Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Quid Pro Joe: Sestak vs. the White House Metastasizes VIDEO


Quid Pro Joe: Sestak vs. the White House Metastasizes VIDEO Fox News' Sean Hannity on Democrat Joe Sestak sticking to his guns on bribe allegations against the White House. When are we going to hear from the "most transparent administration in history" on this?

5-25-10: Fox News' Sean Hannity Program

Joe Sestak vs. the White House it's not the crime, it's the cover-up VIDEO


Ranking Member Issa: "Like Nixon and Watergate, Sestak vs. the White House is a growing problem because it's not the crime, it's the cover-up." What do you think? 5-26-10: Fox News

Senate Judiciary Committee Republicans Call for Attorney General Holder to Appoint Special Prosecutor.

Wednesday, 26 May 2010 12:28 Sestak Has Pledged to “Absolutely” Cooperate with Probe.

WASHINGTON. D.C. – After rejecting an April 21st request made by House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Ranking Member Darrell Issa (R-CA) for Attorney General Eric Holder “name a special prosecutor to conduct a formal investigation into whether a crime was committed when White house officials attempted to secure Rep. Joe Sestak’s withdrawal from Pennsylvania’s Democratic Primary for the United States Senate,” Senate Judiciary Republicans today sent a letter to the Attorney General urging the “appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate Congressman Joe Sestak’s claim that a White House official offered him a job to induce him to exit the Pennsylvania Senate primary race against Senator Arlen Specter.

“From both Democrats and Republicans in the House and Senate, the chorus of those who want the truth continues to grow louder,” Issa said. “Hopefully, the Attorney General will reconsider his initial refusal to take action and appoint an independent prosecutor to examine these very serious and potentially felonious allegations that someone inside the Obama White House offered Joe Sestak a job in an effort to maneuver him out the Pennsylvania Senate Primary.”

“We do not believe the Department of Justice can properly defer to White House lawyers to investigate a matter that could involve a ‘serious beach of the law,’” the Senators’ letter reads. “The White House cannot possibly manage an internal investigation of potential criminal misconduct while simultaneously crafting a public narrative to rebut the claim that misconduct occurred. This inherent conflict of interest is borne out by Mr. Axelrod’s claim yesterday that there is ‘no evidence’ of a job offer to Congressman Sestak.”

It was reported earlier this week in a local Pennsylvania publicationthat Congressman Sestak would “absolutely” comply with investigators if his claims of a politically motivated White House job offer became the focus of a federal probe. ###

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Governor Chris Christie Reform Agenda: Cap 2.5

For Immediate Release: Date: Tuesday, May 25, 2010 Remarks as Prepared for Delivery
Fiscal Crisis: The Current Budget As An Example.

As you all know, we have a fiscal crisis in New Jersey: a $10.9 billion deficit on a $29.3 billion budget.
At 37 percent, it's the worst budget deficit percentage in America—worse than California, worse than New York, worse than Illinois—and we need to take bold steps to deal with it.

On March 16, we put forward a budget with $10.9 billion in reductions against proposed spending of the Corzine administration.

This was not easy to do, so I want to start off by saying that while I stand firmly behind the cuts we proposed, please don't take my firm stance in favoring those cuts as meaning that I don't know how painful they are.

Everybody would love to be governor in a time when you can just give things away and make everybody your friend and make everybody happy.

That's not the time that I'm getting to be governor.

I feel an obligation to stand up and do what the people elected me to do, which is to get our government under control, and to start to reduce the amount of money that people have to pay to the government in taxes.

But if all we do is cut, and we don't get at the underlying problem, we're just going to be back in this spot year, after year, after year.


New Jersey Is On An Unsustainable Fiscal Course

Over the last ten years, municipal spending has grown by 69 percent, and property taxes have grown by 70 percent, until New Jersey property taxes are now the highest of any state in the nation.

This is an unsustainable course.

For nearly 30 years, the citizens of New Jersey have placed in the hands of politicians—mostly politicians from Trenton—the responsibility for fixing property taxes. And in every gubernatorial election since 1973, we've had folks dancing around this property tax problem, putting band-aids on it, but not doing a thing to address the structural issues that allow politicians to hike property taxes year, after year, after year.

We can't increase municipal aid, increase aid to school districts, and increase property taxes without end. At some point, the people's ability to pay runs out.

And now we're there.

With property taxes up 70 percent in ten years, people in New Jersey are now voting with their feet, and they're leaving.

Senior citizens are leaving the homes that they raised their families in, heartbroken because they can't pay the property taxes anymore.

Young couples can't buy their first homes, not because of home prices, but because of the property taxes.

And middle class families are suffering from 9.8 percent unemployment in New Jersey, the highest in the region—higher than Pennsylvania, higher than Connecticut, higher than New York. Many of them are finding that after they've lost their jobs, they're going to lose their homes as well, because their property taxes got raised beyond their ability to pay.

In every poll you'll ever see, New Jerseyans say our biggest problem is property taxes.

So how do we fix it?


The Centerpiece of the Solution: Cap 2.5

First and foremost, we have to impose discipline on every level of the political system. I propose that we start with Cap 2.5, a constitutional amendment to cap property tax increases at no more than 2.5 percent per year.

For 30 years, politicians in Trenton have been passing the buck, and property taxes have gone up and up and up. The people of New Jersey have had enough.

I believe in less government, lower taxes, and empowering local officials who act on behalf of the people who elected them. I came here to do what the people sent me to do.

That may lead to a disagreement or two. Just recently, I had a friendly little exchange with a reporter you might have seen....

But anyone who comes to this discussion talking about "you can't cut this" and "you can't cut that" who doesn't have some way to pay for it besides jacking up property taxes is just joining that pathetic, 30-year tradition of passing along the problem for the next guy to deal with.

When we enact a constitutional amendment to limit property tax increases to no more than 2.5 percent across the board annually, we will have put in place the foundation for getting our fiscal house in order for the first time in a generation.

With that in place, then and only then can we begin to look at doing—in a sustainable way—what New Jerseyans want for urban revitalization, education, and every other big-picture issue.

But first we have to fix the foundation.

Cap the Spending Side, Too

Fundamental fairness dictates that the other part of the constitutional amendment has to be that discretionary state spending—state spending outside debt service or aid to municipalities or school districts—has to be capped at 2.5 percent as well.

We can't ask mayors to make sacrifices while the state goes on its merry way, spending like always.

We need to stop the explosive growth of government. If the projected spending of the Corzine Administration had been permitted to stay in place for Fiscal Year 2011, over the last 20 years state spending in New Jersey would have risen by 322%. That is 16% per year, every year, for 20 years. No economic model can sustain that level of public sector growth. On the local level this growth has also continued unabated.

Even as we speak, it continues in New Jersey at the local level, despite the economic downturn. Consider this fact. In 2009 we lost 121,000 private sector jobs in New Jersey, while the municipal and school board payrolls grew by 11,300 jobs.

The private sector shrank... while the government grew. That's exactly backwards from how it's supposed to be.

The leadership in the State Legislature in New Jersey believes that the solution to this problem is to increase taxes again—for the 116th time in the last 9 years. They passed a bill to raise taxes to 10.75% on those who make $1m per year. I vetoed that bill, literally, one minute after the Senate President handed it to me. I vetoed it because New Jersey does not have a revenue problem; it has a spending and debt problem. I vetoed it because it does not work. Look at the numbers.

In Fiscal Year 2009, the state collected $10.476 billion from our income tax, with no surcharge on small businesses and the wealthy. In Fiscal Year 2010, with Governor Corzine’s surcharge of 10.75% applied to small businesses and individuals, the state collected $10.243 billion. $233 million dollars less than the year without the surcharge. Higher taxes will continue to drive citizens and businesses from New Jersey and keep our private sector job growth at zero, which it was for the entire first decade of this new century.

We must change course.

We must cap the property tax increases. We must cap discretionary spending. They go together.

But that's still incomplete, because mayors still have to provide services and education.

If they have to operate under a cap, then they deserve the tools to help control the underlying expenses.

That's why this reform package is not only a cap on property tax increases, not only a cap on discretionary spending—it also contains a toolkit of 33 specific legislative reforms on collective bargaining, civil service, health care, education, and pensions.

Let me take you through these.


The Toolkit: Collective Bargaining Reform

First: Nearly 75 percent of every municipal or county budget is driven by personnel and labor costs. We need to level the playing field on those costs through collective bargaining reform for our public sector unions.

I stand foursquare in favor of arbitration to resolve the disputes with our public employees who do not have the ability to strike—police, fire, and teachers. Arbitration is there to be sure that these things are fairly resolved—and the key word there is "fair." More often than not these decisions are favorable to labor, but they're not always fair to the taxpayers who have to pay whatever the arbitrator decides.

So under collective bargaining reform, every arbitrator will have to take into account Cap 2.5. They will no longer be allowed to award a benefit that's larger than that. For the first time, arbitrators will have to consider not only who's sitting at the table in front of them, but also who pays the bills.

Municipalities, and mayors, and budgets, and taxpayers... shouldn't be at the mercy of unelected arbitrators who can effectively impose a property tax increase at will. And under this reform, we won't be.


The Toolkit: Civil Service Reform

We also need reform of the civil service system. Civil service was set up over a century ago to protect against political patronage, but collective bargaining has procedures to protect against that as well. We should have one system or the other.

Candidly, I think labor is best served by collective bargaining, so we should give mayors the ability to opt out of civil service, and to manage like a business. If someone isn't doing their job, or that job isn't needed anymore, the mayor ought to be able to get rid of it, and save the taxpayers the expense. Civil service reform will give them the tools to do that.


The Toolkit: Teachers' Fair Contribution to Health Care Costs

When we're taking into account what we spend and how we give raises, we can't act as if health care expenses and pensions aren't a part of it. This has been my big argument with the teachers union over the last number of months. You may have heard something about that....

Everyone values the hard work teachers do. And teachers should be able to have good medical benefits for themselves and their families. That's just common sense.

So this is not about a fight with individual teachers.

This is about a union that has decided that everyone they represent is entitled to free medical, dental and vision benefits for themselves and their families from the day they're hired until the day they die.

You may think I'm exaggerating.

I'm not.

The union does not pay a penny toward the health care of its own members.

That's a pretty sweet deal. I can't think of any other job where your employer says, Well, don't worry about your health insurance. We'll just throw that in no matter what it costs. Yet that's what the union has right now, and their leaders don't seem to feel any need to pay like the rest of New Jerseyans and join the real world on this.

It's a question of fairness. We don't want them to pick up 100 percent of the premiums. We don't want them to pick up 50 percent. Not 25 percent—which is what I paid when I was a federal employee. Not 10 percent.

You know what we ask for? One-point-five percent of their salary.

One-point-five percent.

It's not unreasonable to ask people in public employment to pay 1.5 percent toward their own medical benefits.

If the average teacher makes $55,000, we're talking $825 annually for full family medical, dental and vision coverage. Less than $69 a month.

Now in the private sector, this is a deal employers would run to line up to get.

But the other side on this says this is an attack on public education. I have to tell you, I don't understand why my child would learn better in school if their teacher was paying nothing toward their health benefits as opposed to paying 1.5 percent of their salary.

Candidly, it's still a great deal, so this idea that we won't attract people to teaching because they have to pay 1.5 percent of their salary towards benefits, as opposed to nothing, is just foolish. It makes a mockery of teachers' commitment to their profession and to their students.

Most people become teachers because they find it so rewarding. Of course they want to make a good living, and have financial security like all the rest of us. But the difference between zero and 1.5 percent is not going to cause a dedicated teacher to leave the profession, or stop somebody who wants to teach from doing it in the first place.

I think when the union makes that argument, they're selling their members short.

They may, but I'm not going to.

Also, we need to get away from this one-size-fits-all straightjacket about coverage. We need to give mayors the ability to negotiate with the private sector to offer a full menu of benefits that can lower the cost for municipalities, and give workers the choice to pick the health plan that best fits their needs.

This is not revolutionary. This is happening in the private sector every day. It is also happening with employees of the federal government. Why should state and local government workers in New Jersey have a better deal?

This is restoring a little common sense to the way we spend our tax money.


The Toolkit: Pension Reform

On pensions, I want that pension to be there for every police officer, for every fire fighter, for every teacher who's counting on it.

But our pension system is $46 billion in deficit.

Don't let anybody tell you that is caused by the failure of the state to stand up to its commitment to fund these pensions. That's part of the problem, but it's not the whole thing.

If the state had contributed every dollar it was supposed to over the last ten years, our pensions would be funded at 74 percent of value, instead of 64 percent, which is where they are today. That's only 10 percent difference.

So what does that tell you?

What it tells you is that the benefits are too high and the contributions being made by many of the public sector unions are too low. We need to buttress the pension back up, make it strong for the folks that are in it now, so that it's there for them when they come to retire.


A Real-Life Example of What's at Stake

Now, I'll end with this so you can really understand what's at stake here.

Last week, I had a town hall meeting in Hoboken, and I talked to a family—a husband and wife and three boys—who had a property tax increase last year of $2000. That's an incredible financial hit for any family to take, especially in one year. It's not as if you can go to your employer and say, Hey, I need another $2000.

If Cap 2.5 had been in place for Joe and Jennifer and their three boys, their property taxes would have gone up only $213, not $2000.

For the first time, Joe and Jennifer's property tax bill rose about the $10,000 mark.

Instead of paying the mortgage, or a making a down payment on a car, or saving for college, or taking a vacation, or just keeping up with what it costs to live, another $2000 of their paycheck got sucked up in that ten-year, 70 percent increase in property taxes.

We're long past the point where politicians in Trenton can justify that kind of ever-increasing drain on a family's income.

With Cap 2.5, there's only one out if you want to raise taxes higher than 2.5 percent, and that is to put in on the ballot and let the voters decide. That's what they've done in Massachusetts, and about half the time, the voters say, You know what, it's worth me paying an extra point in taxes this year to have this new program, or to hire more police officers.

The other half of the time, they say no. But the control is in the hands of the people, not the politicians.


New Jersey Needs Cap 2.5

Skyrocketing property taxes hurt seniors, they hurt middle-class families trying to make ends meet, and they hurt young families trying to buy their first home.

Cap 2.5 will cap property tax increases at no greater than 2.5 percent a year for everything: municipal tax, county tax, and school tax.

For 30 years, the politicians in Trenton have failed the people of New Jersey. In the last ten years, those politicians have raised property taxes 70 percent.

We can no longer afford it, and the politicians in Trenton have refused to solve the problem.

Cap 2.5 will allow the people of New Jersey to control property taxes and keep them at no more than 2.5 percent a year, unless the people vote differently.

To fully address the problem, I've matched Cap 2.5 with a toolkit of 33 specific legislative reforms to reform collective bargaining, civil service, health care, education, and pensions.

After three decades of passing the buck, we'll cap increases in property taxes that are wrecking people's lives and driving people out of our state, and we'll give local leaders the tools they need to help control the underlying expenses.

We're going to build a solid fiscal foundation for our state. We’re going to say “No” to those who refuse to understand that the days of something for nothing are over and the days of shared sacrifice are here. We’re going to stand up to the entrenched, special interests that are unused to having the truth told to them without regard to the political consequences. We’re going to stand up for the future of our children and grandchildren—a future in New Jersey that is hopeful, optimistic and full of opportunity and prosperity in a private sector that is growing and a public sector that stops the annual grab for the taxpayers wallets.

The legislature needs to put Cap 2.5 on the ballot this November as a constitutional amendment, and let the people do what the politicians in Trenton have refused to do for 30 years: get out-of-control property taxes under control and, at long last, fix this perpetual fiscal crisis, once and for all.

Thank you. ###

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Sean Duffy's First TV Ad VIDEO


Sean P. Duffy is the District Attorney for Ashland County Wisconsin. Sean is currently serving his fourth term as Ashland County's District Attorney and is recognized as an aggressive prosecutor with a better than 90% trial success rate. He is most proud of his dedication to prosecuting child sex crimes. Working together with law enforcement, Sean helped make Ashland County one of the first counties in the state to investigate and prosecute child internet sex crimes.

Sean was born and raised in rural Wisconsin and has never strayed far from his roots. Wisconsin's storied lumber history runs through his veins. His great, great grandfather was one of the state's early pioneers and a laborer for the Northwestern Lumber Company. His great grandfather, one of the city of Hayward's founding settlers, was a sawyer for 27 years.

Four generations later, Sean is carrying on the family tradition as a nationally recognized professional lumberjack athlete. He is a three-time world champion in the 90-foot speed climb and an accomplished log-roller. Sean has been a color commentator for ESPN's Great Outdoor Games, as well as a Badger State Games Honorary Athlete and takes pride in bringing national attention to a sport with vital roots in Wisconsin's proud history.

Among Wisconsin's younger voters, Sean is well-known for having been cast on MTV's iconic reality show, The Real World. Through the show, Sean met Arizona native Rachel Campos, and a year and a half later, they married and returned to northwestern Wisconsin to raise their family. After Sean graduated from law school he practiced law at his father's Hayward law firm before becoming a special prosecutor in Ashland, Wisconsin, Shortly thereafter, he became the assistant D.A, and later the District Attorney.
Sean Duffy and family

Uploaded on July 7, 2009 by Sean Duffy for Congress. All rights reserved
Virtually all of his very large family (he's the tenth of eleven siblings!) still lives in Hayward, and having experienced a quintessential small-town childhood Sean wanted nothing less for his own family. Now, nine year old Evita, seven year old Jack, five year old Lucia-Belen, three year old John-Paul, and one year old Paloma are growing up surrounded by the idyllic beauty and solid values of northwestern Wisconsin. Not surprisingly, as soon as Sean's kids learn to walk, he teaches them how to logroll and they perform in logrolling exhibition and competitions throughout the region.

Sean believes that much is at stake in the 2010 cycle for his children, and the 7th District. If his Congressional bid is successful, he knows he will be taking an important step to preserve Wisconsin values and the Wisconsin way of life.
VIDEO CREDIT: duffyforcongress

TEXT CREDIT: Sean Duffy for Congress

Charles Djou Wins Hawaii Special Election VIDEO


May 23, 2010 — Charles Djou has won the Hawaii Special Election with 39.5% of the vote. Mr. Djou's election ends two decades of a Democrat controlled delegation to Washington, D.C.

VIDEO CREDIT: DianondTiger12

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Senator David Vitter Weekly Republican Address TEXT VIDEO 05/22/10


5/22/10 - Sen. David Vitter (R-LA) Delivers Weekly GOP Address On The Gulf Oil Spill.

Hi, I’m Sen. David Vitter of Louisiana.

What a month it’s been since the initial explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil platform just off Louisiana’s coast.

While the gulf oil spill most directly impacts Louisiana and our immediate neighbors, people all across the country certainly share in our feelings of anxiety as the ongoing gushing of the well continues.

They’ve also shared by joining together to provide relief for those most affected by this tragedy. And I know I speak for all Louisianians when I express how grateful we are for that outpouring of support.

As we continue to work toward a recovery solution, none of us should lose sight that there are families who’ve lost loved ones. That is the greatest tragedy, something everyone in Washington should try a little harder to remember.

I’ve also been all along Louisiana’s coast over the last few weeks meeting with those economically devastated, oystermen and fishermen, mayors and local officials and others hit hard by the impacts of the spill.

They have clearly expressed that they don’t want a handout, they want a job and a paycheck. And through the Vessels of Opportunity program, many of these folks have been hired to man the coastline and marsh protection efforts underway.

But clearly more needs to be done.

From the annual blessing of the boats in Chalmette, a somber event this year -- to the public meetings with the Vietnamese community in New Orleans that continues to struggle in working with BP on claims issues, I’ve listened, learned, and left with a much deeper perspective on how people’s lives all along the coast have been disrupted.

That’s why it’s so frustrating to many Louisianians that while the crisis actually continues in the gulf, while we’re still fighting to contain the well, Washington Democratic Committee chairmen have rushed to create media events for television cameras instead of devoting full attention to stopping the immediate problem.

I guess it’s typical of the culture in Washington for politicians to believe that they can solve an ongoing crisis with statements and testimonies in Congressional committee rooms. But the time for committee hearings is for after the well has been capped, not before.

Folks closer to the scene understand that we want 100% of the attention of all parties focused on our two most immediate problems: stopping the gushing oil, and protecting our coastlines and marshes from the oil.

In addition to capping the well, coastal communities are in desperate need of more floating containment barriers, known as "boom." And I’ve talked numerous times to Adm. Thad Allen about this need.

But this boom is really just a Band-Aid to the larger wound of the spill. A greater, more substantial solution would be for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to work immediately with our state to build up and extend our barrier islands made from materials dredged from the immediate area -- our rivers and deltas.

With BP, by the way, appropriately paying the bill.

To prevent this type of incident from ever happening again, I’ve also worked with other Gulf Coast senators to introduce legislation that addresses two specific areas: the liability cap for the responsible party of a spill, and greater technological preparedness to address any future incidents much more rapidly and effectively.

Our Oil Spill Response and Assistance Act would establish a new liability cap equal to the last four quarters of the responsible party’s profits or double the current limit, whichever is greater.

The bill would establish much greater reserve requirements for the amount of boom -- capable of withstanding up to six-foot waves and would direct work on technology to effectively cap leaks like the one currently gushing in the gulf.

That would make offshore drilling safer, smarter and more reliable, but not extinct.

Some in Washington have tried to seize on this real human tragedy in the gulf to advocate for a radical new energy agenda. That only cheapens the loss of those who’ve lost loved ones and brushes aside the ongoing, unsolved problem to spring forward with an emotionally charged political agenda.

That’s wrong and, frankly, an example of bankrupt leadership.

Both Republicans and Democrats say they want to decrease our foreign dependence on oil, but ending all domestic energy production offshore would only make us that much more dependent.

And this false choice on how to proceed in the future of energy exploration in the wake of a terrible accident contributes little to the debate.

We all acknowledge that alternative fuels are the future, but the sad reality is that they are still very much in the future from a practical-use standpoint.

That’s why domestic energy production is critical to free ourselves from foreign energy sources and should provide a bridge toward that more renewable, cleaner future.

I believe Americans understand that, even in the midst of this tragedy. And I know Louisianians do. Thank you. ###

Friday, May 21, 2010

Rand Paul George Stephanopoulos Good Morning America Civil Rights Act VIDEO

Dr. Rand Paul in response to George Stephanopoulos on Good Morning America this morning Friday May 21, 2010 related to his remarks about the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Below follows Dr. Paul's official statement from yesterday.

Rand Paul Sets the Record Straight. Published on 20 May 2010 by Jesse in General News

In response to liberal media attacks, Dr. Rand Paul today released the following statement:

“I believe we should work to end all racism in American society and staunchly defend the inherent rights of every person. I have clearly stated in prior interviews that I abhor racial discrimination and would have worked to end segregation. Even though this matter was settled when I was 2, and no serious people are seeking to revisit it except to score cheap political points, I unequivocally state that I will not support any efforts to repeal the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

“Let me be clear: I support the Civil Rights Act because I overwhelmingly agree with the intent of the legislation, which was to stop discrimination in the public sphere and halt the abhorrent practice of segregation and Jim Crow laws.

“As I have said in previous statements, sections of the Civil Rights Act were debated on Constitutional grounds when the legislation was passed. Those issues have been settled by federal courts in the intervening years

“My opponent’s statement on MSNBC Wednesday that I favor repeal of the Civil Rights Act was irresponsible and knowingly false. I hope he will correct the record and retract his claims.”

“The issue of civil rights is one with a tortured history in this country. We have made great strides, but there is still work to be done to ensure the great promise of Liberty is granted to all Americans.

“This much is clear: The federal government has far overreached in its power grabs. Just look at the recent national healthcare schemes, which my opponent supports. The federal government, for the first time ever, is mandating that individuals purchase a product. The federal government is out of control, and those who love liberty and value individual and state’s rights must stand up to it.

“These attacks prove one thing for certain: the liberal establishment is desperate to keep leaders like me out of office, and we are sure to hear more wild, dishonest smears during this campaign.”

TEXT CREDIT: Rand Paul 2010 | U.S. Senate

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Rand Paul Rachel Maddow Show Civil Rights Act VIDEO

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Rand Paul Rachel Maddow Show Civil Rights Act VIDEO



Rand Paul Sets the Record Straight. Published on 20 May 2010 by Jesse in Uncategorized


In response to liberal media attacks, Dr. Rand Paul today released the following statement:

“I believe we should work to end all racism in American society and staunchly defend the inherent rights of every person. I have clearly stated in prior interviews that I abhor racial discrimination and would have worked to end segregation. Even though this matter was settled when I was 2, and no serious people are seeking to revisit it except to score cheap political points, I unequivocally state that I will not support any efforts to repeal the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

“Let me be clear: I support the Civil Rights Act because I overwhelmingly agree with the intent of the legislation, which was to stop discrimination in the public sphere and halt the abhorrent practice of segregation and Jim Crow laws.

“As I have said in previous statements, sections of the Civil Rights Act were debated on Constitutional grounds when the legislation was passed. Those issues have been settled by federal courts in the intervening years

“My opponent’s statement on MSNBC Wednesday that I favor repeal of the Civil Rights Act was irresponsible and knowingly false. I hope he will correct the record and retract his claims.”

“The issue of civil rights is one with a tortured history in this country. We have made great strides, but there is still work to be done to ensure the great promise of Liberty is granted to all Americans.

“This much is clear: The federal government has far overreached in its power grabs. Just look at the recent national healthcare schemes, which my opponent supports. The federal government, for the first time ever, is mandating that individuals purchase a product. The federal government is out of control, and those who love liberty and value individual and state’s rights must stand up to it.

“These attacks prove one thing for certain: the liberal establishment is desperate to keep leaders like me out of office, and we are sure to hear more wild, dishonest smears during this campaign.”

VIDEO CREDIT: MSNBC

TEXT CREDIT: Rand Paul 2010 | U.S. Senate

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Jim DeMint Introduces European Bailout Protection Act

Jim DeMintWASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Jim DeMint (R-South Carolina), chairman of the Senate Steering Committee and member of the Senate Banking and Foreign Relations committees, introduced the “European Bailout Protection Act” to halt U.S. participation in the proposed bailout of European Union (EU) countries, including Greece. U.S. Representatives Mike Pence (R-Indiana), Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Washington), Jerry Lewis (R-California), Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas), and Rep. Kay Granger (R-Texas) have introduced similar legislation in the House of Representatives.
Specifically, the bill would: 1) Prohibit any U.S. funds that have yet to be drawn by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) from being used to provide financing to any EU countries until all EU nations are in compliance with the debt to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratio requirement in their own collective growth pact, and 2) Require the U.S. Treasury Secretary to oppose any IMF loans to EU nations until all EU countries are in compliance with their debt to GDP ratio requirement. The bill does not permanently prohibit the IMF from lending to these nations, it simply prohibits U.S. contributions to the IMF from being used to loan money to these nations until they can bring their debt to GDP ratio to 60 percent.

In comparison, the U.S. is in danger of losing its AAA rating as the American debt to GDP ratio is expected to reach 94 percent by next year, up from 57 percent in 2007. The total outstanding U.S. public debt is nearing $13 trillion.

“America isn’t even close to getting our own fiscal house in order and this is the worst time to ask taxpayers to borrow more from China to bailout other foreign nations,” said Senator DeMint. “The U.S. debt is equal to nearly 90 percent of our GDP today and we need to stop the runaway spending and find a way to pay our own bills instead of bailing out other nations. It’s time to end the bailout and big government culture in Washington that thinks more spending and higher taxes is the answer to every problem. I was proud to support Senator Cornyn’s amendment as a necessary first step, and we must go further to ensure EU nations are held accountable to their own standards.”

Senator DeMint authored legislation last year to prevent $108 billion in U.S. taxpayer dollars to be used bailouts of foreign nations through the IMF, but it was opposed 64-30.

United States Senator Jim DeMint Press Releases News Room May 18, 2010.

Rand Paul Victory Speech VIDEO


Rand Paul spoke to supporters and thanked them for their help in his win in the Kentucky Republican primary election.

05/18/2010 - Ron Paul is in Kentucky tonight to celebrate his son Rand Paul's victory in the Republican primaries for U.S. Senate. Rand secured 58.8% of the vote.

VIDEO CREDIT: RonPaul2008dotcom

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Primaries Pennsylvania Kentucky Arkansas Oregon LIVE STREAMING VIDEO

Primaries Pennsylvania Kentucky Arkansas Oregon LIVE STREAMING VIDEO

C-SPAN - Windows Media Format.

C-SPAN 2 - Windows Media Format.

C-SPAN 3 - Windows Media Format.

Today 05/18/10 primaries in Pennsylvania, Sen. Specter (D-PA) and challenger U.S. Representative Joe Sestak (D). Mark Critz (D) and Tim Burns (R) in a special election to fill the seat of the late Rep. John Murtha (D). Kentucky's Republican Senate primary Trey Grayson and Rand Paul. Sen. Blanche Lincoln challenger Lt. Gov. Bill Halter in the Arkansas Senate Democratic Primary. Oregon Governor's race Republican former NBA basketball player Chris Dudley and Democratic former Governor John Kitzhaber.

Gilbert Baker Election Day Interview VIDEO


ay 18, 2010 — Today is the Primary Election Day in Arkansas, and Gilbert Baker is out at the polls talking to voters. Here he speaks this morning at the Park Place Baptist Church. to KATV Channel 7 Little Rock.

VIDEO CREDIT: bakerforussenate

TEXT CREDIT: Baker for U.S. Senate, 2010 PO Box 3471 • Little Rock, AR 72203

Monday, May 17, 2010

Rand Paul expands lead VIDEO


Rand Paul has opened up an 18 point margin in polling of Kentucky’s U.S. Senate Republican primary, inspiring confidence among reform-minded voters.

Turnout is key for Tuesday’s election and this last-minute boost for voters supporting balanced budgets, term limits and strong national defense can only be seen as good news for those who want government to function within the confines of the U.S. Constitution.

VIDEO CREDIT: RandPaulsupporter

TEXT CREDIT: Rand Paul 2010 | U.S. Senate

Observer-Reporter Backs William "Bill" Russell

William 'Bill' Russell“In the Republican primary, Burns is competing with William Russell, a retired lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army who challenged Murtha in the 2008 general election. Some of Russell’s policy prescriptions, like giving seniors $1,000 monthly vouchers in lieu of Medicare so they can buy insurance on the open market, give us pause. But Russell has considered the issues with a depth and thoughtfulness that Burns has not demonstrated.

William Russell for Congress, P.O. BOX 630, Johnstown, PA 15907 | 814-254-4475 | info@RussellBrigade.com

Tim Burns Statement on Fair Tax and Mark Critz VIDEO


Today, Tim Burns released the following statement regarding the Fair Tax and Mark Critz’s apology for his false attacks. "I want to be crystal clear regarding my position on the fair tax. I do not in any way, shape or form now or in the future support the fair tax. My opponent, Mark Critz, has made it clear that he understands my position. After falsely claiming that I supported the proposal, Mark Critz publicly apologized for misleading voters.

Now, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has shamelessly begun attacking me on this same issue despite the fact that the non-partisan FactCheck.org and Mark Critz himself have debunked their claim.

I believe the truth still has a place in political campaigns. The DCCC is entitled to its own opinion but it is not entitled to its own facts."

TEXT CREDIT: Tim Burns for Congress

VIDEO CREDIT: TimBurns2010

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Meet Joe Sestak, AKA, Joe SaysTax - Watch the First Joe SaysTax Video


Allentown, PA – For many months, the Toomey campaign has acknowledged and commended Congressman Joe Sestak for being a person who honestly believes in the positions he espouses. That stands in stark contrast to Senator Arlen Specter, whose only discernable principle is his own reelection. But that doesn’t mean Joe Sestak’s sincerely held views are good for Pennsylvania.

As voters are now learning more about Sestak on their television screens, they should also get to know the real Joe. To help, the Toomey campaign is releasing a new video today, entitled, “Joe SaysTax.” It’s a bit of a tongue-in-cheek look at the not so funny way Sestak recklessly spends our tax dollars.

All across Pennsylvania, hardworking families and businesses are struggling, and what does Joe say? He says tax Pennsylvanians and spend more of their hard-earned money.

Joe SaysTax thinks the first Wall Street bailout wasn’t enough, so he voted to release a second Wall Street bailout even though 99 of his Democratic colleagues voted against it.

Joe SaysTax thinks the $787 billion stimulus wasn’t big enough and said he would have voted for a $1 trillion stimulus.

Joe SaysTax thinks the job-killing cap-and-trade bill wasn’t big enough and would have voted for even more burdensome regulations and taxes.

Joe SaysTax thinks the $2.3 trillion health care bill legislation did not go far enough and even voted for a version in committee that would have allowed states to outlaw private health insurance altogether.

Joe SaysTax is so outside the mainstream, it’s no wonder that last week Pennsylvania Democratic Chairman T.J. Rooney told Politico: “If we want to keep this seat in Democratic hands, the only person capable of delivering that victory is Arlen Specter. I can’t say, honest and true, if the shoe’s on the other foot, that we’ll have the same race in November. The results could be cataclysmic.” Rooney also said it will be easy for [opponents] to “paint Joe Sestak as a far-flung lefty.” (Politico, 05/06/10)

All in all, Joe SaysTax has voted for at least $4.71 trillion in new spending over the past year and a half:

Cap-and-Trade . . . . . . . . . $821.2 billion
Health Care . . . . . . . . . . . . $2.3 trillion
Auto Bailout . . . . . . . . . . . $105 billion
Stimulus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $787 billion
Wall Street Bailout . . . . . . . $700 billion
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4.71 trillion

“Joe Sestak is so liberal and so outside the mainstream, his solution for every problem is to impose more taxes on Pennsylvanians and spend more of their hard-earned money,” Toomey Communications Director Nachama Soloveichik said. “On issue after issue, from Wall Street bailouts, to the so-called stimulus, to government-run health care, to job-killing cap-and-trade, Sestak has pushed for legislation even more extreme than those endorsed by Nancy Pelosi. Now that’s really extreme.”

Documentation:

Cap-and-Trade
Sestak voted for the cap-and-trade legislation. (RC #477, 06/26/09)
Sestak thought the cap-and trade bill did not go far enough, saying: “I was disappointed in this bill because I thought it was eviscerated during the process too much.” (Netroots Nation, 08/14/09)
Cost: $821.2 billion (CBO, 06/05/09)

Health Care
Sestak voted for the final health care legislation. (RC #165, 03/21/10)
Sestak said the final bill did not go far enough, saying, “I’m disappointed in the bill frankly, frustrated, I wanted a robust public option.” (MSNBC, Andrea Mitchell Reports, 12/17/09)
Sestak voted for a version of the health care bill in committee that would have allowed states to outlaw private health insurance altogether. (Education & Labor Committee, 07/17/09)
Cost: $2.3 trillion (Senate Minority Budget Committee Report March 26, 2010)

Auto Bailout
Sestak voted to bail out the auto industry. (RC #690, 12/10/08)
Cost: $105 billion (CNNMoney, “CNNMoney.com’s bailout tracker")

Stimulus
Sestak voted for the stimulus. (RC #70, 02/13/09)
Sestak thought the stimulus did not go far enough, saying, “This bill is actually a bit small in my opinion, but it’s the right step.” (ABC WPVI, 02/27/09) He also said he “would have voted for $1 trillion.” (NBC WCAU, 02/27/09)
Cost: $787 billion (Associated Press, 02/14/09)

Wall Street Bailout
Joe voted for the first half of the Wall Street bailout (RC #681, 10/03/08) and for the release of the second half. (RC #27, 01/22/09)
Joe thought a year of Wall Street bailouts was not sufficient and opposed a bipartisan effort to let the bailout expire after one year. (Press release, 09/26/09).
Cost: $700 billion (New York Times)

Pat Toomey for U.S. Senate Mon, 05/10/2010 Contact—Nachama Soloveichik • 484.809.7994 • 646.528.1029 Tim Kelly • 484.809.7994 For Immediate Release—May 10, 2010

VIDEO CREDIT: ToomeyForSenate

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Congressman Chris Lee Weekly Republican Address TEXT PODCAST VIDEO 05/15/10


Podcast of the address: Download MP3 for PODCAST

Delivering the Weekly Republican Address, Rep. Chris Lee (R-NY) says that with Washington’s out-of-control spending spree hurting our economy, Democrats’ failure to pass a budget represents a “missed opportunity” to provide the fiscal discipline economists say is needed to create jobs and grow our economy. The lawmaker notes that, according to the non-partisan Congressional Research Service, the House has never failed to pass a budget in the modern era. In the address, Rep. Lee talks about the need to cut spending now and discusses some of Republicans' common-sense solutions to do just that. Now in his first term in Congress, Rep. Lee represents the Buffalo area, where, on Thursday, President Obama tried to defend his ineffective trillion-dollar ‘stimulus.’

“Hello – I’m Congressman Chris Lee, and I have the great privilege of representing New York’s 26th Congressional District, which includes the suburbs of Buffalo and Rochester.

“President Obama visited our area this week, and it was my hope that he would listen – really listen – to what the people are saying. I’ve been in Congress 16 months now, but it doesn’t take that long to figure out that Washington does more talking than listening. And it certainly does more spending than saving, often in the name of creating jobs that never seem to come. The trillion-dollar ‘stimulus’ was supposed to keep unemployment below eight percent, but joblessness is now near ten percent.

“The new health care bill is faring no better. It was supposed to lower Americans’ health care costs, but the Obama Administration’s own experts determined that it will actually increase them. It was supposed to help reduce the deficit, but the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office now says the new law will cost taxpayers more than one trillion dollars.

“And now, after leaving taxpayers on the hook for massive ‘stimulus’ programs and permanent bailouts, Democrats in Washington have no credible plan to put our fiscal house in order. In fact, House Democrats may not even offer a budget this year.

“Families are making tough choices each month in order to live within a budget, and government should be doing the same. One Democratic leader in Congress has called the budget ‘the most basic responsibility of governing.’ Another Democratic leader has said, ‘if you can’t budget, you can’t govern.’ But now these same Democrats just want to continue spending money we don’t have, and they want to do it without a budget.

“This is a remarkable failure of leadership: according to the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service, not passing a budget resolution would be unprecedented in the modern era.

“And for you and your families, it means a missed opportunity to provide the fiscal discipline economists say is needed to create jobs and boost the economy. What’s worse, the fewer sacrifices Washington makes now, the more Americans will be asked to give up later in the form of massive, job-killing tax hikes.

“This is a recipe for economic disaster, and it has to change.

“Consider this: since President Obama was sworn into office, our national debt has risen by more than $2 trillion to a record $12.9 trillion. In just two more years, according to the President’s own estimates, our national debt will surpass the size of our entire economy. And unless we change course, our debt will reach levels now being experienced by Greece, whose debt is projected to reach 125 percent of its economy this year. Greece is already in the process of receiving an international bailout.

“We are seeing in Europe today what happens when debt spirals out of control, how it shakes the confidence of consumers, manufacturers, and small businesses, and how it creates an insurmountable obstacle to economic recovery. We’re also seeing in Europe that government is not immune to the same fate that befalls any business or family that recklessly spends more than it earns: you run out of money and you go bankrupt.

“So our choice is this: make the tough decisions required to put our fiscal house in order or continue to duck them. That’s why Republicans have proposed several initiatives to cut spending now and make Washington do more with less, just as families and small businesses are. We have asked President Obama to use his authority under the law to force Congress to consider spending cuts. We have also imposed an immediate, unilateral earmark ban and called for the savings to be used to reduce the deficit. And we have proposed strict budget caps to limit federal spending on an annual basis. Less spending, more jobs: it’s that simple.

“President Obama and Democrats in Washington should listen to the American people, who want us to work together on common-sense solutions to stop the spending spree and focus on helping manufacturers and small businesses create jobs. A responsible budget would be a good place to start.

“Thank you for listening.”

Friday, May 14, 2010

Governor Schwarzenegger Unveils 2010-11 Revised State Budget Proposal VIDEO

Governor Schwarzenegger Unveils 2010-11 Revised State Budget Proposal Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger

Governor Chris Christie You know, Tom, you must be the thinnest-skinned guy in America. VIDEO


You know, Tom, you must be the thinnest-skinned guy in America.

Governor Chris Christie holds a press conference outlining a realistic and achievable plan for affordable housing that creates a standards-based, municipally controlled system with minimal involvement from the State with Lt. Governor Kim Guadagno and Department of Community Affairs Commissioner Lori Grifa at the Statehouse in Trenton, N.J. on Thursday, May 13, 2010.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

There's Already a Broadband Deployment Program – It's Called the Free Enterprise System

WASHINGTON – U.S. Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, today made the following statement at a Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet hearing entitled, “The National Broadband Plan: Promoting Broadband Adoption”:

“Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And thank you for calling this hearing. We’re discussing broadband adoption rates today, but there’s obviously much more going on in the telecom world.

“It is already a cliché: The Internet has changed our lives. We sit here in congressional hearings and throughout the Capitol—indeed, throughout our entire lives—able to quickly access all kinds of information…about the country, our constituents, and our families. All at the tips of our thumbs. I can update my Facebook status or tweet on Twitter.

“Our world has changed. Dramatically. I hope that it will continue to do so, but I have to tell you, I’m more than bit concerned about the FCC’s proposed path to ‘change.’

“Last week’s proposal from Chairman Genachowski is truly troubling. In an atmosphere of vibrant competition, impressive investment, and exciting and unprecedented innovation, we see a government ‘solution’ in search of a problem. Here we go again. Speaking of clichés, ‘we’re from the government and we’re here to help.’

“The public is paying attention. The public has raged against bigger government. The cap-and-trade ‘no-energy’ energy bill lit a prairie fire that continues to rage. The healthcare reform bill narrowly passed into law despite clear and consistent public opposition. And its new objectionable problems are reported every day. The Congressional Budget Office is revising its earlier estimates about the cost, and I believe it will inevitably find that the bill is pushing the country—our children and grandchildren—toward a Grecian-style bankruptcy. And now, President Obama and Chairman Genachowski want to regulate the Internet?

“For many years now, it has been the policy of the United States—clearly laid out in the law—to leave the Internet free to flourish unencumbered by government involvement, meddling, and malfeasance. Guess what? It’s worked! Prior to the so-called stimulus—another much-hated law that my Democrat colleagues foisted on the country—many bemoaned the lack of a national broadband plan. We now have an official plan. At the cost of at least $20 million.

“There’s already a broadband deployment program – it’s called the free enterprise system.

“The government—the Congress and at least three Presidents—explicitly stated that they would stay out of it. And it’s worked out pretty well. People say we’re not first in the world in broadband build-out? I’m sick and tired of being compared to Malta and to Liechtenstein. We can all look at a map. We ain’t Liechtenstein. Bottom line: The FCC has now said that 95 percent of the country has broadband access and two-thirds have signed up. All without our beloved bureaucrats or the beleaguered Congress getting in the way. Chairman Genachowski, and all of us, should stay on that course.

“With all that said however, more people subscribing to broadband service is a laudable goal. Wider use of the Internet could help improve our lives, our economy and our nation. And it’s true that about one in 20 of us isn’t able to log in, and many millions who are able have yet to join the party. Some will never be convinced that the broadband world will benefit them. But to the extent that some have not yet understood how the Internet might enrich their lives, appropriate efforts to facilitate that understanding are admirable. Any government efforts however should be carefully targeted and diligently overseen. Convincing people to buy something they’re not sure they need is a dangerous business, and any government involvement is ripe for mischief, waste, and nonsense. We cannot allow that.

“I’m anxious to hear the opinions of the panel, and I thank them all for taking the time out of their schedules to discuss how even more of the country might change their lives through the same magic that allows us all to read the Fort Worth Star-Telegram from a dais in Washington, D.C.

“Thank you again, Mr. Chairman, and I yield back.”

House Energy and Commerce Committee Republicans May 12, 2010 2322A Rayburn House Office Building | Washington, DC 20515 | (202) 225-3641