Date: Fri 30-Oct-1998
Date: Fri 30-Oct-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
Election-5th-District
Full Text:
5th District Candidates Spar Over Taxes, Environment And HMO Reform
(with cut)
BY KAAREN VALENTA
The congressional candidates in Connecticut's Fifth District continued to
hammer at each other in debates and television advertisements as election day
approached.
US Rep James Maloney, a Democrat serving his first term in Congress, his
Republican challenger State Sen Mark Nielsen, and Robert Strasdauskas of the
Concerned Citizens Party shared the podium again last week in a debate before
the Waterbury Chamber of Commerce.
Throughout the campaign, Rep Maloney, a Danbury Democrat and former four-term
state senator, has stood on his record and the fulfillment of a promise, made
four years ago, to be accessible to his constituents.
Mr Nielsen, the Republican who succeeded Maloney in the traditionally
Democratic 24th State Senatorial District, criticized his opponent's record,
accusing him of raising taxes, supporting tariffs, and violating the public
trust.
Mr Strasdauskas, a union steward at Whyco Industries in Thomaston, has
stressed his own non-political background, describing his opponents as "two
career politicians who are also lawyers."
"You can either get a team player for [House Majority Leader] Dick Armey, a
team player for [House Minority Leader] Dick Gephardt, or someone who's going
to his own constituents," said Mr Strasdauskas. A Vietnam veteran whose
platform includes trimming the federal government and promoting tariffs to
protect US industries and workers, he said he would push to eliminate the
federal income tax and replace it with a national sales tax.
US Rep James Maloney
A member of the House Banking, Financial Services and National Security
committees, Rep Maloney has been a highly visible member of Congress during
his first term. In a bipartisan effort with US Rep Christopher Shays, the
Republican who represents Connecticut's Fourth District, Rep Maloney won
congressional approval of "brownfields" legislation that provides tax
incentives to clean up contaminated sites and make them suitable for
industrial development. Danbury, Meriden, Derby, Seymour and Waterbury already
have benefitted from the legislation.
To counter school violence and juvenile crime, Rep Maloney wrote the
bi-partisan Law Enforcement School Partnership Act that will provide youth
officers in school districts across the country. He was instrumental in
securing the establishment of a veterans clinic that opened last week at St
Mary's Hospital in Waterbury. Previously veterans from the Fifth District had
to travel to Newington or West Haven for health care.
This week Rep Maloney released a report that showed senior citizens are paying
significantly more for prescription drugs than such high-volume users as
health maintenance organizations and hospitals, and promised to introduce
legislation to change this practice.
"I have kept my promise to be accessible, worked for a balanced budget and a
tax cut, opposed the state income tax, opposed increasing the state sales tax,
worked hard on Medicare and education," Rep Maloney said, citing his record in
both Congress and the State Legislature.
Viewed as a conservative Democrat who has voted with Republicans on many
issues, Rep Maloney supported the cut in capital gains, the Roth IRA, the
$1,500 Hope scholarship for education, and the $500 per child tax credit. He
helped draft the 1993 tax bill that cut state taxes by $123 million the first
year, and by $260 million the following year.
State Sen Mark Nielsen
As ranking Republican on the Human Services Committee, Sen Nielsen played a
key role in shaping Connecticut's welfare reform legislation, including its
21-month time limit on cash benefits, one of the strictest in the nation. At
the same time, he backed legislation to create the Husky Program to reach
80,000 low-income children who do not have medical benefits.
Throughout three terms in the legislature, including one as a member of the
state House, Sen Nielsen has championed lower taxes and limits on the growth
of government. In 1993 he attracted nationwide attention by filing suit
against the Legislature for its failure to implement the 1992 constitutional
amendment which imposed a cap on the state budget. The suit reached the State
Supreme Court, where it was denied.
If elected to Congress, Sen Nielsen said he would push to lower the personal
income tax rate, eliminate the capital gains tax, and the so-called marriage
penalty and the death tax. To energize business, Mr Nielsen said he would
introduce legislation to "eliminate the surcharge on employees that would save
businesses $100 million over five years."
Summarizing his own position as "taxes, trade and trust," Mr Nielsen has
criticized Rep Maloney's record, accusing him of raising taxes, supporting
tariffs, and violating the public trust.
"I have cut taxes by $1 billion. Jim Maloney raised taxes by $1 billion," Sen
Nielsen said. "So what's the difference between us? The difference is that at
the time he was raising our taxes, Jim Maloney didn't pay his own. His actions
are extremely hypocritical."
Sen Nielsen was referring to six tax liens for $59,626 that were imposed
against Rep Maloney's law firm by the Internal Revenue Service during 1991-94.
Mr Maloney said the decision was made by his firm at that time to use the
money to keep employees working, not lay them off during the recession. The
taxes later were paid.
Mr Nielsen said that if elected, he will introduce legislation next year in
Congress to impose heavy financial penalties against companies who do not pay
their taxes.
"My legislation will deter those who try and `steal' their employees' tax
withholdings. These funds belong to the US government -- not the employer --
and I am determined that these Social Security, Medicare and federal income
taxes are remitted as the law requires," he said.
Other Issues
State Sen Nielsen said he supports free trade, NAFTA, the most-favored nation
status, Fast-Track, and property tax credits for businesses who hire welfare
workers. Rep Maloney agrees, but as a self-described "free market moderate"
draws the line at foreign producers who use "children getting paid 25 cents an
hour" or South American field workers who spread hepatitis on imported
strawberries.
"I supported the International Monetary Fund and the dollars were approved by
Congress," Rep Maloney said. "I do support free trade but we need to pay
attention to the records of businesses and employers."
Rep Maloney said he supported legislation that will have a profound effect on
job training by consolidating programs into three block grants with
availability on a voucher system. Plus I worked hard on education legislation
that will provide 100,000 new teachers, he said.
All three candidates support using the federal budget surplus to restore the
Social Security trust fund and to reduce taxes. "It is important to save
Social Security but the federal budget increase of $30 billion is
unacceptable," Mr Strasdauskas said. "The budget is 4,000 pages long. The
whole federal system is out of whack and Social Security needs more than just
a BandAid approach."
On the question of HMO reform, State Sen Nielsen said medical care should be
"accessible, affordable and accountable," with establishment of a national
appeals process and full deductibility of premiums for the self-employed.
"This is all part of an HMO bill that I worked for in Connecticut -- I have
been part of the solution," Sen Nielsen said.
Rep Maloney said HMO reform is one of the most important issues facing
Congress. There should be minimum standards for HMO's "just like any other
profession" so patients are protected, he said. But a bipartisan bill which he
supported during the last session was defeated, he said.