By The Prowler on 2.4.08 @ 12:08AM
Behind Al Gore's thinking. Also: Big Labor wired in.
GORE'S THINKING
Former Vice President Al Gore has asked his staff
to begin laying out plans for an endorsement of Sen. Barack
Obama if he performs well in the Super Tuesday primaries.
"[Gore] doesn't see the utility of endorsing Obama until the
endorsement would actually mean something and give Gore an
opportunity to be the kingmaker," says a former aide with knowledge
of Gore's thinking.
Gore is also being pressed by Clinton loyalists not to endorse
anyone in the primary phase of the campaign but rather to serve as
the one man who can "heal" the rift between Obama and Clinton
loyalists leading on the convention in Colorado in August.
"Gore is beyond politics now, and to endorse would lower him to
Clinton or Obama's level, I think," says another former adviser.
"But he could take a real leadership role in the party if he wanted
to, bridging the divide that we're beginning to see in the party.
Bill Clinton can't do it. Really, only Gore
can."
WIRED IN
With an expectation that federal and state legislators will be
looking to cut spending in the coming fiscal years, Big Labor --
the AFL-CIO, Service Employees International Union and AFSCME --
are watching local telecom tax initiatives in California tomorrow
to determine whether similar initiatives can be pushed out across
the country.
"If we can get a doubling of people's phone taxes by tweaking
the legal language at the local level, it will mean millions of tax
revenue, and revenue is going to be important for our membership
across the country as localities and states look to cut across the
board," says an SEIU lobbyist in Washington, D.C.
Voters in such California cities as Richmond, Pasadena, and Los
Angeles will vote Tuesday on whether to "modernize" or update
decades-old phone utility taxes to include such things as wireless
phone texting or music downloads over the Internet. Internal
revenue analysis by the city of Pasadena shows that taxpayers there
could see as much as a doubling in their communications-taxes on
the bottom of their phone bills. The phone companies collect the
taxes from consumers and pass it through to the local governments;
it is not a tax on the phone companies.
"It isn't just phone taxes we're looking at," says an AFL-CIO
tax specialist based in New York. "We're looking at everything,
hotel taxes, car-rental taxes, cable-TV, anything that can get
tacked on to people's bills in a relatively innocuous and painless
way that will get local and state government more money."
topics:
Taxes, Bill Clinton