Republicans will take control of the House in January with no new ideas, keeping their specific plans secret. Their one overriding promise is to reduce the deficit. Now that the elections are over, they are starting to talk, what they want first has become clear, and that will add a huge chunk to the deficit. We also can’t forget the things they are not talking about, but that we know are on the way. They must be stopped.

Incoming House Majority Leader Eric Cantor says [Fox Propaganda delinked] that unless President Obama supports permanently cutting taxes on income over $250,000, nobody should get any tax cuts at all. WALLACE: If the president says, "Extend the tax cuts for the middle class permanently and I’ll agree to a two- or three-year extension for tax cuts for the wealthy," could you buy that? CANTOR: First of all, Chris, let’s set the record straight. No one’s getting a tax cut here. One of two things is going to happen January 1. That is your rates are either going to — either going to go up or they’re going to stay the same. So this notion that somehow we are passing tax cuts is just not true. And so, no, I am not for decoupling the rates, because all that says to people looking to go back in and put capital to work and invest to create jobs is, "You’re going to get taxed on any return that you can expect." Cantor knows that we’re really talking about two different tax cuts — one that applies to every taxpayer, regardless of income, and one that only applies only to taxpayers with income over $250,000. Cantor also knows there isn’t much support for extending the "wealthy-only" tax cut and that unless he can hold the universal tax cut hostage, he doesn’t have the leverage he needs to get get the upper-income tax cut signed into law. That’s why he opposes decoupling the high-income tax cuts from the tax cuts that go to everybody (including high income earners, albeit only on their first $250,000 of income)… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Daily Kos>

Of course Cantor is lying. I need my tax cut. I’m on a fixed income and everything is going up. But I’d rather go without than see the country harmed by more Republican welfare for millionaires. Rachel Maddow and small business expert, JJ Ramberg debunk the lies.

It is clear that Democrats will have to protect the poor and middle classes, especially from another key item on the Republican agenda. Rachel and CFPB head, Elizabeth Warren discuss Republican plans to stop her from protecting Main Street from Wall Street’s predatory practices.

But Republicans don’t want basic fairness. They want the criminal corporations they represent free to harvest the remaining assets of the poor and middle classes.