New York Governor-elect Andrew Cuomo has has moved forward with his Tea Party austerity budget. Cuomo announced that he will balance the state budget on the back of working families instead of rescinding the the rebate of the stock transfer tax as Green Party Guv cand Howie Hawkins demanded. According to the Wall Street Journal, Cuomo said: “Democratic Gov.-elect Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday he would refuse to raise taxes to cover the state’s budget shortfall and would seek cuts to politically popular programs like education and health care instead.” In fact Cuomo pointedly refused to stop the rebate:
We have no problem telling rich people they have to pay taxes. We do it extraordinarily well, we do it better than almost any state in the nation.
Over in England, here is there response to such cuts:
An estimated 52,000 students took to the streets of London on Tuesday to protest government plans to increase university tuition fees while cutting higher education funding by 40 percent. The demonstration was one of the biggest student protests in decades and the largest turnout against the British government’s austerity measures that were announced last month. We speak with Johann Hari, a columnist for the London Independent.
via Over 50,000 Students Protest in London over Planned Cuts to Education Funding.
In the United States the response is “silence” This statement from England’s Young Greens could have easily described the incoming Cuomo Tea Party administration in New York:
The anger at yesterday’s protests was remarkable, especially towards the Lib Dems who have left so many students feeling betrayed and unsure where to turn next. Students have begun the fight against the Coalition’s dangerous and damaging policies. This is what you get when you condemn a whole generation to a lifetime of debt, unaffordable housing and a lack of decent jobs.
Related Articles
- “”Stop the cuts” student protest in London” and related posts (whatismatt.com)
- British tuition fee protest turns violent (nationalpost.com)
- Student protest: violence will not undermine cause | Aaron Porter (guardian.co.uk)
- Demo 2010 student protests – live coverage (guardian.co.uk)
- Thousands of U.K. students protest tuition fees hike (ctv.ca)
- Tuition-Fee Protests Hit London (online.wsj.com)
- Students take to streets for protest against tuition fees (guardian.co.uk)
- The ‘battle’ of Millbank Tower has undermined a perfectly reasonable student cause (blogs.telegraph.co.uk)
- Students shake the halls of power (redantliberationarmy.wordpress.com)
- Student protests planned on a national scale on 24 November (guardian.co.uk)
- Guv cand Hawkins (G-NY) Opposes Proposed Layoff of State Workers (www.onthewilderside.com)
- Guv cand Hawkins (G-NY) Joined in SUNY Albany Protests Against Education Budget Cuts, Part of National Day of Action (www.onthewilderside.com)
- Newsday on NY Guv’s debate: About Howie Hawkins’s Southern accent (www.onthewilderside.com)
Filed under: Education, election, Election 2010, elections, Green Party, howie hawkins, new york, New York State Politics, News Tagged: | andrew cuomo, austerity, Carl Paladino, England, green, howie hawkins, Johann Hari, London, new york, prosperity, Tea Party, united states, Wall Street Journal
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