Beria once said.

This is not an outrageous characterization of this so-called investigation.

“Usually, you can point to a statute and say, ‘We’re investigating crime under this statute,’” Professor Dershowitz told a hysteric Anderson Cooper on CNN (Conspiracy News Network). “What Mueller seems to be doing is saying: ‘We don’t like what happened. Maybe there was some collaboration.”

“But I can’t figure out what statute was being violated.”

It has been well over 200 days since we first began to ask politicians on both sides of the aisle and law enforcement officials what law exactly, which statute, does “collusion” fall under. We’ve yet to receive a credible legal response. In truth, we’ve yet to receive any real response.

Let’s not forget how all of this started.

First, we were told the Lt. Gen. Flynn violated the Logan Act, something this outfit pointed out using analysis from legal experts, was a fraud. At best, it was meant to trump up fears a duly elected President colluded with Russia and, at worst, was a puppet of Vladimir Putin.

But the goal post just kept moving.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions failed to disclose (what does that even mean?) a meeting with a Russian ambassador at his office, and Democrats demanded he recuse himself. Claire McCaskill, D-Missouri, took to Twitter before realizing she herself had forgotten she took the same meeting.

Fast-forward passed numerous hysterical claims made from one day to another and now we have moved onto a bogus “obstruction” allegation, which legal experts are now mocking, too. The only hint of obstruction revealed by Thursday’s testimony was on behalf of former Attorney General Loretta Lynch, who sought to de-criminalize the actions of Hillary Clinton.

It also confirmed our reporting that Mr. Comey tanked the Clinton email investigation, intentionally.

As Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., pointed out during his questioning of Mr. Comey, the only piece of information that wasn’t leaked also happened to be the most important. President Trump was never under investigation for alleged collusion with Russia.

Not a counter-intelligence investigation. Not a criminal investigation.

It’s time to end this charade and call it out for what it is–an effort to stop the Trump agenda. It was hatched by Democrats, fueled by corrupt bureaucrats in the permanent government, pushed by ignorant and bias journalists, and enabled by the cowardly leadership of the Republican Party.

We will no longer participate in this taxpayer-funded sham, America. And whether you agree with the Trump agenda or not, neither should you. He was elected by the American people–the sovereign–to drain the D.C. cesspool largely because he was unaccountable to the swamp. But the swamp has engaged in a non-violent coup led by those who have forgotten that We the People are the sovereign, not them.

If they win, we all lose–Republicans, Democrats, independents. It’s that simple.

If you have ideological disagreements with the President, then keep them. Fight him on the issues and back up your arguments with accurate, reliable and persuasive facts. But do not allow yourself to be the stooge any longer.

If you loathe the President, you’ll have to decide which is more important–your hate or our freedom. But understand that this is a choice between policy disagreements and the preservation of our very system of self-governance.

[brid video=”145080″ player=”2077″ title=”Comey Admits He Leaked Info About Trump To Media”]

In light of James Comey's testimony to

Former FBI director James Comey is sworn in prior to testifying before the Senate Intelligence Committee on June 8, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

Former FBI director James Comey is sworn in prior to testifying before the Senate Intelligence Committee on June 8, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

Legal experts on both sides of the aisle say James Comey put himself in legal jeopardy and failed to pin obstruction of justice on President Donald Trump. In his testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee, Mr. Comey also admitted that he did in fact tell the President he was never under investigation over alleged “collusion” with Russia.

Liberal law professor Jonathan Turley said the testimony in the Comey hearing “actually helped Trump and his legal case,” adding that even if we accept his version of events he “did not describe a crime or an impeachable offense.”

“Comey also confirmed that Trump only expressed a “hope” that the Flynn investigation would end — a statement that Trump made repeatedly publicly,” Professor Turley commented in a response. “Again, however, having a duplicitous or dishonest nature is not an impeachable offense. Indeed, if that standard were applied in Washington generally, it would be a ghost town.”

Alan Dershowitz, Professor Emeritus at Harvard Law, was even less entertaining of the possibility there was something that amounted to obstruction of justice.

He said “the president has the authority to direct the FBI to stop investigating any individual.” Absent a bribe or indication of corruption, “the president can, in theory, decide who to investigate, who to stop investigating, who to prosecute and who not to prosecute.”

“The president is the head of the unified executive branch of government, and the Justice Department and the FBI work under him and he may order them to do what he wishes.”

He noted that presidents from “Adams to Jefferson, to Lincoln, to Roosevelt, to Kennedy, to Bush 1, and to Obama” have all directed the Justice Department to move forward or stop ongoing investigations. To question or criminalize these actions was actually more dangerous than the crimes they were falsely accusing the President of committing, he contends.

“Yet virtually every Democratic pundit, in their haste to ‘get’ President Trump, has willfully ignored these realities,” Professor Dershowitz added. “In doing so they have endangered our civil liberties and constitutional rights.”

Professor Dershowitz previously expressed grave concerns over the FBI and Senate’s handling of the Russia investigation. He opposes the Special Counsel on the basis that it is “backward” investigation, meaning it is starting with a target without any crime even being committed.

Mr. Dershowitz likened the inquiry to the words of Joseph Stalin’s secret police chief, Lavrentiy Beria: “Show me the man and I’ll find you the crime.”

Greg Jarrett, a former defense attorney who is now an anchor at Fox News, elaborated on the actual law, which is not only defined by the statute but also affirmed by the U.S. Supreme Court in the 2005 case of Arthur Anderson v. United States.

“James Comey’s public testimony exonerates President Trump of obstruction of justice. To put it simply, ‘hoping’ that something happens is not a crime,” Mr. Jarrett wrote. “The law demands much more than that. Felony obstruction requires that the person seeking to obstruct a law enforcement investigation act ‘corruptly.'”

“The statute specifically defines what that includes: threats, lies, bribes, destruction of documents, and altering or concealing evidence,” he added. “None of that is alleged by Comey.”

Further, legal experts say Mr. Comey put himself in legal jeopardy when he admitted he leaked government documents in the form of his memos with the explicit purpose of forcing Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to appoint a Special Counsel. Worth noting, Robert Mueller, another former FBI director who was appointed as SC, is a personal friend and mentor to Mr. Comey.

He said he intentionally used a “friend” on the Columbia law faculty to leak his memos to the media. That “friend” is Columbia Law School Professor Daniel Richman, who specializes in criminal law and criminal procedure. On his faculty webpage, he is described as “currently an adviser to FBI Director James B. Comey.”

“The problem is that Comey’s description of his use of an FBI computer to create memoranda to file suggests that these are arguably government documents,” Professor Turley noted. “Assuming that the memos were not classified, there is 18 U.S.C. § 641 which makes it a crime to steal, sell, or convey ‘any record, voucher, money, or thing of value of the United States or of any department or agency thereof.’”

“I find Comey’s admission to be deeply troubling.”

[brid video=”145080″ player=”2077″ title=”Comey Admits He Leaked Info About Trump To Media”]

Legal experts on both sides of the

Reality Winner, a 25-year-old NSA contractor and Air Force veteran, was also an Islamist sympathizer and radical left hater of President Trump. (Photo: DoJ)

Reality Winner, a 25-year-old NSA contractor and Air Force veteran, was also an Islamist sympathizer and radical left hater of President Trump. (Photo: DoJ)

Reality Winner, 25, had previously wrote that she wanted “to burn the White House Down” and had plans to leak more information in the future. She also wanted to “find somewhere in Kurdistan to live.”

Federal prosecutors argued in court before a judge in Augusta, Ga., on Thursday that Winner intended to leak further documents and was a flight risk. The judge ordered she remain in jail without bail until her trial.

Prosecutors added that Winner wrote in her notebook alleged plans to set the White House on fire, and travel to Afghanistan and pledge her allegiance to the Taliban. The defense argued that the comments were not serious in nature, though it didn’t fly with the judge.

The judge said whether Winner’s words were “a jest or not, it still concerns” the court. Prosecutors did concede they aren’t arguing Winner is a jihadist or terrorist sympathizer, though she does have ties to the Women’s March organizers, led by Linda Sarsour, a radical Islamist.

“The government is not in any way suggesting the defendant has become a jihadist or that she is a Taliban sympathizer,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Jennifer Solari told the judge in court.

Titus Nichols, the defense attorney, claimed Winner was going on trial for being a “typical” tech-savvy millennial. He said the government is exaggerating the threat she poses.

“Because my client is a millennial and she knows how to use technology, that’s somehow proof of evil intent,” Mr. Nichols said. “The government is scraping and clawing to build a mountain out of a molehill.”

But Winner, in a jailhouse phone call, she told her mother that she “screwed up.”

“Mom, those documents. I screwed up,” Winner also reportedly confessed to her mom in the recorded jailhouse phone call.

She also told her to tell the media that her daughter was “scared.”

Winner also told her sister she was “pretty, white and cute,” which would benefit her during the bond hearing.

Reality Winner, 25, had previously wrote that

Workers in protective equipment are reflected in the window of a betting shop with a display inviting customers to place bets on tbe result of the general election with images of Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May and opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, in London, June 7, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

Workers in protective equipment are reflected in the window of a betting shop with a display inviting customers to place bets on tbe result of the general election with images of Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May and opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, in London, June 7, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour party made big gains over Theresa May and Conservative Tories in the UK elections, ensuring a new resident at Number 10 Downing Street. While Conservatives won the most seats and votes, it will not be enough for an outright majority.

It is expected that the Tories will form a coalition government with the DUP, which won 9 seats (thus far). Only a strong showing in Scotland kept the conservatives from a total bloodbath, though there is little Prime Minister Theresa May can do to put a spin on the fall.

Conservatives even lost Canterbury, which they’d held since World War I. The incumbent Sir Julian Brazier occupied the seat for 30 years, since 1987.

In her “victory” speech, Prime Minister May, who held on to Maidenhead with 45.4% of the vote, all but conceded there’s going to be a “hung Parliament” and vowed “stability” if it turns out the Conservative Party wins the most seats and votes.

Assuming she does not survive the political fallout from within and outside the party, Mrs. May will be the shortest serving prime minister Britain has had since 1922.

Nick Clegg, the former leader of the Liberal Democratic Party and the Deputy Prime Minister in the coalition government with Conservatives from May 2010-May 2015 has been defeated in a pickup for the Labour party. Labour picked up seats against Conservatives in Rutherglend, Hamilton West and Battersea, the latter going for the Conservative Party in 2015 by 8,000 votes.

It went for Labour by 3,000.

Alex Salmond, the former head of the SNP and the leader of Scottish Independence movement, was also defeated. The seat was a much-needed pickup for the Tories.

The Exit Polls forecasted the conservative Tories to hold onto 314 seats, which is 12 short of a majority. Technically, or officially, a single party needs 326 seats to gain an outright majority in the 650-member House of Commons. However, the actual practical number is around 321 to 323 depending on how the Sinn Fein, the Irish nationalist party fairs.

The Speaker of the House of Commons does not vote and members from Sinn Fein, which won four seats in the last general election in 2015, do not show at Westminster. Labour was projected by the exit polls to win 266, Liberal Democrats 14; Scottish National Party (SNP) 34; and, UKIP 0.

One of the stories of the night was the split in the vote of the UKIP, which roughly went equally to the Tories and Labour. That is a working class party with nationalist tones and were assumed to be more pro-conservative party. However, unlike the preconceived notions of the media, they are largely not one-issue voters (re: Muslim immigration).

The momentum in the campaign changed after two Islamist terror attacks in a 12-day period killed 29 people and injured hundreds more. With the attacks came a dive in the polls amid deeper scrutiny of the six-year tenure Prime Minister May served as Home Secretary, Britain’s top law enforcement official.

The BBC is projecting 318 seats for Conservatives, 8 short of an outright majority. Labour is projected at 267 and Liberal Democrats 11. People’s Pundit Daily’s number-crunching put the likely conservative number at around 316, which could change shorty. Stay tuned.

Jeremy Corbyn's Labour party made big gains

Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Ut., left, speaks with Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., right, during a House Oversight Committee hearing on Capitol Hill, Washington D.C. October 10, 2012. (Photo: Reuters)

Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Ut., left, speaks with Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., right, during a House Oversight Committee hearing on Capitol Hill, Washington D.C. October 10, 2012. (Photo: Reuters)

The Republican Steering Committee has elected Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., to serve as the next chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

“I am grateful to the Steering Committee and the Conference as a whole for this opportunity to serve,” Rep. Gowdy said in a statement. “I look forward to working alongside the other Committee members, as well as any member of Congress, as we discharge the jurisdiction assigned to us.”

Rep. Gowdy, a former federal prosecutor, will replace outgoing Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Ut., who recently made the surprise announcement that he is resigning from Congress at the end of June.

“Trey Gowdy is the right person for the job,” Rep. Chaffetz said in a statement. “He has a long history of demanding accountability, upholding transparency, and relentlessly pursuing the truth. Under his capable leadership, the Committee will continue to work towards ensuring effectiveness and efficiency throughout the federal government. As his friend and colleague, I have every confidence in his abilities moving forward.”

Mr. Gowdy led a two-year long investigation into the deadly attacks in Benghazi, Libya, and is a favorite among the conservative base. He was an outspoken critic of the Obama Administration.

The Republican Steering Committee has elected Rep.

FILE PHOTO – Crates filled with 2011 tax forms are seen at the 96th Street Public Library in New York April 17, 2012. (Photo: Reuters)

The federal income tax is corrosive and destructive. It’s almost as if a group of malicious people decided to deliberately design a system that imposes maximum damage while also allowing the most corruption.

The economic damage is not only the result of high tax rates and pervasive double taxation, but also because of loopholes that exist to bribe people into making economically unwise decisions.

These include itemized deductions for mortgages and charitable contributions, as well as the fringe benefits exclusion and the exemption for municipal bond interest. And there are many other corrupt favors sprinkled through a metastasizing tax code.

But there’s a strong case to be made that the worst loophole is the deduction for state and local taxes. Why? For the simple reason that it encourages, enables, and subsidizes bad policy.

Here’s how it works. State and local lawmakers can increase income taxes or property taxes and be partially insulated from political blowback because their taxpayers can deduct those taxes on their federal return.

And it’s a back-door way of giving a special break to upper-income taxpayers because the deduction is more valuable to people in higher tax brackets.

Let’s look at an example that’s currently in the news. Democrats in the Illinois state legislature want a big increase in the personal income tax. If they succeed and boost taxes by an average of $1000, high-income taxpayers who take advantage of the deduction may only suffer a loss of as little as $600 since their federal tax bill may fall by almost $400.

For politicians, this is an ideal racket. They can promise various interest groups $1000 of goodies while reducing take-home pay by a lesser amount.

Let’s review some recent commentary on this topic.

The Wall Street Journal opined on the issue last weekend.

Chuck Schumer aspires to raise taxes on every rich person in America, save one protected class: coastal progressives. …Like many other Democrats, he’s apoplectic about a plan to end the state and local tax deduction. …One goal of tax reform is to reduce unproductive tax loopholes, and ending the state and local deduction would generate revenue to finance lower rates: The deduction is worth about $100 billion a year… About 88% of the benefits in 2014 flowed to taxpayers who earn more than $100,000, while 1% went to those who earn less than $50,000. California alone reaps nearly 20% of the benefit…and a mere six states get more than half. …The folks underwriting this windfall are in Alaska, South Dakota, Wyoming and other places without a state income tax. …Eliminating the deduction would be a powerful incentive for Governors to cut state taxes on residents who are suddenly exposed to their full liability. …killing the state and local deduction would pay a double dividend: The first is creating a more equitable tax code with a broader base and lower rates. The second is spurring reform in states that are long overdue for a better tax climate.

Writing earlier this year for National Review, Kevin Williamson was characteristically blunt.

It’s time for…blue-state…tax increases that would fall most heavily on upper-income Americans in high-tax progressive states such as California and New York. …eliminate the deduction for state income taxes, a provision that takes some of the sting out of living in a high-tax jurisdiction such as New York City (which has both state and local income taxes) or California, home to the nation’s highest state-tax burden. Do not hold your breath waiting for the inequality warriors to congratulate Republicans for proposing these significant tax increases on the rich. …allowing for the deduction of state taxes against federal tax liabilities creates a subsidy and an incentive for higher state taxes. California in essence is able to capture money that would be federal revenue and use it for its own ends, an option that is not practically available to low-tax (and no-income-tax) states such as Nevada and Florida. It makes sense to allow the states to compete on taxes and services, but the federal tax code biases that competition in favor of high-tax jurisdictions.

And Bob McManus adds his two cents in an article for the Manhattan Institute’s City Journal.

Voters in all heavy-tax, high-spending states have no one to blame for their situation save themselves. At a minimum, it seems clear that deductibility—by softening the impact of federal taxation—encourages outsize state and local spending. States that take advantage of deductibility—mostly in the Northeast and on the West Coast—are in effect subsidized by states that have kept tighter control on their spending. …New York’s top-of-the-charts spending puts the state at the pinnacle…with New Yorkers paying a national high of 12.7 percent of income in state and local levies. Local property taxes in New York are astronomical and not coming down any time soon. …deductibility has powerful friends—among them the public-employee unions… New York and the nation would benefit if deductibility was jettisoned. …end the incentive for the tax-and-spend practices that have been so economically corrosive to big-spending Blue states.

Let’s close with the should-be-obvious point that the goal isn’t to repeal the state and local tax deduction in order to give politicians in Washington more money to spend. Instead, every penny of that revenue should be used to finance pro-growth tax reforms.

That creates a win-win situation of better tax policy in Washington, while also creating pressure for better tax policy at the state and local level.

For what it’s worth, both Trump and House Republicans are proposing to get rid of the deduction.

The economic damage from the federal tax

Votes on the American Health Care Act (AHCA) in Congress.

Votes on the American Health Care Act (AHCA) in Congress.

Back in 2015, I basically applauded the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) for its analysis of what would happen if ObamaCare was repealed. The agency’s number crunchers didn’t get it exactly right, but they actually took important steps and produced numbers showing how the law was hurting taxpayers and the economy.

Now we have a new set of ObamaCare numbers from CBO based on the partial repeal bill approved by the House of Representatives. The good news is that the bureaucrats show substantial fiscal benefits. There would be a significant reduction in the burden of spending and taxation.

But the CBO did not show very favorable numbers in other areas, most notably when it said that 23 million additional people would be uninsured if the legislation was enacted.

Part of the problem is that Republicans aren’t actually repealing ObamaCare. Many of the regulations that drive up the cost of health insurance are left in place.

My colleague at Cato, Michael Cannon, explains why this is a big mistake.

Rather than do what their supporters sent them to Washington to do – repeal ObamaCare and replace it with free-market reforms – House Republicans are pushing a bill that will increase health-insurance premiums, make health insurance worse for the sick… ObamaCare’s core provisions are the “community rating” price controls and other regulations that (supposedly) end discrimination against patients with preexisting conditions. …Community rating is the reason former president Bill Clinton called ObamaCare “the craziest thing in the world” where Americans “wind up with their premiums doubled and their coverage cut in half.” Community rating is why women age 55 to 64 have seen the highest premium increases under ObamaCare. It is the principal reason ObamaCare has caused overall premiums to double in just four years. Community rating literally penalizes quality coverage for the sick… ObamaCare is community rating. The AHCA does not repeal community rating. Therefore, the AHCA does not repeal ObamaCare.

It would be ideal if Republicans fully repealed Obamacare.

Heck, they should also address the other programs and policies that have messed up America’s healthcare system and caused a third-party payer crisis.

That means further reforms to Medicaid, as well as Medicare and the tax code’s exclusion of fringe benefits.

But maybe that’s hoping for too much since many Republicans are squeamish about supporting even a watered-down proposal to modify Obamacare.

That being said, there are some reasonable complaints that CBO overstated the impact of the GOP bill.

Doug Badger and Grace Marie Turner, for instance, were not impressed by CBO’s methodology.

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) launched its latest mistaken Obamacare-related estimate this week, predicting that a House-passed bill to repeal and replace the embattled law would lead to 23 million more uninsured people by 2026. …the agency’s errors are not only massive – one of their predictions of 2016 exchange-based enrollment missed by 140%… Undaunted by failure and unschooled by experience, CBO soldiers on, fearlessly predicting that millions will flock to the exchanges any day now.  …CBO measures the House-passed bill against this imaginary baseline and finds it wanting. …One reason CBO gets it so wrong so consistently is its fervent belief that the individual mandate has motivated millions to enroll in coverage.  …CBO’s belief in the power of the individual mandate is misplaced. …The IRS reports that in the 2015 tax year, 6.5 million uninsured filers paid the tax penalty, 12.7 million got an exemption and additional 4.2 million people simply ignored the penalty.  They left line 61 on their form 1040 blank, refusing to tell the government whether or not they had insurance.  …In all, that is a total of 23.4 million uninsured people – out of an estimated 28.8 million uninsured – who either paid, avoided or ignored the penalty.  That hardly suggests that the mandate has worked.

The Wall Street Journal also was quite critical of the CBO analysis.

…the budget scorekeepers claim the House bill could degrade the quality of insurance. This editorializing could use some scrutiny. Without government supervision of insurance minutiae and a mandate to buy coverage or pay a penalty, CBO asserts, “a few million” people will turn to insurance that falls short of the “widely accepted definition” of “a comprehensive major medical policy.” They might select certain forms of coverage that Obama Care banned, like “mini-med” plans with low costs and low benefits. Or they might select indemnity plans that pay a fixed-dollar amount per day for illness or hospitalization, or dental-only or vision-only single-service plans. CBO decided to classify these people as “uninsured,” though without identifying who accepts ObamaCare’s definition of standardized health benefits and why they deserve to substitute their judgment for the choices of individual consumers. …But the strangest part of CBO’s preoccupation with “high-cost medical events” is that the analysts never once mention catastrophic coverage—not once. These types of plans didn’t cover routine medical expenses but they did protect consumers against, well, a high-cost medical event like an accident or the diagnosis of a serious illness. Those plans answered what most people want most out of insurance—financial security and a guarantee that they won’t be bankrupted by cancer or a distracted bus driver. …under the House reform Americans won’t have any problem insuring against a bad health event, even if CBO won’t admit it. …CBO has become a fear factory because it prefers having government decide for everybody.

Drawing on his first-hand knowledge, Dr. Marc Siegel wrote on the issue for Fox News.

…23 million…will lose their health insurance by 2026 if the American Health Care Act, the bill the House passed to replace ObamaCare, is passed in the Senate and signed by President Trump. This number is concerning — until you look at it and the CBO’s handling of the health care bills more closely. …First, the CBO was wildly inaccurate when it came to ObamaCare, predicting that 23 million people would be getting policies via the exchanges by 2016. The actual number ended up being only 10.4 million… Second, many who chose to buy insurance on the exchanges did so only because they wanted to avoid paying the penalty, not because they needed or wanted the insurance. Many didn’t buy insurance until they got sick.

The Oklahoman panned the CBO’s calculations.

IN the real world, people who don’t have insurance coverage cannot lose it. Yet…the CBO estimates 14 million fewer people will have coverage in 2018 if the House bill is enacted than would be the case if the ACA is left intact, and 23 million fewer by 2026. …In 2016, there were roughly 10 million people obtaining insurance through an Obamacare exchange. The CBO estimated that number would suddenly surge to 18 million by 2018 if the law was left intact, but that far fewer people would be covered if the House reforms became law. Put simply, the CBO estimated that millions of people who don’t have insurance through an exchange today would “lose” coverage they would otherwise obtain next year. That’s doubtful. …At one point, the office estimated 22 million people would receive insurance through an Obamacare exchange by 2016. As already noted, the actual figure was less than half that. One major reason for the CBO being so far off the mark is that federal forecasters believed Obamacare’s individual mandate would cause people to buy insurance, regardless of cost. That hasn’t proven true. …In a nutshell, the CBO predicts reform would cause millions to lose coverage they don’t now have, and that millions more would eagerly reject the coverage they do have because it’s such a bad deal. Those aren’t conclusions that bolster the case for Obamacare.

And here are passages from another WSJ editorial.

CBO says 14 million fewer people on net would be insured in 2018 relative to the ObamaCare status quo, rising to 23 million in 2026. The political left has defined this as “losing coverage.” But 14 million would roll off Medicaid as the program shifted to block grants, which is a mere 17% drop in enrollment after the ObamaCare expansion. The safety net would work better if it prioritized the poor and disabled with a somewhat lower number of able-bodied, working-age adults. The balance of beneficiaries “losing coverage” would not enroll in insurance, CBO says, “because the penalty for not having insurance would be eliminated.” In other words, without the threat of government to buy insurance or else pay a penalty, some people will conclude that ObamaCare coverage isn’t worth the price even with subsidies. …CBO’s projections about ObamaCare enrollment…were consistently too high and discredited by reality year after year. CBO is also generally wrong in the opposite direction about market-based reforms, such as the 2003 Medicare drug benefit whose costs the CBO badly overestimated.

Here are excerpts from Seth Chandler’s Forbes column.

My complaints about the CBO largely revolve around its dogged refusal to adjust its computations to the ever-more-apparent failings of the Affordable Care Act. When the CBO says that 23 million fewer people will have insurance coverage under the AHCA than under the ACA — a statistic that politics have converted into a mantra —  that figure is predicated on an ACA that no longer exists. It is based on the continuing assumption that the ACA will have 18 million people enrolled on its exchanges in 2018 and that this situation will persist until 2026. I know no one on any side of the political spectrum who believes this to be true. The ACA has about 11 million people currently enrolled on its exchanges in 2017 and, with premiums going up, some insurers withdrawing from various markets, and the executive branch fuzzing up whether the individual mandate will actually be enforced. The consensus is that ACA enrollment will stay the same or go down, not increase 60%.

And here’s some of what Drew Gonshorowski wrote for the Daily Signal.

…reducing premium levels by rolling back regulations could actually have the effect of making plans more desirable for individuals looking to pay less. The CBO lacks any real discussion of these positive effects. …The CBO’s score on Medicaid…reflects that it assumes more states would likely have expanded in the future under the Affordable Care Act. Thus, its projection that 14 million fewer people would be insured due to not having Medicaid under the American Health Care Act might be overstated… CBO…assumes the Affordable Care Act will enroll 7 to 8 million more people in the individual market, when in reality it does not appear this will be the case

Last but not least, my former colleague Robert Moffit expressed concerns in a column for USA Today. The part that caught my eye was that CBO has a less-than-stellar track record on Obamacare projections.

The GOP should be skeptical of CBO’s coverage estimates. It has been an abysmal performance. For example, CBO projected initially that 21 million persons would enroll in exchange plans in 2016. The actual enrollment: 11.5 million.

The bottom line is that CBO overstated the benefits of Obamacare, at least as measured by the number of people who would sign up for the program.

The bureaucrats were way off.

Yet CBO continues to use those inaccurate numbers, creating a make-believe baseline that is then used to estimate a large number of uninsured people if the Republican bill is enacted.

This is sort of like the “baseline math” that is used to measure supposed spending cuts when the budget actually is getting bigger.

CATO economist Dan Mitchell scrutinizes numerous flaws

FILE PHOTO: Illinois Gov-elect Bruce Rauner speaks to the media after a meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama and other Governor-elects from seven U.S. states at the White House in Washington December 5, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

FILE PHOTO: Illinois Gov-elect Bruce Rauner speaks to the media after a meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama and other Governor-elects from seven U.S. states at the White House in Washington December 5, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

Illinois is a mess. Taxes and spending already are too high, and huge unfunded liabilities point to an even darker future.

Simply stated, politicians and government employee unions have created an unholy alliance to extract as much money as possible from the state’s beleaguered private sector.

That’s not a surprise. Indeed, it’s easily explained by the “stationary bandit” theory of government.

But while the bandit of government may be stationary, the victims are not. At least not in a nation with 50 different states. Indeed, Illinois Policy reports that a growing number of geese with golden eggsdecided to fly away after a big tax hike in 2011.

Politicians enacted Illinois’ 2011 income-tax hike during a late-night legislative session in January 2011 and raised the state’s personal income-tax rate to 5 percent from 3 percent. This 67 percent income-tax hike lasted for four years, during which time Illinois experienced record wealth flight. …The short-term increase in tax revenue gained from higher tax rates is offset by the long-term loss of substantial portions of Illinois’ tax base. The average income of taxpayers leaving Illinois rose to $77,000 per year in 2014, according to new income migration data released by the IRS. Meanwhile, the average income of people entering Illinois was only $57,000. …During the four years of the full income-tax hike, prior to its partial sunset in 2015, Illinois lost $14 billion in annual adjusted gross income, or AGI, to other states, on net.

Illinois has always had an unfavorable ratio when comparing the incomes of immigrants and emigrants. But you can see from this chart that there was a radically unfavorable shift after the tax hike.

Here’s a table from the article showing the 10-worst states.

Illinois leads this list of losers by a comfortable margin. Connecticut, meanwhile, has a strong hold on second place (which shouldn’t be a surprise).

The IP report observes that the states benefiting from internal migration have much better fiscal policy. In particular, most of them are on the admirable list of states that don’t impose income taxes.

…the top five states with favorable income differentials were Florida, Wyoming, Nevada, South Carolina and Texas. Notably, 4 of 5 of these states have no income tax, and none of them have a death tax.

It’s worth noting that the high-tax approach is not producing good results.

Instead, as reported by Bloomberg, the Land of Lincoln is the land of red ink.

Illinois had its bond rating downgraded to one step above junk by Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings, the lowest ranking on record for a U.S. state… Illinois’s underfunded pensions and the record backlog of bills…are equivalent to about 40 percent of its operating budget. …investors have demanded higher premiums for the risk of owning its debt. Moody’s called Illinois “an outlier among states” after suffering eight downgrades in as many years. …like other states, has no ability to resort to bankruptcy to escape from its debts. A downgrade to junk, though, would add further financial pressure by increasing its borrowing costs.

Amazing, in spite of this ongoing meltdown, the Democrats who control the state legislature are pushing hard to once again increase the income tax.

Heck, they want to increase all sorts of taxes. Including higher burdens on the financial industry.

Kristina Rasumussen, the President of Illinois Policy, warned in the Wall Street Journal that this was not a good recipe.

Proponents here call it the “privilege tax.” …The Illinois bill would put a 20% levy on fees earned by investment advisers. It passed the state Senate in a 32-24 vote Tuesday, and backers are hoping to get it through the House before the legislative session ends May 31. The new tax is pitched as a way to squeeze more revenue—as much as $1.7 billion a year—from hedge funds and private-equity firms… An earlier version of the Illinois proposal included a provision so that the 20% tax would take effect only if and when New York, New Jersey and Connecticut enacted similar measures. But the bill as written now would impose the tax regardless, and lawmakers will simply have to hope other states follow suit. Yet who says financiers can’t do their jobs just as well in Palm Beach, Fla.—or London, Zurich or Hong Kong? The progressives peddling this idea don’t understand that Chicago competes for these businesses not only with New York and Greenwich, Conn., but with anywhere that can offer cellphone service and an internet connection. …Railing against supposed “fat cats” might satisfy progressive groups, but lawmakers shouldn’t be in the business of hounding the people who help connect capital with new opportunities for growth. …Rather than focus on how to make everyone miserable together, policy makers should work to increase their states’ competitiveness. A start would be to rally against this proposed privilege tax and instead fix the spiraling pension costs and outdated labor rules that are dragging Illinois and other blue states down.

Let’s hope the governor continues to reject any and all tax increases.

If he does hold firm, he’ll have allies.

Including the Chicago Tribune, which recently editorialized about the state’s dire position

Illinois legislators fumble repeated attempts to send a balanced budget to Gov. Bruce Rauner; while the stack of Illinois’ unpaid bills climbs by the minute; while our leaders prioritize politics over policy… Employers and other taxpayers are hopping over Illinois’ borders with alarming regularity. …What an embarrassment. What a dereliction of duty. …Illinois, boasting the lowest credit rating and the highest population loss of any state in the country, has doubled down. State government is in a full-blown crisis. Again. Since January, Democrats have discussed plans to raise income taxes and borrow money to pay down bills. They approved bills that would make Illinois a less attractive place to do business; under one proposal, Illinois would have the highest minimum wage of all its neighboring states.

This is some very sensible analysis from a newspaper that endorsed Obama in both 2008 and 2012.

Even more important, the state’s taxpayers are mostly on the correct side.

Illinoisans feel the strain of the state’s two-year budget impasse, but they are emphatic that tax hikes should not be part of any budget deal. These are the findings of a new poll of likely Illinois voters… Only 31 percent of survey respondents support raising the state income tax to end the budget impasse. An increase in the state sales tax is even more unpopular, with 76 percent of survey respondents opposed. Another key takeaway from the poll: A plurality (49 percent) of respondents who are directly affected by the state budget impasse prefer a cuts-only, no-tax-hike budget. …Survey respondents were also asked what they think of political candidates who support raising taxes to end the budget impasse. The poll found that likely Illinois voters will be unforgiving of candidates for governor or the General Assembly who raise the state income tax or sales tax.

I suspect taxpayers realize that higher taxes will simply lead to more spending.

Indeed, a leftist in the state inadvertently admitted that the purpose of tax hikes is to enable more spending.

If there is to be any hope for the future in Illinois, Governor Rauner needs to hold firm. So long as Republicans in the state legislature hold firm, he can use his veto power to stop any tax hikes.

Illinois is a mess. Taxes and spending already are

Former FBI Director James Comey said former Attorney General Loretta Lynch directed him to call the Hillary Clinton email probe a “matter,” not an investigation.

He claimed the request “confused and concerned” him and led him to the decision he needed to make his independent announcement last July to not recommend criminal charges. He said another deciding factor was reports about a secret meeting on a tarmac at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport between Bill Clinton and then-Attorney General Lynch.

“It gave me the impression the attorney general was willing to align the way we talk with a political campaign,” Mr. Comey said. “That gave me a very queazy feeling.”

The testimony confirms a critical piece of information in an exclusive inside look at the Clinton email probe on People’s Pundit Daily. On May 11, PPD reported:

The story told to PPD must be retold in the proper context.

In 2015, the FBI received a criminal referral from the Department of Justice (DOJ) after the House Select Committee on Benghazi discovered Mrs. Clinton had used personal servers to end-round public records-keeping laws. According to sources, the referral was sent to the Bureau along with strict private instructions to refer to the probe as a “matter,” not as a criminal investigation.

The career investigators at the Bureau immediately took notice. Their radars went off.

But Mr. Comey made it clear he wanted these instructions followed. In what some had perceived as an effort to appease their objections, he made his first disclosure blunder. He told reporters last summer the FBI wasn’t conducting a “security inquiry,” as Mrs. Clinton repeatedly told the American public.

However, that same reporting, based on the same sources, found other reasons Mr. Comey decided to hold that press conference and do what Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosentein describe as overstepping his authority.

Former FBI Director James Comey confirmed former

People's Pundit Daily
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