"It's the Economy Stupid"
I don't think the question is so much who are you voting for, but what are you voting against.
I am voting against the McCain Middle Class Tax Increase, shown as follows based on his TV debate proposals:
A Closer Look at McCain's Tax Plans
McCain Tax Plan For Average Income Wage Earner ($66,354)
Health Plan Expense: Employer’s contribution (est. $8,000) X Personal Tax Rate (25%) = $2,000 additional tax
Health Plan Expense: Employees contribution (est. $2,407) X Personal Tax Rate (25%) = $601.75 additional tax
Flexible Spending Account (FSA) ($2,000) X Personal Tax Rate (25%) = $500 additional tax
McCain Soc Sec Substitute Plan Funding Income ($5,000) X Personal Tax Rate (25%) = $1,250 additional tax
$4,352 additional tax total
less $319 Proposed McCain Tax Decrease (washingtonpost.com data)
Net Total = $4,033 additional tax per year
(Note: There could be more taxes than these few taxes I found at first glance.)
Additional Soc Sec Substitute Plan Expense (est current soc. sec cost of $6,076/yr)
$5,000 plan funding income
-$1250 tax at 25%
$3,750 available funds
$6,076 plan cost
-$3,750 funds available
$2,326 additional funds due
$4,033 additional tax per year
+$2,326 additional funds due
$6,359 additional "taxes" due each year
Considering the new tax increases on health benefits and taxes on his new social security substitute plan income, minus a tax cut, plus the cost of a new social security substitute plan; it looks like a middle class family making $66,354 annual income will be paying at least an additional $6,359 every year under McCain's new tax policies.
That $6,359 annuual tax increase is a 9.6 % tax increase for an average middle class family that ought to shove them from the 25% tax bracket to a 34.6% tax rate. You have to be in an average income bracket to comprehend what a huge impact that will be on middle class family finances. Take that dollar amount, multiply that times the number of middle class familys in America, and you can imagine the huge sucking sound of cash being drawn out of the consumer spending financial sector. Imagine trying to pull the economy from the brink of a second great depression without consumer spending to help and with middle Americal in a deep financial crisis.