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President Donald Trump arrives for a meeting with retail industry leaders in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2017. From left are, Gary Cohn, director of the National Economic Council; J.C. Penney CEO Marvin Ellison and Jo-Ann Craft Stores CEO Jill Soltau.

President Donald Trump arrives for a meeting with retail industry leaders in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2017. From left are, Gary Cohn, director of the National Economic Council; J.C. Penney CEO Marvin Ellison and Jo-Ann Craft Stores CEO Jill Soltau.

I’ve written many times that Washington is both a corrupt city and a corrupting city. My point is that decent people go into government and all too often wind up losing their ethical values as they learn to “play the game.”

I often joke that these are people who start out thinking Washington is a cesspool but eventually decide it’s a hot tub.

During the presidential campaign, Trump said he wanted to “drain the swamp,” which is similar to my cesspool example. My concern is that El Presidente may not understand (or perhaps not even care) that shrinking the size and scope of government is the only effective way to reduce Washington corruption.

In any event, we’re soon going to get a very strong sign about whether Trump was serious. With Republicans on Capitol Hill divided on how to deal with this cronyist institution, Trump basically has the tie-breaking vote on the issue.

In other words, he has the power to shut down this geyser of corporate welfare. But will he?

According the Susan Ferrechio of the Washington Examiner, Trump may choose to wallow in the swamp rather than drain it.

President Trump now may be in favor of the Export-Import Bank, according to Republican lawmakers who met with him privately Thursday, even though Trump once condemned the bank as corporate welfare.

Veronique de Rugy of the Mercatus Center is one on the Ex-Im Bank’s most tenacious opponents, and she’s very worried.

…if the reports are true that Trump has decided to support the restoration of the crony Export-Import Bank’s full lending authority, it would be akin to the president deciding to instead happily bathe in the swamp and gargle the muck. …If true, the news is only “great” for Boeing, GE, and the other major recipients of Ex-Im’s corporate welfare. It is also at odds with his campaign promises since much of the way the program works is that it gives cheap loans — backed by Americans all over the country — to foreign companies in China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE. Restoring Ex-Im’s full lending-authority powers is renewing the policy to give cheap loans backed by workers in the Rust Belt to companies like Ryanair ($4 billion in guarantee loans over ten years) and Emirates Airlines ($3.9 billion over ten years) so they can have a large competitive advantage over U.S. domestic airlines like Delta and United. It continued to subsidize the large and prosperous state-owned Mexican oil company PEMEX ($9.7 billion over ten years). Seriously? That’s president Trump’s vision of draining the swamp?

Ugh. It will be very disappointing if Trump chooses corporate welfare over taxpayers.

What presumably matters most, though, is whether a bad decision on the Ex-Im Bank is a deviation or a harbinger of four years of cronyism.

In other words, when the dust settles, will the net effect of Trump’s policies be a bigger swamp or smaller swamp?

The New York Times opined that Trump is basically replacing one set of insiders with another set of insiders, which implies a bigger swamp.

Mr. Trump may be out to challenge one establishment — the liberal elite — but he is installing one of his own, filled with tycoons, Wall Street heavyweights, cronies and a new rank of shadowy wealthy “advisers” unaccountable to anyone but him. …Take first the Goldman Sachs crowd. The Trump campaign lambasted global financiers, led by Goldman, as having “robbed our working class,” but here come two of the alleged miscreants: Gary Cohn, Goldman’s president, named to lead the National Economic Council, and Steven Mnuchin, named as Treasury secretary. …Standing in the rain during Mr. Trump’s inaugural speech, farmers and factory workers, truckers, nurses and housekeepers greeted his anti-establishment words by cheering “Drain the Swamp!” even as the new president was standing knee-deep in a swamp of his own.

I’m skeptical of Trump, and I’m waiting to see whether Gary Cohn and Steven Mnuchin will be friends for taxpayers, so I’m far from a cheerleader for the current administration.

But I also think the New York Times is jumping the gun.

Maybe Trump will be a swamp-wallowing cronyist, but we don’t yet have enough evidence (though a bad decision on Ex-Im certainly would be a very bad omen).

Here’s another potential indicator of what may happen to the swamp under Trump’s reign.

Bloomberg reports that two former Trump campaign officials, Corey Lewandowski and Barry Bennett have cashed in by setting up a lobbying firm to take advantage of their connections.

The arrival of a new president typically means a gold rush for Washington lobbyists as companies, foreign governments, and interest groups scramble for access and influence in the administration. Trump’s arrival promises to be different—at least according to Trump. Throughout the campaign, he lambasted the capital as a den of insider corruption and repeatedly vowed to “drain the swamp,” a phrase second only in the Trump lexicon to “make America great again.” …Trump’s well-advertised disdain for lobbying might seem to augur poorly for a firm seeking to peddle influence. …“Business,” Lewandowski says, “has been very, very good.”

This rubs me the wrong way. I don’t want lobbyists to get rich.

But, to be fair, not all lobbying is bad. Many industries hire “representation” because they want to protect themselves from taxes and regulation. And they have a constitutional right to “petition” the government and contribute money, so I definitely don’t want to criminalize lobbying.

But as I’ve said over and over again, I’d like a much smaller government so that interest groups don’t have an incentive to do either the right kind of lobbying (self-protection) or the wrong kind of lobbying (seeking to obtain unearned wealth via the coercive power of government).

Here’s one final story about the oleaginous nature of Washington.

Wells Fargo is giving a big payout to Elaine Chao, the new Secretary of Transportation.

Chao, who joined Wells Fargo as a board member in 2011, has collected deferred stock options —  a compensation perk generally designed as a long-term retention strategy — that she would not be able to cash out if she left the firm to work for a competitor. Her financial disclosure notes that she will receive a “cash payout for my deferred stock compensation” upon confirmation as Secretary of Transportation. The document discloses that the payments will continue throughout her time in government, if she is confirmed. The payouts will begin in July 2017 and continue yearly through 2021. But Wells Fargo, like several banks and defense contractors, provides a special clause in its standard executive employment contract that offers flexibility for awarding compensation if executives leave the bank to enter “government service.” Such clauses, critics say, are structured to incentivize the so-called “reverse revolving door” of private sector officials burrowing into government. …Golden parachutes for executives leaving firms to enter government dogged several Obama administration officials. Jack Lew, upon leaving Citigroup to join the Obama administration in 2009, was given a cash payout as part of his incentive and retention awards that wouldn’t have been paid if he had left the firm to join a competitor or under ordinary circumstances. But Lew’s Citigroup contract stipulated that there was an exception for leaving to work in a “full time high level position with the U.S. government or regulatory body.” Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and Northrop Grumman are among the other firms that have offered special financial rewards to executives who leave to enter government.

This rubs me the wrong way, just as it rubbed me the wrong way when one of Obama’s cabinet appointees got a similar payout. But the more I think about it, the real question isn’t whether government officials get to keep stock options and other forms of deferred compensation when they jump to government.

What bothers me much more is why companies feel that it’s in their interest to hire people closely connected to government. What value did Jacob Lew bring to Citigroup? What value did Chao bring to Wells Fargo?

I suspect that the answer has a lot to do with financial institutions wanting people who can can pick up the phone and extract favors and information from senior officials in government.

For what it’s worth, I’m not a fan of Lew because he pushed for statism while at Treasury. By contrast, I am a fan of Chao because she was one of the few bright spots during the generally statist Bush years.

But I don’t want a system where private companies feel like they should hire either one of them simply because they have connections in Washington.

I hope that Trump will change this perverse set of incentives by “draining the swamp.” But unless he reduces the size and scope of government, the problem will get worse rather than better.

Mitchell: Is a bad decision on the

Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt arrives at Trump Tower in New York, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2016. (Photo: AP)

Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt arrives at Trump Tower in New York, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2016. (Photo: AP)

The Senate voted 52 – 46 to confirm former Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt as the next administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The confirmation, which was helped along by two Democratic senators, is a major blow to Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and the party.

For Republicans, Sens. Susan Collins, R-Me., and John McCain, R-Ariz., again did not support President Donald J. Trump’s nominee. But Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Heidi Heitkamp, D-N.D., both are in deeply red states that voted for the president and both voted for Mr. Pruitt.

View the Full Confirmation Vote List Below

Voted “yes”

D
Joe Manchin III W.Va.
D
Heidi Heitkamp N.D.
R
Roy Blunt Mo.
R
Ron Johnson Wis.
R
Ben Sasse Neb.
R
Luther Strange Ala.
R
Dean Heller Nev.
R
Tim Scott S.C.
R
Michael B. Enzi Wyo.
R
Thom Tillis N.C.
R
Patrick J. Toomey Pa.
R
Orrin G. Hatch Utah
R
Johnny Isakson Ga.
R
Charles E. Grassley Iowa
R
Jeff Flake Ariz.
R
Todd Young Ind.
R
Roger Wicker Miss.
R
John Thune S.D.
R
Dan Sullivan Alaska
R
Richard C. Shelby Ala.
R
Marco Rubio Fla.
R
Michael Rounds S.D.
R
Pat Roberts Kan.
R
Jim Risch Idaho
R
Rob Portman Ohio
R
David Perdue Ga.
R
Rand Paul Ky.
R
Lisa Murkowski Alaska
R
Jerry Moran Kan.
R
Mitch McConnell Ky.
R
Mike Lee Utah
R
James Lankford Okla.
R
John Kennedy La.
R
James M. Inhofe Okla.
R
John Hoeven N.D.
R
Lindsey Graham S.C.
R
Cory Gardner Colo.
R
Deb Fischer Neb.
R
Joni Ernst Iowa
R
Steve Daines Mont.
R
Ted Cruz Tex.
R
Michael D. Crapo Idaho
R
Tom Cotton Ark.
R
John Cornyn Tex.
R
Bob Corker Tenn.
R
Thad Cochran Miss.
R
Bill Cassidy La.
R
Shelley Moore Capito W.Va.
R
Richard M. Burr N.C.
R
John Boozman Ark.
R
John Barrasso Wyo.
R
Lamar Alexander Tenn.

Voted “no”

R
Susan Collins Me.
D
Bob Casey Pa.
D
Kirsten Gillibrand N.Y.
D
Claire McCaskill Mo.
D
Jeanne Shaheen N.H.
D
Maria Cantwell Wash.
D
Elizabeth Warren Mass.
D
Ron Wyden Ore.
D
Sheldon Whitehouse R.I.
D
Mark Warner Va.
D
Chris Van Hollen Md.
D
Tom Udall N.M.
D
Jon Tester Mont.
D
Debbie Stabenow Mich.
D
Chuck Schumer N.Y.
D
Brian Schatz Hawaii
D
Gary Peters Mich.
D
Jack Reed R.I.
D
Bill Nelson Fla.
D
Patty Murray Wash.
D
Christopher S. Murphy Conn.
D
Jeff Merkley Ore.
D
Robert Menendez N.J.
D
Edward J. Markey Mass.
D
Patrick J. Leahy Vt.
D
Amy Klobuchar Minn.
D
Tim Kaine Va.
D
Mazie K. Hirono Hawaii
D
Martin Heinrich N.M.
D
Maggie Hassan N.H.
D
Kamala Harris Calif.
D
Al Franken Minn.
D
Dianne Feinstein Calif.
D
Richard J. Durbin Ill.
D
Tammy Duckworth Ill.
D
Catherine Cortez Masto Nev.
D
Chris Coons Del.
D
Thomas R. Carper Del.
D
Benjamin L. Cardin Md.
D
Sherrod Brown Ohio
D
Cory Booker N.J.
D
Richard Blumenthal Conn.
D
Michael Bennet Colo.
D
Tammy Baldwin Wis.
I
Bernie Sanders Vt.
I
Angus King Me.

Not voting

D
Joe Donnelly Ind.
R
John McCain Ariz.

The Senate voted 52 - 46 to

Security guards walk past the entrance to CNN headquarters in Atlanta. (Photo: AP)

Security guards walk past the entrance to CNN headquarters in Atlanta. (Photo: AP)

On Tuesday, a federal judge in Georgia ruled that CNN may have acted with “actual malice” in a misleading report at the center of a lawsuit. Judge Orinda Evans allowed a lawsuit filed against CNN by St. Mary’s Medical Center in West Palm Beach to move forward.

In 2015, CNN reported that St. Mary’s Medical Center in West Palm Beach had an infant mortality rate for open-heart surgery that was three times the national average. Reporters from “Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees” visited Davide Carbone, the CEO of the hospital, who refused to talk to them.

He was later forced to resign.

Mr. Carbone filed a defamation lawsuit against the network after the segment aired, claiming it was a “series of false and defamatory news reports.” Mr. Carbone argued this was an intentional manipulation of the data. Independent experts have at least corroborated the data was incorrect.

The lawsuit alleged that “by knowingly comparing a mortality rate for Dr. Black based only on open-heart surgeries to a mortality rate based on both open-heart and closed-heart surgeries, the CNN Defendants knowingly and artificially inflated Dr. Black’s mortality rate vis-à-vis the STS national average.”

Put simply, CNN intentionally presented viewers with an “apples-to-oranges” comparison for the explicit purpose of creating outrage. CNN had attempted to have the case dismissed, but were unsuccessful.

“The Court finds these allegations sufficient to establish that CNN was acting recklessly with regard to the accuracy of its report,” Judge Evans wrote in her ruling.

On Tuesday, a federal judge in Georgia

U.S. President Donald Trump gestures as he leaves the podium after a news conference at the White House in Washington, U.S., February 16, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

U.S. President Donald Trump gestures as he leaves the podium after a news conference at the White House in Washington, U.S., February 16, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

President Donald J. Trump held a press conference Thursday excoriating what has been openly hostile coverage by a media playing the role of an electorally decimated political party. The relationship between the media and individuals occupying offices and walking the hallways of power must be adversarial. But that’s not the case here.

Proven political hacks masquerading as journalists are on a search for facts to back up their premature, ideologically-driven conclusions. That’s backward America. And on Thursday President Trump again exposed the corruption, pushed back on the bias and explained who is ultimately hurt by what it now an information crisis created by a totally corrupt Fourth Estate.

I’m making this presentation directly to the American people–with the media present, which is an honor to have you this morning–because many of our nation’s reporters and folks will not tell you the truth, and will not treat the wonderful people of our country with the respect that they deserve.

Unfortunately, much of the media in Washington, D.C., along with New York, Los Angeles in particular, speaks not for the people, but for the special interests and for those profiting off a very, very obviously broken system. The press has become so dishonest that if we don’t talk about, we are doing a tremendous disservice to the American people. Tremendous disservice. We have to talk to find out what’s going on, because the press honestly is out of control. The level of dishonesty is out of control.

I ran for president to present the citizens of our country. I am here to change the broken system so it serves their families and their communities well.

Predictably, after being told their bias “is out of control,” the mainstream criticism by supposed journalists on CNN, NBC and elsewhere went totally out of control.

Jake Tapper, the flagship hard news anchor at CNN (more on this shortly), said the president was “unhinged.” He proceeded to laughably pretend that his outrage was about the president not using the time to talk about U.S. steel workers and other blocs of Americans who overwhelmingly supported President Trump. Let’s not forget, the same people Tapper now cares about are the same who he and others in the media showed absolute contempt for during the election.

Chuck Todd, a so-called anchor and political analyst at NBC News, said the president’s behavior at the press conference was “un-American.” Reuters actually wrote the exact headline–verbatim!–that the president said the media would write in an attempt to twist his words and the perception of his demeanor.

Let’s talk about un-American behavior, and allow us to be perfectly honest.

Jake Tapper and Chuck Todd want to pretend like it is not proven fact that they were caught colluding with the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton to help them defeat Republicans and President Trump. Considering what we know, Tapper has some nerve to pretend to be outraged over Donna Brazile leaking debate questions to the Clinton campaign before he knew he would be the subject of a leak, himself.

As far as CNN as a news organization, both their top “hard news” anchors–Wolf Blitzer and Tapper–played star roles in WikiLeaks revealing flat-out corruption. They no doubt want to pretend it never happened, even having other anchors tell Americans on national television it was “illegal” to read WikiLeaks, but Americans will never consider them credible journalists again.

That’s true no matter how many awards other corrupt mediates give them.

It’s not just about media bias, or even corruption anymore. The president is absolutely right. They are sowing the seeds of hate and ignorance with no regard to the impact it is having on our national unity. That deserves zero respect and we hope–no, we pray–President Trump does this at least once a week.

Someone has to “treat the wonderful people of our country with the respect that they deserve.”

Trump Press Conference Branco

President Donald J. Trump held a press

Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Kansas, speaks to the press about the findings of the House Select Committee on Benghazi. (Photo: AP)

Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Kansas, speaks to the press about the findings of the House Select Committee on Benghazi. (Photo: AP)

CIA Director Mike Pompeo is also pushing back hard on a story published by the Wall Street Journal claiming officials are holding back intel from President Donald J. Trump.

“The CIA does not, has not, and will never hide intelligence from the president, period,” Director Pompeo said in a statement. “We are not aware of any instance when that has occurred.”

The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday that some cases intelligence officials decided not to tell the president their methods, or how they collected information. The paper, citing both former and current officials, said the decision to hold back certain information underscored the mistrust between the Executive Branch and spies.

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI), which is not yet headed up by President Trump’s team, was the first to deny the story by the Wall Street Journal.

“Any suggestion that the U.S. intelligence community is withholding information and not providing the best possible intelligence to the President and his National Security team is not true,” the Office of the Director of National Intelligence Public Affairs Office said in a statement.

As PPD reported thursday, the Trump Administration asked Stephen Feinberg to lead a review of the U.S. intelligence community. Mr. Feinberg is the co-founder of Cerberus Capital Management, a private equity firm. He has been asked to make recommendations on improvements to efficiency and coordination between the various intelligence agencies. However, the announcement will not be official until he completes an ethics review.

In the meantime, President Trump also asked FBI Director James Comey to investigate the leaks, which multiple reports indicate is a “disinformation campaign” to undermine his presidency.

“It appears to me there has been a concerted effort to try to discredit not only General Flynn, but obviously, the entire Trump administration through him,” D.W. Wilber, who has over 30 years of experience with the CIA and the Defense Department, told The Daily Caller. “He just happened to be the first scalp.”

CIA Director Mike Pompeo is also pushing

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, who served as the White House Communications Director, takes questions from reporters in the Brady Briefing Room.

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, who served as the White House Communications Director, takes questions from reporters in the Brady Briefing Room.

Mike Dubke, the founder of Crossroad Media, will be named White House communications director, multiple sources confirm. White House press secretary Sean Spicer had been serving as communications director.

Mike Dubke, the founder of Crossroad Media,

donald-trump-charleston

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump models a coal miner’s helmet during his rally in Charleston, West Virginia, on May 5, 2016. (Photo: Mark Lyons/Getty Images)

President Donald J. Trump signed House Joint Resolution 38 to stop the Stream Protection Rule, an Obama administration policy decimating workers in the coal industry. The action represents the fulfillment of a campaign promise that hopes to reverse damage done by another promise made by his successor.

“So if somebody wants to build a coal-powered plant, they can; it’s just that it will bankrupt them, because they’re going to be charged a huge sum for all that greenhouse gas that’s being emitted,” Barack Obama said during a 2008 interview with the San Francisco Chronicle’s editorial board.

And he made good on that campaign promise.

A 2015 study found the U.S. coal industry lost 50,000 jobs from 2008 to 2012 during Obama’s first term. By September 2016, America had 83,000 fewer coal miners employed. By the end of Obama’s presidency, 600 coal mines had closed.

As a result, U.S. coal production declined by more than 177,000,000 tons, raising the cost of electricity on Americans of all incomes and leaving the country vulnerable to blackouts.

Trump-Rally-Charleston-WV-Coal-Miners

People show their support as Donald Trump speaks in Charleston, West Virginia, on May 5, 2016. (Photo: Chris Tilley/Reuters)

The White House said the president wanted to stop the policy from “further harming coal workers and the communities that depend on them.” In a statement, they said “H.J.Res. 38 blocks an overly burdensome regulation that threatened the coal industry with millions of dollars in compliance costs, reduced coal production, and fewer jobs.”

During the 2016 campaign, President Trump’s opponent promised in private–and accidentally in public once–she would continue the Obama era regulations, which Republicans call a “war on coal.”

“We’re going to put a lot of coal miners and coal companies out of business,” Hillary Clinton said.

Meanwhile, President Trump promised coal workers he bring the jobs back “and reverse the harmful actions of the past administration.” Two weeks ago, President Trump also signed an executive order requiring that for every new Federal regulation, two existing regulations be eliminated.

[brid video=”113785″ player=”2077″ title=”President Trump Signs H.J. Res. 38″]

President Donald J. Trump signed House Joint

[brid video=”113773″ player=”2077″ title=”President Donald Trump Holds Press Conference The New York Times”]

President Donald J. Trump spoke for more than an hour about the state of the country, “fake news” and illegal leaks meant to take down his administration. The media is having a hysterical meltdown but, agree with him or not, he smoked them. It was vintage Trump.

He continued his feud with Jim Acosta at CNN, a corrupt network proven to have colluded with Hillary Clinton. After several weeks of calling the network purveyors of “fake news,” he has downgraded them to “very fake news.”

Consequently, Acosta erroneously claimed the “fix was in” at a joint press conference with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Wednesday, because he called on the Christian Broadcast Network, which has about as large of a following and who’s viewers are keenly interested in matters of the Israeli state.

Further, the Obama administration, including Barack Obama himself, sometimes went weeks without calling on FOX News correspondent Ed Henry and never even allowed other conservative media into the Brady Briefing Room.

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Nevertheless, we’ll leave you with a transcribed comment from the president that everyone can keep in mind when they watch the news today and tonight. It’s almost verbatim.

I certainly didn’t win by people listening to you people. That’s for sure. But I’m having a good time.

Tomorrow, they will say, “Donald Trump rants and raves at the press.” I’m not ranting and raving. I’m just telling you. You know, you’re dishonest people. But — but I’m not ranting and raving. I love this. I’m having a good time doing it.

But tomorrow, the headlines are going to be, “Donald Trump rants and raves.” I’m not ranting and raving.

President Donald J. Trump spoke for more

Catherine-Mann-OECD

The new chief economist for the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Catherine Mann, talks while presenting the advance G-20 OECD Economic Outlook on Nov. 6, at the OECD headquarters in Paris. (Photo: AFP)

Back in 2009, I shared the results of a very helpful study by Pierre Bessard of Switzerland’s Liberal Institute (by the way, “liberal” in Europe means pro-market or “classical liberal“).

Pierre ranked the then-30 member nations of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) based on their tax burdens, their quality of governance, and their protection of financial privacy.

Switzerland was the top-ranked nation, followed by Luxembourg, Austria, and Canada.

Italy and Turkey were tied for last place, followed by Poland, Mexico, and Germany.

The United States, I’m ashamed to say, was in the bottom half. Our tax burden was (and still is) generally lower than Europe, but there’s nothing special about our quality of governance compared to other developed nations. And we definitely don’t allow privacy for our citizens, though we’re a good haven for foreigners.

Pierre’s publication was so helpful that I’ve asked him several times to release an updated version.

I don’t know if it’s because of my nagging, but the good news is that he’s in the final stages of putting together a new Tax Oppression Index. He just presented his findings at a conference in Panama.

But before divulging the new rankings, I want to share this slide from Pierre’s presentation. He correctly observes that the OECD’s statist agenda against tax competition is contrary to academic research in general, and also contrary to the Paris-based bureaucracy’s own research!

Yet the political hacks who run the OECD are pushing bad policies because Europe’s uncompetitive governments want to prop up their decrepit welfare states. And what’s especially irksome is that the bureaucrats at the OECD get tax-free salaries while pushing for higher fiscal burdens elsewhere in the world.

But I’m digressing. Let’s look at Pierre’s new rankings.

As you can see, Switzerland is still at the top, though now it’s tied with Canada. Estonia (which wasn’t part of the OECD back in 2009) is in third place, and New Zealand and Sweden also get very high scores.

At the very bottom, with the most oppressive tax systems, are Greece and Mexico (gee, what a surprise), followed by Israel and Turkey.

The good news, relatively speaking, is that the United States is tied with several other nations for 11th place with a score of 3.5.

So instead of being in the bottom half, as was the case with the 2009 Tax Oppression Index, the U.S. is now in the top half.

But that’s not because we’ve improved policy. It’s more because the OECD advocates of statism have been successful in destroying financial privacy in other nations. Even Switzerland’s human rights laws on privacy no longer protect foreign investors.

As such, Pierre’s new index basically removes financial privacy as a variable and augments the quality of governance variable with additional data about property rights and the rule of law.

Business, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development

A voter marks a ballot for the New Hampshire primary Feb. 9 inside a voting booth at a polling place in Manchester, N.H. (Photo: AP)

A voter marks a ballot for the New Hampshire primary Feb. 9 inside a voting booth at a polling place in Manchester, N.H. (Photo: AP)

For the first time in years, self-identified Republicans slightly outnumber Democrats nationwide, according to the Gallup U.S. Daily Tracking Poll. Political junkies and news consumers would never know it if they simply watched network and cable news all day, but the results of Gallup’s tracking are the latest set of data indicating the modern Democratic Party is in serious political peril.

In Jan. 2009 (9-11), right before former President Barack Obama was sworn into office after his landslide electoral college victory over Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a majority of Americans (51%) identified as Democrats when including leaners. As early as Feb. 1, Democrats still had a slight edge in party affiliation nationwide, 47% to 42%

Now, only 43% with leaners self-identify with the Democratic Party. Without leaners, it just 25% juxtaposed to 36% in Jan. 2008.

For Republicans, 28% excluding leaners self-identify with the GOP, up only 1 point from 27% in 2008. But including leaners puts them 4 points higher than 8 years ago at 44%. Still, the shift is largely from the loss of independents, who backed President Donald J. Trump by large margins in most battleground states in November against Hillary Clinton.

And this near-decade long shift has played out more significantly when we look at the state level.

Not only do Republican states continue to outnumber Democratic states, but every single shift in party affiliation over the year has benefited the GOP. According to Gallup U.S. Daily, 21 states are now classified as solid or leaning Republican, 14 are solid or leaning Democratic and 15 states are competitive.

That represents a monumental shift from a 30-state advantage for the Democrats in 2008 to a 7-state advantage for Republicans. Gallup’s findings are largely in line with the latest results published on the PPD Battleground State Voter Profiles, which found only a slightly larger Democratic advantage in Virginia. However, independents continued to shift their allegiance toward the GOP, resulting in a state that is still very much competitive.

Electorally speaking, from 2008 to 2016, the Democratic Party has lost a net 9 seats in the U.S. Senate, 63 in the U.S. House of Representatives, 13 governorships, 949 state legislative seats and full control of 29 state legislatures.

Going into an election pundits proclaimed they were certain to win from top to bottom, they held full control in only 7 states. Now, they only hold only 5–California, Delaware, Oregon, Hawaii and Rhode Island–after the GOP tied it all up in the Connecticut state Senate.

“Democratic losses were exacerbated by what is at least a temporary end to split-ticket voting,” said PPD’s editor-in-chief and polling head Richard Baris. He said the data bode bad for Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s aspirations to be majority leader in 2018.

“Take the U.S. Senate for instance. Direct senatorial elections began following the adoption and ratification of the 17th Amendment in 1913. During that period, in only three elections–1920, 1924 and 1948–has the percentage of states voting for the same party on the presidential and senate levels reached 90% or more.”

“And never has it reached 100%, until 2016.”

For Democrats to prevent Republicans from obtaining a supermajority in the U.S. Senate, Mr. Baris says they will have to defy the trend.

“That’s certainly not impossible,” he added. “It’s just looking less and less likely given the radical turn they have decided to take post-election rather than conducting an autopsy.”

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For the first time in years, self-identified

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