Difference between revisions of "Martin O'Malley"
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− | * | + | *Require banks to separate commercial and speculative banking within 5 years [https://martinomalley.com/15-goals/goal-13/] |
+ | *Ensure key political appointees are independent of Wall Street | ||
==Health Policy== | ==Health Policy== |
Revision as of 14:42, 22 January 2016
Martin O'Malley was born in Washington, D.C. on January 18, 1963. He graduated from The Catholic University of America and earned his J.D. at the School of Law of the University of Maryland, Baltimore. O'Malley served as the Mayor of Baltimore from 1999 to 2007 and the Governor of Maryland from 2007 to 2015. On May 30, 2015, O'Malley publicly announced his candidacy in the 2016 presidential election.
Contents
Issues
Martin O'Malley sets his vision in his "15 Goals to Rebuild the American Dream." [1]
Tax Reform
Jobs and Business Policy
Increasing Median Net Worth
- reach wage growth of 4% annually by 2018 [2]
- increase number of families with adequate retirement savings by 50% within 8 years [3]
- cut the pay gap between full-time men and women workers in half by 2025 through paycheck fairness laws, strong family leave policies, and expanded access to quality, affordable healthcare [4]
Unemployment
- cut the unemployment rate among young people in half within 3 years [5]
- reach full employment for American veterans by 2020 [6]
Banks
- Require banks to separate commercial and speculative banking within 5 years [7]
- Ensure key political appointees are independent of Wall Street
Health Policy
Drug Policy
Middle East
Trade
Immigration
Comprehensive Immigration Reform
- immediately extend executive action to protect at least 9 million immigrants from deportation [8]
Environmental
Renewable Energy [9]
- create a Clean Energy Jobs Corps to partner with communities to become more energy efficient, create new green spaces, and restore and expand forests
- generate 100% of American electricity with renewable energy by 2050
- federal legislation that caps on carbon emissions from all sources, proceeds from permits returned to low- and middle-class families and invested in job transition assistance and Clean Energy Jobs Corps
- reject projects like Keystone XL and deny new permits for drilling in Alaska, the arctic, and off the coast
- increase royalties and emissions fees for fossil fuel companies currently drilling on federal land and invest proceeds in jobs and skills training