From Heritage...........I have done it this AM. Hope you will as well.
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Don't listen to the pundits in the mainstream media. Obamacare is not the law of land.
This week, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) will offer the "Restore Growth First" amendment to Senate's omnibus funding bill. The Cruz Amendment would halt the implementation of Obamacare by denying funding for the law. It is crucial that Obamacare be defunded before 2014, when its most egregious aspects are implemented.
>> MAKE THE CALL: Tell your Senators to Defund Obamacare.
If lawmakers sit idly by and allow Obamacare to be fully implemented, it will become ingrained in our nation's culture, making is nearly impossible to undo the damage. Americans will be subjected to higher healthcare costs, diminished quality of care, and decreased access to physicians. Not only this, but Obamacare is an unprecedented assault on liberty.
>> TAKE ACTION: Call your Senators and tell them to support t...
Conservatives know that individuals should be allowed to make healthcare decisions, not career bureaucrats in Washington. Similarly, the free market is the best way to control costs. Competition, not government interference, is the best means of ensuring quality of care. The Cruz Amendment is a critical step towards advancing freedom and restoring our healthcare system once again.
Thanks in advance for making the call,
Michigan’s John Dingell, the longest serving member of Congress and a liberal lion, once said, "If you let me write the procedure, and I let you write the substance, I'll [beat] you every time." All too often, procedure is policy. That is why Arizona’s Matt Salmon is urging his colleagues – especially his conservative colleagues – "to vote against House rules on specific bills that did not uphold conservative principles."
Russ Vought Political Director Heritage Action for America
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Monday, March 11, 2013
If there’s anything I have learned since returning to Congress, it’s that talk is still cheap, progress is still slow, and our liberties continue to erode every day.
When I last served in the House during the 1990s, it was common to say that we needed to control spending to protect future generations. Since I left, I have watched the national debt pile up under President George W. Bush, and then explode to unprecedented levels under President Obama. Indeed, both political parties are responsible for this. Our fiscal situation has now become so dire that it’s no longer just about protecting future generations — it’s about protecting the person retiring tomorrow.
This is what compelled me to return to Washington and get back in the fight to restore fiscal sanity.
Since being sworn in, I’ve had the opportunity to survey our problems from the inside out for more than two months. It’s not pretty. America now owes more in debt than the total of our national gross domestic product, and Congress is more dysfunctional than ever.
Sadly, far too many politicians in Washington lack the courage to do something to fix our problems. They are worried about the political implications of making the hard choices we so desperately need to cut spending and shrink government.
That’s unfortunate, and it needs to change.
During my previous tenure in Congress, House Republicans passed several pieces of meaningful legislation. We enacted welfare reform, pro-growth tax cuts, and achieved the holiest of grails — a balanced budget. In fact, by the time I left Congress in 2001 to honor my term-limits pledge, we had a budget surplus of more than $240 billion.
These successes were not easy to achieve. They came about because House conservatives were willing to confront GOP leadership when they occasionally got off-track rather than standing firm on the principles of economic freedom.
One tactic we used was to vote against House rules on specific bills that did not uphold conservative principles.
This is how it works: Before a bill can be considered in the House, there must first be a vote on the rule. The rule dictates how much time is spent on debate, how many amendments will be allowed, etc. Since the majority party is in charge of the House schedule, they are the ones who create the rules. The vote to pass these rules is almost always party-line affairs and usually goes unchallenged.
It’s not uncommon for strong, fiscally conservative Republicans in the House to support the rule on an ugly bill that grows government, but then vote against the underlying bill.
Yet it shouldn’t be that way. Why should a self-described fiscal conservative enable the passage of a bad bill by supporting the rule? If they oppose the underlying bill, then they should vote against any procedural move — including the rule — that enables the bill’s passage.
As Rep. John D. Dingell, Michigan Democrat, once said, “If you let me write the procedure, and I let you write the substance, I’ll [beat] you every time.”
More recently, had House conservatives voted against certain rules, they could have defeated several big-government bills that passed under a Republican House.
It’s time to shake things up and return the Republican Party to its roots of smaller government and less spending.
From this point forward, I will vote against the rule for bills that increase spending without offsetting spending cuts and encourage my other conservative colleagues to do the same. Similarly, if House leadership brings any more bills to the floor without first securing the support from the majority of the GOP conference, I will take the same action. If enough of my conservative colleagues in the House join me, we can unilaterally put an end to the growth of government that is moving us closer to Greece-like fiscal calamities.
Why would I be willing to challenge my Republican leadership? Because my allegiance will always be to the Constitution and the American people first and foremost, not to my political party.
The United Kingdom Special Forces have a motto — “who dares, wins.” It’s time for conservative Republicans in Congress to dare. The future of our nation depends on it.
Rep. Matt Salmon is an Arizona Republican
Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/mar/11/its-time-to-break-s...
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Pat, can I blast? This is one that I was hoping to get to today. If you are not careful you will have a job putting these together for the FCTP and I will give you blast permission.. :) Leanne
If you're not already aware. This is what's going on in DC while dangerous criminals are allowed back out on the streets. It's horrifying that this is happening to our citizens and veterans for protesting the hijacking of our election process. This is still happening! They are STILL being tortured and treated like full on terrorists.
You may not be aware of the typical things they're forced to go through...…
ContinuePosted by Babs Jordan on August 14, 2022 at 8:44am
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