Not a snowball’s chance in hell of passing.

(The Hill) — The AFL-CIO is proposing a number of tax hikes and healthcare policy reforms, along with drawing troops down in Afghanistan and Iraq, to help bring down the national deficit.

In a memo sent to reporters Monday, Alison Omens, the labor federation’s director of media outreach, says the AFL-CIO will be urging members of Congress this October to help get Americans back to work, including passing $140 billion in funds for rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure and aiding state governments as proposed by President Obama in his American Jobs Act.

The labor federation says the supercommittee should oppose any benefit cuts to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid and also require a score by the Congressional Budget Office on the jobs impact of every proposal considered by the panel, as proposed by Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.).

In addition, healthcare costs can be brought under control without cutting benefits, according to the AFL-CIO. They propose establishing a government-run insurance program known as “the public option,” which they estimate could save $88 billion over 10 years; allowing prescription drugs to be re-imported, saving $11 billion over 10 years; and having Medicare negotiate drug prices, saving $200 billion over 10 years, among their suggestions.

Calling them “progressive tax revenue proposals,” the AFL-CIO also recommends a number of tax hikes on the wealthy and the financial services sector to pare down the debt. That would include a financial transactions tax, saving more than $1 trillion over 10 years; a millionaires’ surtax, saving more than $400 billion over 10 years; and taxing capital gains as ordinary income, equaling savings of more than $168 billion over 10 years, among their proposals.

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