One of my favorite blogs, A Taxing Matter,  recently posted a great entry on the new Congress’ dealings so far  with estate taxes and bank losses. Below is a quote from the opinion  piece, but be sure to check out the full text here. 
 
First, the estate tax.
 
After eight years of Republicans' tax-cut-and-spend  mentality, you'd think that the new Congress would step back, look at  the economic mess that has resulted, and reconsider the Republican proposals  that started with the 2001 Bush bills and continued on throughout the  Bush administration.  The Bush administration and Congress enacted  tax cuts that paved the way for enormous inequality, as the wealthy  became wealthier and the rest barely hung even or lost ground.   Don't they get that it has got to be reversed, now?  That is, after  all, part of the change the American people voted for. 
 
One person who obviously doesn't get  it is Earl Pomeroy, Democrat (at least in name) from North Dakota.   On Jan. 9, Mr. Pomeroy introduced H.R. 436, a bill that would fulfill  Obama's campaign statements about the estate tax by keeping the tax  at the ridiculously low levels enacted by the Republicans on their way  to complete repeal--$3.5 million as the base exemption amount, at a  45% rate.  (The bill currently has no co-sponsors--dare I hope  that means that people know this is a foolhardy piece of legislation?)  Read more in the Tax Justice Digest, Estate Tax Proposal Would Partially  Extend One of Bush's Tax Cuts for the Wealthy, Jan. 16, 2009.