Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Dave Camp Statement on H.R. 3630 Conference Committee Appointment

Committee on Ways & Means Logo

Washington, DC – Today, Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-OH) appointed Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp (R-MI) to serve on a Conference Committee to be made up of House and Senate members to resolve differences over H.R. 3630, The Middle Class Tax Relief & Job Creation Act.

"I urge my Democrat colleagues to quickly appoint conferees so we can ensure middle-class families are not hit with a tax increase next year, the unemployed do not have their benefits expire and seniors do not see the reimbursement rates for their doctors slashed. The only thing standing in the way of completing this bill is the Senate’s refusal to come back from vacation, appoint conferees and do the work the American people sent us here to do. Americans lucky enough to have a job in this economy are not on vacation, and Congress shouldn’t be either.”

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CONTACT: House Committee on Ways & Means: 1101 Longworth HOB, Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone (202) 225-3625 Fax (202) 225-2610 Jim Billimoria, Michelle Dimarob, or Sarah Swinehart (202) 226-4774

Monday, December 19, 2011

Statement of the Chairman and Ranking Member of the Committee on Ethics Regarding the Matter of Representative Maxine Waters

House Committee on Ethics Logo

Statement of the Chairman and Ranking Member of the Committee on Ethics Regarding the Matter of Representative Maxine Waters.

The Committee on Ethics has voted unanimously to extend the contract of William R. Martin to continue his service as outside counsel to the Committee in the matter of Representative Maxine Waters. The Committee’s goal has been and remains to resolve this matter as expeditiously as possible, but due to unavoidable delays, additional time is needed for outside counsel to complete his initial review and report his findings and conclusions to the full Committee, which will then determine whether the matter should proceed. The Committee’s decision to extend the contract does not indicate that the Committee has made any findings or reached any conclusions, or reflect any judgment on behalf of the Committee.

In July 2011, the Committee announced that it had retained Mr. Martin to review, advise, and assist the Committee in completing this matter. The decision to retain outside counsel reflected the high priority of this unique matter and the need to resolve it with the utmost care, diligence, and integrity. Hiring an outside counsel allowed for an independent review and a faster resolution than if the Committee staff were to handle it alone. In addition, retaining outside counsel in this matter has allowed the Committee and its staff to continue to work diligently on its large number of other pending investigative matters, as well as its substantial ongoing work within its advice and education, financial disclosure, travel, and training responsibilities.

To date, Mr. Martin and his team have performed a substantial amount of work to move this matter forward. Mr. Martin has reviewed tens of thousands of pages of documents, interviewed numerous witnesses, and conducted extensive legal research regarding the nature of due process rights which attach to Members of Congress appearing before this Committee. While significant progress has been made, Mr. Martin’s review and recommendations regarding due process allegations will not be complete by the end of the first session of the 112th Congress, which is the termination date of the initial contract. Mr. Martin has suggested to the Committee that he not present his recommendations regarding substantive issues of due process, including whether any fact witnesses should consider recusal from this matter, until the factual review is complete.

The new contract has an expiration date of July 31, 2012, and authorizes expenditures of between $50,000 and $500,000. The Committee has not concluded either that the entirety of the matter will be completed by that date or that outside counsel will need the full amount of time and/or funding to complete his initial review and any subsequent work, if necessary.

Instead, both the expiration date and amount of funding are intended to provide both outside counsel and the Committee with the flexibility to finish this matter as promptly as a thorough, diligent, and fair review of the allegations and relevant facts will allow. As with the initial contract, pursuant to Committee rules, any cancellation, further extension, or amendment to the contract must be approved by a majority vote of the Members of the Committee, acting consistent with integrity and fairness.

The Committee notes that the initial contract with Mr. Martin also authorized expenditures of between $50,000 and $500,000, but that to date, the cost of services provided under the initial contract is approximately $300,000. The range designated in the new contract was fully contemplated in the Committee’s request to the Committee on House Administration for funding in the second session of the 112th Congress. The Committee on House Administration has approved both the funding request and the new contract with Mr. Martin, consistent with its rules. Representative Waters and her counsel were informed of the new contract.

At the end of each stage in the matter, the Committee will consider what, if any, statement is appropriate to keep the House and the public informed of the activities of the Committee. Until the next such appropriate time, however, neither the Committee nor outside counsel will have further public comment on this matter.

FULL RELEASE in PDF FORMAT: Statement of the Chairman and Ranking Member of the Committee on Ethics Regarding the Matter of Representative Maxine Waters

John Boehner Full-Year Payroll Tax Cut Extension Needed to Give Job Creators Certainty VIDEO

Boehner: Full-Year Payroll Tax Cut Extension Needed to Give Job Creators Certainty They Need to Put Americans Back to Work.

Announces House Will Vote to Go to Conference, Resolve Differences Between House & Senate Payroll Bills.

Washington (Dec 19) At a press conference today, House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) reiterated the need for a full-year extension of the payroll tax cut to provide certainty for job creators, and previewed a House vote this evening to request a formal conference to resolve differences between the two chambers. Following are video and text of Speaker Boehner’s remarks:


BOEHNER: “A TWO-MONTH EXTENSION CREATES UNCERTAINTY & WILL CAUSE PROBLEMS FOR PEOPLE WHO ARE TRYING TO CREATE JOBS”:

“Americans are tired of Washington’s short-term fixes and gimmicks, which are creating uncertainty for job creators at a time when millions of Americans are out of work. Democrats and Republicans agree that the payroll tax cut needs to be extended for a full year to provide the kind of relief that Americans need in this struggling economy. The House last week passed a bill to do just that -- but instead of passing the House bill or another bill which extended the payroll credit for a year, the Senate Democratic leaders passed a two-month extension, punting the problem into next year.

“We oppose the Senate bill because doing a two-month extension instead of a full year extension causes uncertainty for job creators. I used to run a small business, I met a payroll, I hired workers. A two-month extension creates uncertainty and will cause problems for people who are trying to create jobs in the private sector. The idea that tax policy can be done two months at a time is the kind of activity that we see here in Washington that’s really put our economy off its tracks.

“Last week both chambers worked together to pass a full-year bill to fund our government. And I don’t think this issue is any different. It’s time for Congress to do its work. No more kicking the can down the road.”

BOEHNER: HOUSE WILL SEND HOUSE-SENATE PAYROLL TAX CUT BILLS TO CONFERENCE TO RESOLVE DIFFERENCES:

“Tonight the House will vote on the Senate-passed bill. This is a vote on whether Congress will stay and do its work, or go on vacation. I expect that the House will disagree with the Senate amendment, and instead vote to formally go to conference – the formal process in which the House and Senate can resolve differences between the two chambers and between our two bills. And I expect the House to take up legislation that reinforces the need to extend the payroll tax relief for a full year, rather than just two months, again – to provide certainty for job creators. And I think the best way to resolve the difference between the two-month extension and the full-year bill is to follow the regular order here in Congress. When there’s a disagreement between the two chambers we sit down in a conference and resolve those differences. And that’s exactly what I believe the House will do.”

BOEHNER: NO VACATION UNTIL WE “FINISH THE NATION’S BUSINESS”:

“The President has said repeatedly that no one should be going on vacation until the work is done. Democrat leaders in the House and Senate have said exactly the same thing. So I think it’s time for Senate Democrat leaders to follow the president’s example, put their vacations on hold, and work in a bipartisan manner to finish the nation’s business.”

TEXT CREDIT: John Boehner | speaker.gov H-232 The Capitol Washington, DC 20515 P (202) 225-0600 F (202) 225-5117

VIDEO CREDIT: JohnBoehner

Saturday, December 17, 2011

John Barrasso Weekly Republican Address TEXT PODCAST VIDEO 12/17/11


FULL TEXT TRANSCRIPT: John Barrasso Weekly Republican Address TEXT PODCAST VIDEO 12/17/11

Hi. I'm John Barrasso, United States Senator for Wyoming.

Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming

As we begin the holiday season, we're reminded of those who are far from home serving our country in the military. We've welcomed many back home, but there are still men and women in dangerous places protecting our freedoms and keeping us safe.

This Thanksgiving, I had the special opportunity to visit Wyoming National Guard troops deployed overseas. We talked about their mission and their hopes for the future.

What these soldiers were most concerned about was whether they would be able to find a good job when they return.

Here at home, Republicans are working on legislation that will make it easier and cheaper for the private sector to create jobs for all Americans.

For example, the creation of the Keystone Pipeline, a shovel-ready American energy project. It will create as many as 20,000 construction jobs and 100,000 indirect jobs and it will strengthen our nation's energy security.

Keystone would allow us to transport 700,000 barrels of oil a day from our northern neighbor Canada to refineries in the United States. Having a steady source of energy from our friend and ally here would make us less dependent on energy from the volatile Middle East and that is good for America.

Everyone from members of the United States Chamber of Commerce to members of Labor Unions support this project.

But the President has threatened to veto this bill because the pipeline is opposed by a number of extreme environmental groups.

These are the same groups who in the past have supported the President and he needs their support for his reelection.

It appears that President Obama is opposing these new American jobs in order to try to save his own job. It's time for the President to stop playing politics.

After repeatedly saying, 'We Can't Wait' for American job creation, the President now wants Americans to wait on the jobs from the pipeline until after next year's election.

Canada has made it clear, if we don't build this pipeline, the United States will lose these jobs and Canada will sell the oil to China. And we will be forced to get more of our energy from the Middle East.

If the President successfully blocks these new jobs, it will only add to his long list of bad economic decisions for our country.

While the President may have inherited a bad economy, he has made it worse.

Earlier this week, in a '60 Minutes' interview, the President said that he has not overpromised. His record shows otherwise.

His Administration projected that his $800 billion failed stimulus bill would keep unemployment below 8 percent. Almost three years later, under the Obama economy, the unemployment rate is 8.6 percent and it has been over 8 percent for a record 34 straight months.

He promised that he would cut spending. But in less than three years as President, America's national debt has increased so much that we have to borrow almost $3 million every minute -- a lot of it from China.

He promised that his health care law would lower premiums for families, but since his inauguration, premiums have increased more than $2,200.

He promised to create a new era of bipartisanship in Washington, and now he wants to veto a bill that both Democrats and Republicans enthusiastically support.

Americans deserve better. Americans want real solutions and good jobs.

The Keystone pipeline is a real solution that President Obama should embrace immediately to create new jobs across America.

The House of Representatives has now passed the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation bill. This bill gives the President everything he has claimed to be for.

It extends payroll tax relief for hard working Americans.

It helps those who are still looking for work.

And it is paid for by actually cutting government spending.

Most Americans want their government to be smaller, not larger; they want their taxes to be lower, not higher.

We are a strong and resilient nation. We will weather this storm.

To get Americans back to work, small business owners need a level of predictability that they just don't have with this President and this Administration.

We need more from the White House than threats to veto a bill that would create 20,000 jobs for Americans.

Thanks for listening.

VIDEO CREDIT: gopweeklyaddress

Friday, December 16, 2011

Iowa Republican (GOP) Debate FULL VIDEO FOX NEWS 12/15/11


Iowa Republican (GOP) Debate FULL VIDEO FOX NEWS 12/15/11

Seven candidates participated: Michele Bachmann, Newt Gingrich, Jon Huntsman, Ron Paul, Rick Perry, Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum.

Fox News anchor Bret Baier moderated

TWEETERS NOTE: IOWA REPUBLICAN DEBATE OFFICIAL HASHTAG: #IowaDebate

Iowa Republican (GOP) Debate FULL VIDEO FOX NEWS 12/15/11

MORE DEBATES:

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Iowa Republican (GOP) Debate LIVE STREAMING VIDEO FOX NEWS 12/15/11



Iowa Republican Debate LIVE VIDEO STREAM. coverage begins at 8:30 p.m. ET. (5:30 p.m. PT) with the debate scheduled from 9 to 11:00 p.m. EDT. Mobile phone viewing, the live stream can also be seen via Fox News iPhone and iPad app and Droid app

This feed should go LIVE shortly before 8:30 pm ET. FOX NEWS, Iowa Republican Debate from Sioux City on Wednesday, December 15 at 9 pm ET. FULL STREAMING VIDEO. Iowa Republican (GOP) Debate LIVE STREAMING VIDEO FOX NEWS 12/15/11.

Seven candidates will participate: Michele Bachmann, Newt Gingrich, Jon Huntsman, Ron Paul, Rick Perry, Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum.

Fox News anchor Bret Baier, will moderate

TWEETERS NOTE: TONIGHT’S OFFICIAL HASHTAG: #IowaDebate

Iowa Republican GOP debate FULL DEBATE VIDEO 12/10/11

RELATED:

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Democrats Should Stop Holding Government Funding Hostage VIDEO


Washington (Dec 14) At a press conference with GOP leaders, House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) called on President Obama and Senate Democrats to end the threat of a government shutdown by allowing a bipartisan funding agreement to move forward:

“It’s pretty clear to all of us that President Obama and Senator Reid want to threaten a government shutdown so that they can get leverage on a jobs bill because the United States Senate can’t pass one. We’ve got an agreement between appropriators in the House and the Senate – Democrats and Republicans – on a bipartisan bill to fund our government. We believe that the responsible thing to do is to move this.

“I’m tired of hearing what the Senate can’t do. I think it’s time for us to wait and see what the Senate can do. I’m hopeful that the president and Senator Reid will allow the appropriators to sign the conference report and allow that bill to come to a vote in the House and the Senate to keep our government open, and allow the conversations to continue about how best to put the American people back to work. … It’s time for the Senate to do its job.”

TEXT CREDIT: Speaker of the House John Boehner H-232 The Capitol Washington, DC 20515 P (202) 225-0600 F (202) 225-5117

VIDEO CREDIT: JohnBoehner

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp introduces H.R. 3630 FULL TEXT The Middle Class Tax Relief & Job Creation Act

Legislation Includes Extension of Payroll Tax Holiday, Reforms the Unemployment Insurance Program, Prevents Cuts to Doctors Serving Our Nation’s Seniors and Does Not Add One Dime to the Nation’s Debt.

Washington, DC – Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp (R-MI) introduced H.R. 3630, The Middle Class Tax Relief & Job Creation Act. The legislation extends a number of provisions scheduled to expire at the end of the year and includes fully paid-for extensions of the payroll tax holiday and a reformed unemployment insurance program, along with a two-year freeze on cuts to doctors providing care to our nation’s seniors and disabled enrolled in Medicare. The legislation also extends and expands provisions to encourage employers to invest and hire.

“This bill is about strengthening our economy and getting Americans back to work through commonsense reforms,” said Camp. “In addition to helping create jobs, this bill will ensure America’s seniors and the disabled are protected by preventing massive cuts to doctors working in the Medicare program. This package includes many of the President’s own ideas. With its passage, Americans can be confident that these programs and provisions will be available next year, that they will not result in decades of debt and that they will be paid for with fiscally responsible reforms, not job-killing tax hikes.”

The legislation incorporates a wide range of long overdue reforms spanning across the Ways and Means Committee’s jurisdiction and that of many other committees. Within the purview of the Ways and Means Committee are:

House Committee on Ways & Means Logo

Tax Provisions: Extends the payroll tax holiday to help middle class families struggling in this economy while protecting the Social Security Trust Funds and also extends 100 percent expensing to help employers expand and hire new workers. The President has endorsed both of these policies.

Medicare Provisions: Prevents a 27 percent cut to doctors serving Medicare patients and replaces it with payment updates in 2012 and 2013; reforms and extends temporary Medicare payment provisions to ambulance services; outpatient therapy services; assistance for low-income seniors; and physician payments in certain areas. Additionally, the legislation adopts a recommendation from President Obama that reduces subsidies to high-income seniors by requiring them to pay a greater share of their Part B and D premiums. This change alone reduces spending by $31 billion in the next decade.

Unemployment Insurance Provisions: Strengthens job search requirements in the unemployment insurance program; allows States to screen and test for drug use; increases State flexibility to design reemployment programs (including those supported by President Obama); reduces waste, fraud and abuse through increased program integrity measures like data standardization; and reduces the maximum weeks of unemployment benefits from 99 to 59 weeks – a level consistent with prior recessions. The weeks of benefits are immediately reduced by 20 and then, by adopting one of the President’s own policies, an additional 20 weeks are phased out by the middle of 2012 in all but four States.

Welfare Provisions: Extends through September 30, 2012 the nation’s primary welfare program, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), which is set to expire on December 31, 2011 while making some needed reforms to ensure that taxpayer funds are protected from abuse. Those reforms include bipartisan efforts to improve program integrity by requiring standardized data and Health and Human Services coordination of exchanges across State TANF programs, as well as closing the current “strip club loophole” to ensure welfare funds cannot be accessed at ATMs in strip clubs, liquor stores and casinos.

Repeals Provisions in the Democrats’ Health Care Law: Prevents $13.4 billion in wasteful overpayments of Exchange subsidies (the President has twice signed similar measures into law) and repeals provisions in the law that hurt physician-owned hospitals. The legislation also includes an additional $12 billion in reduced spending in the Energy and Commerce Committee’s jurisdiction, chaired by Rep. Fred Upton (R-MI): cutting $8 billion from the Harkin Prevention Fund and reducing Medicaid spending by more than $4 billion.

Provisions to Protect Taxpayer Dollars: Prevents fraud and abuse of the Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC) program by requiring individuals to include their Social Security number on their tax return in order to claim the credit. This legislation also incorporates a recommendation from President Obama to prevent Social Security overpayments by improving coordination with State and local governments.

Camp added, “In addition to reforms in the unemployment insurance program and Medicare, the legislation also cracks down on fraud and abuse in our nation’s welfare and tax credit programs. These reforms protect taxpayer dollars and, when paired with other reforms supported by President Obama, allow us to meet the needs facing America without adding to the debt.”

To access more detailed summaries of key Ways and Means provisions, click here.

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Jim Billimoria || Michelle Dimarob || Sarah Swinehart (202) 226-4774

H.RES.491 -- Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 3630) to provide incentives for the creation of jobs, and for other purposes. (Reported in House - RH)

HRES 491 RH House Calendar No. 99 112th CONGRESS 1st Session H. RES. 491 Report No. 112-328

Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 3630 ) to provide incentives for the creation of jobs, and for other purposes.

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES December 12, 2011

Mr. DREIER, from the Committee on Rules, reported the following resolution; which was referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed

RESOLUTION

Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 3630 ) to provide incentives for the creation of jobs, and for other purposes.

Resolved, That upon the adoption of this resolution it shall be in order to consider in the House the bill (H.R. 3630 ) to provide incentives for the creation of jobs, and for other purposes. All points of order against consideration of the bill are waived. The amendment printed in the report of the Committee on Rules accompanying this resolution shall be considered as adopted. The bill, as amended, shall be considered as read. All points of order against provisions in the bill, as amended, are waived. The previous question shall be considered as ordered on the bill, as amended, to final passage without intervening motion except: (1) 90 minutes of debate equally divided and controlled by the chair and ranking minority member of the Committee on Ways and Means; and (2) one motion to recommit with or without instructions.

House Calendar No. 99 112th CONGRESS 1st Session H. RES. 491 Report No. 112-328

RESOLUTION

Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 3630 ) to provide incentives for the creation of jobs, and for other purposes.

FULL TEXT in PDF FORMAT: H.RES.491 -- Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 3630) to provide incentives for the creation of jobs, and for other purposes. (Reported in House - RH)

TEXT CREDIT: waysandmeans.house.gov 1101 Longworth HOB, Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone (202) 225-3625 Fax (202) 225-2610

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Iowa Republican GOP debate FULL DEBATE VIDEO 12/10/11



Republican GOP Debate Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa 9 pm ET 12/10/11 FULL DEBATE VIDEO. Six candidates participated: Michele Bachmann, Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul, Rick Perry, Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum.


The ABC News, Yahoo News, WOI-TV, Des Moines Register, Iowa Republican Party Debate on Saturday, December 10 at 9 pm ET. FULL STREAMING VIDEO.

Iowa Republican GOP debate FULL DEBATE VIDEO 12/10/11

9 p.m. Eastern/8 p.m. Central. The debate was moderated by ABC’s Diane Sawyer and George Stephanopoulos on the campus of Drake University in Des Moines Iowa.

TWEETERS NOTE: OFFICIAL HASHTAG: #IowaDebate

RELATED:

VIDEO EMBED CREDIT: RonPaulcom

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Republican GOP Debate Des Moines, Iowa 12/10/11 LIVE STREAMING VIDEO



UPDATE 12/11/11: Iowa Republican GOP debate FULL DEBATE "OFFICIAL" VIDEO 12/10/11

Iowa Republican Debate Logo

Republican GOP Debate Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa 9 pm ET 12/10/11 LIVE STREAMING VIDEO. Six candidates will participate: Michele Bachmann, Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul, Rick Perry, Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum.

This feed should go LIVE shortly before 9 pm ET. The ABC News, Yahoo News, WOI-TV, Des Moines Register, Iowa Republican Party Debate on Saturday, December 10 at 9 pm ET. FULL STREAMING VIDEO


begins at 9 p.m. Eastern/8 p.m. Central. The debate will be moderated by ABC’s Diane Sawyer and George Stephanopoulos on the campus of Drake University in Des Moines Iowa. Watch on any ABC television station. Live-streams will be provided by ABCNews.com, Yahoo.com, MyABC5.com, and DesMoinesRegister.com

TWEETERS NOTE: TONIGHT’S OFFICIAL HASHTAG: #IowaDebate


Republican National Security Debate 11/22/11

RELATED:
Live-streams will be provided by ABCNews.com, Yahoo.com, MyABC5.com, and DesMoinesRegister.com

John Boehner Weekly Republican Address TEXT PODCAST VIDEO 12/10/11



John Boehner Weekly Republican Address TEXT PODCAST VIDEO 12/10/11 Podcast of the address: Download MP3 for PODCAST |||| FULL TEXT TRANSCRIPT BELOW. || Download Video MPEG Video || MP4 Video

Washington (Dec 9) In the Weekly Republican Address, House Speaker John Boehner touts the Middle Class Tax Relief & Job Creation Act, legislation the House will vote on next week that will help to create thousands of new American jobs while helping families struggling with the consequences of President Obama’s failed economic policies. This jobs bill (H.R. 3630) will extend the payroll tax cut, protect Social Security, reform and extend unemployment insurance, and extend pro-growth tax relief for businesses of all sizes – while also advancing several bipartisan measures that will directly support the creation of private-sector jobs, including the Keystone XL energy pipeline. Everything in the House bill is offset by spending cuts, rather than through tax increases that would hit small businesses and destroy jobs, as proposed in Senate Democrats’ bill.

John Boehner Weekly Republican Address

"There’s no more urgent task for Washington than getting our economy back to creating jobs. Unemployment is still well above eight percent. Millions of Americans are looking for work or have simply stopped looking altogether. That’s unacceptable, plain and simple.

"Republicans have, as promised, focused all year on our plan to remove government-made barriers to job creation. In all, 27 bipartisan, House-passed jobs bills are now waiting for a vote in the Democratic-run Senate. One of those initiatives is the REINS Act, passed just a few days ago. It would require Congress to review any new regulation that has a major impact on the economy.

"Nearly three years ago, President Obama proposed a ‘stimulus’ plan with the promise it would keep unemployment below eight percent. It didn’t work. Because his policies aren’t working, the president has asked Congress to pass legislation that would extend unemployment benefits and payroll tax relief for working Americans.

"Next week, the House is going to do that. To help Americans who are struggling in the current economy, we will act on a jobs bill that extends payroll tax relief, extends and reforms unemployment benefits, and cuts government spending. There will be no tax hikes on America’s job creators.

"This bill will also contain several bipartisan jobs initiatives, including a provision – which is in the president’s jobs plan as well as ours – to continue a tax incentive that allows employers, small and large, to invest now in new machinery and equipment, grow their businesses, and create jobs.

"Another bipartisan provision in this bill supports the job-creating Keystone energy project.

"As you may know, the Keystone energy project would create tens of thousands of American jobs and reduce our dependence on oil from the Middle East. This jobs project has bipartisan support in the House and the Senate. It’s backed by a broad-based coalition, from small businesses to organized labor.

"You’ve heard President Obama say the American people “can’t wait” to take action on jobs. Well, the Keystone project is the very definition of an idea the American people can’t wait for Washington to take action on.

"As a matter of fact, Stephen Harper, the prime minister of Canada, has warned that if the United States doesn’t approve this project, Canada will be forced to move forward with other customers, potentially China. We can’t stand by and allow that to happen. Those jobs are too important.

"Unfortunately, the president wants to put off a decision on the Keystone project until after next year’s election. Not only that – he now says he will reject the House’s jobs bill if it includes support for the project.

"This is no time for the same-old my-way-or-the-highway theatrics. It’s no secret Democrats and Republicans often disagree about the best way to create jobs, but we can’t let those disagreements prevent us from acting when we agree. There’s bipartisan support for extending payroll tax relief and unemployment benefits. There’s bipartisan support for tax incentives that allow employers to invest and expand. And there’s bipartisan support for the Keystone energy project. We should get these things done.

"As the president has said, the American people 'can’t wait' for action on jobs. At a time when they’re still asking the question ‘where are the jobs?,’ the Keystone energy project is a bipartisan proposal the president ought to support. Next week, the House will act to do the right thing for jobs and economic growth. We remain ready to work with the president and find common ground, which is what the American people expect and deserve.

"Merry Christmas, and thanks for listening."

VIDEO and IMAGE CREDIT: JohnBoehner

TEXT CREDIT: Speaker of the House John Boehner Contact H-232 The Capitol Washington, DC 20515 P (202) 225-0600 F (202) 225-5117

AUDIO / VIDEO FILES CREDIT: The House Republican Conference - Digital Communications visual.media@mail.house.gov 202-225-5439

Thursday, December 08, 2011

Rick Perry: “Repeal Obamacare” VIDEO


Rick Perry: “Repeal Obamacare” VIDEO. Rick Perry will repeal Obamacare, starting on Day One.

Category: News & Politics.

Tags: rick perry, perry, president, 2012, republican, rick perry debate, iowa caucus, caucuses, caucus, obamacare, individual mandate, newt gingrich, newt, gingrich, mitt romney, mitt, romney, grp12.

License: Standard YouTube License.

VIDEO CREDIT:RPerry2012

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Paul Ryan Unveils Comprehensive Reform Package

House Budget Committee Logo

WASHINGTON – This morning, Members of the House Budget Committee introduced a comprehensive package of ten legislative reforms designed to help repair the broken budget process. House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan issued the following statement upon release of these reforms:

“The federal budget process is broken. Washington stumbles from budget crisis to budget crisis, with little to no oversight of how government spends hardworking taxpayers’ money. The incentives currently favor those who want to spend more, and the result is a crushing burden of debt that is hurting economic growth today and threatening economic prosperity tomorrow.

“I’m pleased to join a team of reformers at the House Budget Committee committed to repair the broken budget process. My colleagues at the Committee have put forward 10 proposals designed to strengthen spending controls, enhance oversight, and increase transparency. These reforms mark an important first step to getting our arms around the problem, but there is no substitute for political will in solving our structural budget problems.

“The House Budget Committee will keep advancing solutions that deal directly with the drivers of the debt, help get our economy back on track, and ensure future generations a shot at the American Dream.”

The budget process reform package includes the following bills:

Spending Control

1. The Legally Binding Budget Act (Lead sponsor: Rep. Diane Black of Tennessee)

Gives the budget the force of law by converting it from a concurrent to a joint resolution, which requires the President’s signature. Upon a presidential veto, the joint resolution automatically reverts to a concurrent resolution.

2. The Spending Control Act (Lead sponsor: Rep. John Campbell of California)

Establishes binding limitations on federal spending and deficits – all enforced by a sequester of no more than 4 percent of programs – within each category if the program is growing faster than inflation.

3. The Expedited Line-Item Veto and Rescissions Act
(Lead sponsors: Chairman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, Ranking Member Chris Van Hollen of Maryland)

Provides for the expedited consideration by Congress of specific requests by the President to reduce discretionary spending in appropriations legislation.

Enhanced Oversight

4. The Biennial Budgeting and Enhanced Oversight Act
(Lead sponsor: Rep. Reid Ribble of Wisconsin)

Establishes a biennial budgeting cycle where Congress adopts a budget resolution in the first session of Congress (i.e., odd-numbered years) and considers authorization legislation in the second session, providing greater opportunities for review of government spending.

5. The Baseline Reform Act (Lead sponsor: Rep. Rob Woodall of Georgia)

Reforms the budget “baseline” to remove automatic inflation increases in discretionary accounts, and to require a comparison to the previous year’s spending levels.

6. The Government Shutdown Prevention Act (Lead sponsor: Rep. James Lankford of Oklahoma)

If Congress fails to enact appropriations bills by the beginning of the fiscal year (Oct. 1), provides automatic authority to fund programs at a slightly reduced rate from the previous year’s level.

7. The Review Every Dollar Act (Lead sponsor: Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah)

Requires periodic sunset reviews and reauthorization of all federal programs to ensure the programs perform an appropriate role and are operating effectively.

Requires all transfers from the general fund to the Highway Trust Fund to be offset or counted as new spending.

Removes all direct spending provisions from Pell Grants and moves all funding to the discretionary spending category.

Requires any new rule or regulation promulgated by the administration that includes new spending to be explicitly funded by Congress before such regulations take effect.

Provides a mechanism through which Members can devote savings from spending bills to deficit reduction.

Full Transparency

8. The Balancing our Obligations for the Long Term Act
(Lead sponsor: Rep. Mick Mulvaney of South Carolina)

Caps total spending over the long term to reduce the burden of government to no more than 20 percent of the economy by gradually reducing spending.

Requires Congress to review long-term budget trends every five years and provides a fast-track legislative process to put federal spending on a sustainable path.

Authorizes reconciliation of long-term savings (beyond the current limit of the budget resolution’s typical 10-year window, up to 75 years) in Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.

Requires CBO long-term estimates beyond the 10-year window.

Requires the President’s budget to extend beyond the 10-year window.

Strengthens the statutory requirement directing the President to submit legislation to save Medicare if the general fund subsidy to the program exceeds 45 percent of the program’s costs.

Requires GAO and OMB to report annually on the federal government’s unfunded obligations.

9. The Budget and Accounting Transparency Act
(Lead sponsor: Rep. Scott Garrett of New Jersey)

Reforms the Credit Reform Act to incorporate Fair Value accounting principles.

Recognizes the budgetary impact of the GSEs by formally bringing the entities on-budget.

Brings the U.S. Postal Service on-budget.

Requires a CBO & OMB study on offsetting receipts/collections/revenues.

Requires all federal agencies make public the budgetary justification materials prepared in support of their requests for taxpayer dollars.

10. The Pro-Growth Budgeting Act (Lead sponsor: Rep. Tom Price of Georgia)

Requires CBO to provide an assessment of the macroeconomic impact of major legislation.

TEXT and IMAGE CREDIT: Committee on the Budget: U.S. House of Representatives 207 Cannon House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515

Tuesday, December 06, 2011

Mitt Romney today announced the support of former Vice President Dan Quayle

Mitt Romney Visits New Hampshire Headquarters

Mitt Romney today announced the support of former Vice President Dan Quayle.

"I am humbled to have Vice President Quayle's support," said Mitt Romney. "He has served our country with honor and distinction. I hope to work with leaders like Vice President Quayle to reestablish faith in our economy, stop the growth of government, and ensure that the United States remains the strongest country in the world.”

Announcing his support, Vice President Quayle said, "Because of President Obama’s failed leadership, Washington has become dysfunctional. We need a leader from outside of the Washington establishment to get America back on track. Mitt Romney has proven over and over that he is a leader. He is a man of integrity. He understands budgets and financial markets. He is strong on national defense and has a deep love of the conservative philosophy that makes America great. Governor Mitt Romney has what it takes to be a great President of the United States and that is why I enthusiastically endorse him for President."

Background on Vice President Quayle:

Dan Quayle served as Vice President from 1989 to 1993. Prior to his election, Quayle served for eight years in the U.S. Senate and served four years in the U.S. House of Representatives. Quayle has been Chairman of Cerberus Global Investments since 2000.

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TEXT CREDIT: Romney for President

IMAGE CREDIT: Mitt Romney on Flickr

Monday, December 05, 2011

New Newt Gingrich Ad Rebuilding the America We Love VIDEO


New Newt Gingrich Ad Rebuilding the America We Love VIDEO

Rebuilding the America We Love

Some people say that the America we love is a thing of the past. Newt doesn't believe that. He says that working together we CAN rebuild the America we love.

Join the movement to rebuild the America we love at www.newt.org.

VIDEO and TEXT CREDIT: ngingrich

New Rick Perry Ad Elites VIDEO


New Rick Perry Ad Elites VIDEO

The mission of Make Us Great Again is to support Rick Perry for the Republican nomination for President in 2012, to oppose Barack Obama’s reelection, and to support Rick Perry in the general election in November 2012.

VIDEO CREDIT: MakeUsGreatAgain

TEXT CREDIT: Make Us Great Again, Not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee

New Ron Paul Ad – Big Dog VIDEO


New Ron Paul Ad - BIG DOG

VIDEO CREDIT: ronpaul

Sunday, December 04, 2011

2012 Congressional Calendar for the U.S. House of Representatives VIDEO


2012 Congressional Calendar for the U.S. House of Representatives. From the House Majority Leader's Office.

I am pleased to release the 2012 Congressional Calendar for the U.S. House of Representatives. As with this year, next year's calendar is the result of substantial input garnered from Members of both the House Republican Conference and the House Democratic Caucus. The goal of next year's calendar is to create certainty, increase efficiency and productivity in the legislative process, protect committee time, and afford Members the opportunity to gain valuable input from their constituents at home.

2012 Calendar Information in PDF FORMAT:
2012 Congressional Calendar

TEXT and PDF FILE CREDIT: Office of the Majority Leader H-329, The Capitol House of Representatives P: 202.225.4000

VIDEO CREDIT: EricCantor

Saturday, December 03, 2011

Herman Cain Statement: As of today, with a lot of prayer and soul searching, I am suspending my presidential campaign VIDEO

Herman Cain: As of today, with a lot of prayer and soul searching, I am suspending my presidential campaign VIDEO

"As of today, with a lot of prayer and soul searching, I am suspending my presidential campaign."

"Because of the continued distractions, the continued hurt caused on me and my family, not because we are not fighters. Not because I’m not a fighter."

"I’m at peace with my God, I’m at peace with my wife, and she is at peace with me.”





VIDEO CREDIT: MiniRtist

Olympia Snowe Weekly Republican Address TEXT PODCAST VIDEO 12/03/11


Olympia Snowe Weekly Republican Address TEXT PODCAST VIDEO 12/03/11 Podcast of the address: Download MP3 for PODCAST || FULL TEXT TRANSCRIPT BELOW. ||

Full Text transcript of Senator Snowe’s Address:

Olympia Snowe Weekly Republican Address

“Hello, I’m Senator Olympia Snowe from Maine. In the coming days, the United States Senate will have a long overdue debate and vote on a constitutional amendment to require a balanced federal budget. And let there be no mistake, we have no greater duty than to once and for all obligate the government to live within its means and spend no more than what it takes in.

“I have been a longtime champion of a balanced budget amendment in both the House and Senate to prevent precisely the kind of fiscal quagmire we are enmeshed in today, as our federal government borrows an astounding 40 cents of every dollar we spend.

“The fact is, debts and deficits do matter. We have now entered what some have called an ‘economic danger zone.’ Our outstanding debt, which has now reached $15 trillion, has stunted economic growth, costing millions of American jobs. Just as disturbingly, the government currently pays a staggering $200 billion per year in interest to foreign countries that hold our treasury bonds…countries like China, and Russia. And that number is projected to increase to $1 trillion per year by 2021.

“Indeed, in the three short years since President Obama has taken office, the national debt has increased by nearly $5 trillion. So when the President stated last summer that, ‘We don’t need a constitutional amendment to do our jobs,’ well…not exactly. If Congress were capable of doing its job, it wouldn’t have added nearly $10 trillion to our national debt since 1997, the year a balanced budget amendment failed to pass the Senate by just a single vote. Just imagine where we would be today, if we had accomplished then what we must achieve now.

“So let’s be clear. The impending vote to amend the Constitution represents a choice between changing business as usual in Washington, or embracing the status quo that we can no longer afford. The status quo that has led to an inexcusable 950 straight days without passing a federal budget…the status quo that has brought us the first ever downgrade of America’s sterling triple-A credit rating…and the status quo that was exemplified by the so-called supercommittee’s inability to agree on $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction over the next 10 years.

“Even the automatic cuts resulting from the supercommittee’s failure to reach an agreement could all be undone by this or any future Congress – unless we pass a balanced budget amendment like those already adopted by 49 other states, which will bind each successive Congress in perpetuity.

“Now, I’ve heard all the arguments against this amendment. And we will hear them all again. Some even portray a balanced budget amendment as simply a ‘gimmick’ that isn’t worthy of Congress’ consideration. But I say, if this really were a gimmick, Congress would have passed it a long time ago.

“The bottom line is, the real reason many lawmakers don’t want a balanced budget amendment is the exact reason why it’s so essential. They don’t want their hands tied…they want to continue to spend without restraint. Their way has been to break budgets and amass more and more debt…all the while promising Congress will one day balance the budget. Well, as we sadly know, the promises were empty, the debt is astronomical, and their way hasn’t worked. Now, it’s time for our way.

“For too long, the burden has fallen to supporters of the balanced budget amendment to justify its necessity. Today, at this moment when our debt has exceeded the size of our entire economy, I ask you, the American people, to place the burden squarely where it belongs…on those who would oppose this measure. In typical Washington fashion, they’re hoping you won’t notice this historic vote is occurring. They are banking on you thinking it doesn’t matter.

“Well, with the national debt at $15 trillion and rising, let me suggest there are 15 trillion reasons to prove them wrong. Fifteen trillion reasons to make a stand. Fifteen trillion reasons to contact your Senators and urge them to support our balanced budget amendment…Senate Joint Resolution 10…so that we can finally seize the fiscal reins, and reclaim our future for our children and our grandchildren.

“Thank you for listening, and may God bless America.”

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TEXT and AUDIO FILE CREDIT: United States Senator Olympia Snowe 154 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20510-1903. Phone: (202) 224-5344. Fax: (202) 224-1946. Toll-Free in Maine: (800) 432-1599

VIDEO and IMAGE CREDIT: SenatorOlympiaSnowe