Tax codes help nonprofits get political

McCain-Feingold can't plug all the leaks... Anchorage Daily News article discusses the various types of 501(c) organizations. Tax exempt organizations that are non-partisan generally file under 501(c)3. However, for nonprofits linked to an agenda, the tax code provides a way to get political. And with the Congress sure to increase scrutiny on 527 groups such as Moveon.org in the next session, the nonprofit sector might see an increase in 501(c)4 groups.

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FDA Responds to Failures in Drug Safety System

In the aftermath of the Vioxx and antidepressant scandals, the FDA has begun taking steps to reevaluate its drug safety system. According to the New York Times, FDA will "hire the nation's top scientific review body to figure out whether the drug safety system is adequate."

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The coming attacks on the environment

Don't miss the New York Times's coverage of the administration and GOP Congress's plans for weakening and dismantling environmental policy. The article identifies several specific targets:

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    Bush administration failing to protect us from bio-terror

    Today's Washington Post spells out weaknesses in the Bush administration's plans to protect us from biological terrorist attacks.

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    Bush judge picks are tied to energy/mining corporations

    The Center for Investigative Reporting has compiled a comprehensive database of disclosure forms and background information of Bush's nominees to federal appeals courts. The results reveal significant ties to big corporations, in particular the mining and energy industries:

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    The coming attacks on regulatory policy

    Election day results portend a new wave of attacks on the ability of the people to use their federal government to serve the public interest. More Destruction of Public Safeguards. The Bush administration mounted an all-out assault on regulatory safeguards in its first term. An exhaustive catalogue of these attacks is available in our reports Special Interest Takeover: The Bush Administration and the Dismantling of Public Safeguards and The Bush Regulatory Record: A Pattern of Failure.

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    Coming attack on tire pressure monitoring rule?

    Remember the tire pressure monitoring rule? NHTSA was forced by law to require automakers to implement systems that alert drivers when air pressure in their tires becomes dangerously low. There was unnecessary brouhaha (and lives were needlessly lost) because White House regulatory czar John Graham forced the agency to select a less effective alternative.

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    Economic Policy: Looking Ahead To A Second Term

    As President Bush faces a second term, one of his first actions will be to define his goals and lay out agenda for the next four years. As Bush outlined on November 3rd, two of his most ambitious plans include both reforming the federal tax code and making changes to social security, all while continuing to fight a war against terrorism.

    While this ambitious agenda is perhaps helped by the fact that the President has majority support in both Houses of Congress, it is hampered by some of the policy changes he forced through during his first term. Bush begins his second term with the economy in somewhat of a different state than he faced when first taking office. While in 2000 the nation enjoyed a healthy budget surplus, this year has the nation facing a large deficit as well as growing homeland security and defense needs. Federal tax revenue was $100 billion lower this year than it was when Bush first took office. On top of this, spending was $400 billion higher. This large discrepancy between revenue and spending has helped to create the largest budget deficit in our history. And, in response to four years of rising budget deficits, the Treasury announced on Wednesday that the government will borrow $147 billion in the first three months of 2005, to help fund its programs and policies. This level of borrowing, when it occurs, will be a new quarterly record.

    Thomas Mann of the Brookings Institution recently said, "On the domestic side, huge budget and current account deficits, historically low federal revenues as a share of GDP, the approaching retirement of the baby-boom generation, health care cost inflation, and escalating spending pressure for homeland security and defense will handcuff a president hoping to pursue new policy initiatives.

    This administration will seriously be looking into trying to make permanent some of the tax cuts they passed over the last four years, and Bush has already laid some of the groundwork for this. Permanent tax cuts would greatly impact the amount of federal revenue collected by the government, and would cause even greater financial strain for agencies and institutions that rely on the government for funding. It is estimated that permanent tax cuts could cost the government $1 trillion dollars in revenue between 2005 and 2014.

    When Bush sends his version of the budget to Capitol Hill early next February, it will clearly demonstrate how far this administration is willing to go to push the policies they outlined at both the Republican National Convention and on the campaign trail. For more information on second-term tax and budget issues, click here and here.

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    Healthy forests policy: wrong cure for this disease

    The Bush administration's plan to allow loggers into national forests and "thin" the growth was from the get-go an obvious use of a real problem (forest fires) in order to give away the nation's resources to industry interests. Now here's some evidence that an unaddressed environmental problem -- global warming -- may be to blame instead of overgrowth: The raging Western wildfires of recent years have often been blamed on management practices that promoted dense, overpacked forests. But a new study indicates global warming may be the main culprit.

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    U.S. Resists Global Warming Policy

    The Washington Post reported today on the Bush administration's efforts to suppress the conclusions of an eight-nation report that endorses broad policies aimed at mitigating global warming. The 1,200 page report, leaked to reporters last week, chronicles historic increases in Arctic temperatures due in part to human-generated greenhouse gas emissions. The State Department argued that the report, which represents the work of over 300 scientists, "lacks the evidence to prepare detailed policy proposals," according to the Post.

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