July
28, 2006
The
Wrap-up
Campaigns
With 22 million in her campaign coffers,
Hillary is well-positioned for
her upcoming senatorial—and presidential—campaigns.
The Washington Post documents eight
issues sure to play a key role in the 2006 midterms.
Spending
Senator Lieberman unabashedly defends his
myriad pork projects and earmarks.
Heritage provides a model for precluding arbitrary government
spending in four
easy steps.
Barns, banks and billions:
American tax dollars are funding farms unaffected by drought
or disease and giving more than a full harvest to undeserving
farmers.
Club for Growth and the Council for Citizens against Government
Waste post their 2005 congressional scorecards.
E.J. Dionne outlines the
uphill battle conservatives face in trying to rein-in spending
largess as many Republicans facing reelection now tout the
pork they are bringing home to their constituents.
The probability of passage of the legislative
line item veto act is decreasing.
Terrorism
Charles Krauthammer details a
plan to end the senseless violence and rampant fighting initiated
and perpetuated by Hezbollah terrorists.
Iran’s new nuclear
program leaves the U.S. teetering on a precipice of
indecision.
Daniel Pipes opines that Israel needs to shake-off its war
weariness and defeat Hezbollah and its other terrorist
enemies.
Senator Santorum details the
significant threat that the U.S. faces in the global war
against Islamist fascists.
Courts
Progress on the judicial nominee front:
last week, the senate confirmed two
federal appeals court judges and two district court judges:
Neil Gorsuch to the 10th Circuit, Bobby Shepherd to 8th Circuit,
Daniel Jordan to the Southern District of Mississippi, and
Gustavo Gelpi to the District of Puerto Rico.
A federal judge has ruled
against Maryland’s misguided heath coverage law
targeting Wal-Mart.
Interested in a wide-ranging discussion on the U.S. judicial
system? Check out the Committee
for Justice blog.
Clever name changes do little
to hide the frivolous
litigation that taints the image of the Association of
American Trial Lawyers.
Miscellaneous
Apathetic House democrats fail to show
up to caucus meetings, prompting threats by Nancy Pelosi
to punish future truancy.
According
to John Kerry, “If I was president this [war
between Hezbollah and Israel] wouldn’t have happened.”
Bob Barr has filed a lawsuit against NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg,
arguing that the mayor’s crackdown on illegal gun dealers
was “careless,
willful and clearly illegal.”
To the cheers and applause of children, Nobel Peace Laureate
Betty Williams says she’d “love
to kill George Bush.”
Turnout at Elizabeth Dole’s latest fundraiser was lackluster,
raising questions about the viability of her continued leadership
at the National Republican Senatorial Committee.
How did your representatives vote on three recent bills
to bankroll
the DC metro, protect
the flag and destroy
embryos?
Keep abreast of the latest information on missile defense
technology and updates on tenuous international relations here.
Senator Voinovich recants his
initial opposition to the nomination of John Bolton as U.S.
ambassador to the U.N., while National Review recaps the
ambassador’s progress in said post during the past
year. (ACU urges the
senate foreign relations committee to give Bolton a speedy
confirmation.)
Claudia Rosett reports on
the egregious misuse of funds in the U.N. Oil-for-Food program,
and highlights the first-ever victory in the prosecution
of such misdeeds.
Human Events demands that
President Bush fulfill his oath of office and veto any bill
that contains unconstitutional provisions, rather than issuing
his now-infamous “signing statements.”
Although the preponderance of UN member nations seeks to
impose broad restrictions on
the ownership of guns, the Bush administration has been steadfast in
its efforts to impede the passage of any such resolution.
By Traylor Thebaut and Greg Harkins
with Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
July
18, 2006
The
Wrap-up
Spending
Congressman Mike Pence implores President
Bush to veto a bill that would allow federal funding for
embryonic stem cell research.
Congressman Jeff Flake reveals government
largesse in the form of a $150,000 earmark destined to address
the perils of obesity in Davis, California.
“H.R. 3496: The Biggest Pork Barrel Earmark in History?” Sad
but true, says Heritage—and ACU.
Check out the new
Web site for Senator Tom Coburn’s subcommittee
for federal financial management, government information
and international security.
Government-funded “sports
pork” is an entrenched and wholly unnecessary
use of taxpayers’ money, reports ESPN.
ATR releases its annual Cost
of Government Day Report, a measure of governmental
solvency and total taxpayers’ burden.
As he calls on conservatives to ratchet down excessive expenditures,
Grover Norquist asserts that
government spending is increasing at an unsustainable rate.
Immigration
Channeling both Ronald Reagan and
George W. Bush, 33 leading conservatives come
out for comprehensive immigration reform.
Energy
Soaring
oil prices have economists betting upwards of $80 on
the future value of oil.
CEI claims that
doom and gloom scenarios of global warming derive from misguided
science and cautions that energy policy reform would likely
result in a misallocation of scarce resources.
Miscellaneous
Jonathan Chait claims that “President
Bush is taking a bashing from conservative elites for supposed
ideological impurity. But what the right wing actually resents
is political failure.”
Corporate foundations in America gave a record $3.6 billion
in charitable
donations last year.
Last week the House passed legislation containing nearly
$50 million in additional expenditures over five years and
a $1.5 million decrease in government revenues over five
years, reports
the RSC.
The Hill reveals ironic
happenings in the capitol, from a convicted felon being honored
at the U.S. Capitol Historical Society to a congressman likening
immigrants to livestock.
The 527 Reform Act, an anti-free
speech provision of H.R. 513 that ACU
opposes, will likely
be sidelined in this congressional session.
FEMA’s “central
planning” role in allocating resources and emergency
response to disasters is replete with inefficient and ineffective
bureaucracy that stifles relief efforts and inhibits stabilized
recovery.
Former President Clinton praises President
Bush’s efforts on immigration reform and criticizes
Republicans who seek to divide Americans on this polemic
issue.
As House discussion over the minimum wage increases, the
RSC offers a
selection of pertinent information on the history, enforcement
and significance of minimum wages in the marketplace.
Congressman Steve Chabot delves into the issue of Taiwan’s
freedom from Chinese control and hints toward impending
trouble for the U.S. if the diplomatic sovereignty of Taiwan
goes wobbly.
Michael Massing brings some much-needed
context to the now-infamous essay, “The
Israel Lobby” (PDF) by John Mearsheimer and Stephen
Walt.
By Traylor
Thebaut and Greg Harkins with Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
July
7, 2006
The
Wrap-up
Terrorism
Laurie Mylroie reveals a
basic misconception that Americans have about who represents
the true enemy in Iraq.
Charles Krauthammer analyzes the
wretched motivations behind the Palestinians' continued bombing
of Israel even after the surrender of Gaza.
The White House details (PDF)
progress made in Iraq in the past two years despite the efforts
of an unrelenting terrorist insurgency.
Campaigns
“McCain sitting
pretty for 2008 race,” reports Ralph
Hallow.
Spending
The New York Times reports on
bipartisan efforts to effectuate transparency in government
spending via an online public database of government expenditures.
Misappropriation of agricultural
subsidies, amounting to billions of dollars, continues
unabated with little chance for much-needed reform.
Heritage’s Brian Riedl and
Baker Spring explain how
members of congress unapologetically shortchange much-needed
defense spending in favor of domestic pet projects.
Conservatism
In their new book, One Party
Country: The Republican Plan for Dominance in the 21st
Century, Tom Hamburger and Peter Wallsten detail the
resilience and permanence of the GOP in the face of sagging
poll numbers and seemingly waning support. Chapter
1 (PDF) of this exposé goes behind the scenes
with Republican movers and shakers, including ACU chairman
David Keene and board member Grover Norquist.
To his dismay, Jonah Goldberg finds that
conservatives and liberals alike are turning to the “redemptive
power and professional competence of the state.”
Domestic
Issues
Susette Kelo reveals her
own struggle with eminent domain abuse in New London, CT.
Heritage gives Congress poor grades for the third
quarter on key domestic policy issues.
President Bush may tout himself as a proponent of free trade,
but Bruce Bartlett asserts that
it is a guise for protectionist political maneuvering that
hurts the American economy.
Immigration
Not unexpectedly, the Pence
plan for immigration reform has its critics.
Deroy Murdock criticizes the
hypocrisy of the Bush administration with respect to immigration
and multilingualism.
Miscellaneous
Deroy Murdock reviews the
disturbing record of the New York Times in elevating
the “public interest” above national security.
By Traylor
Thebaut with Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
June
30, 2006
The
Wrap-up
Human Events calls
on the Justice Department to prosecute those who leaked
information about the terrorist finance tracking program
to the New York Times.
Former New York State Attorney General Dennis Vacco suggests that
the Restaurant Opportunity Center of New York “illegally
organizes minority unions and abuses its nonprofit status.”
Ron Suskind reveals al
Qaeda’s aborted plot to unleash poison gas on New York’s
subway system.
James Taranto observes the
hypocrisy of billionaires like Warren Buffett, who is a vocal
supporter of the death tax but has no intention to pay it
himself.
Pork-barrel spenders beware: the Line
Item Veto Act has passed in the House.
Cato’s Tim Sandefur reports that
eminent domain abuses by bureaucrats and developers are still
in very much alive even after the Kelo ruling.
As a result of a complaint filed by ACU, the FEC
has levied a $60K fine against the presidential campaign
of John Edwards.
The New York Times analyzes the
implications and addresses the vulnerabilities of the theretofore
secret terrorist finance tracking program.
By targeting disenfranchised and underprivileged children, school
choice programs are becoming more prevalent nationwide
while making future program enhancements much easier to
pass the scrutiny of legislators.
Steve Chapman finds that
federal spending by both Democrats and Republicans has reached
an all time high.
Ghana may have knocked the U.S. out of the World Cup, but
not even Europe can touch our system
of higher education.
Radley Balko reviews the
futile endeavors of no-knock raids in Buffalo, New York.
Victor Davis Hanson observes that
selective compliance with established laws fosters illegal
immigration and undermines our legal system.
Through the Holy Grail of licensure,
which makes the qualifications to become a doctor unnecessarily
complex and expensive, the American Medical Association conspires
with the government to squelch competition and thwart innovation.
Victor Davis Hanson argues that
a minority of critics of the Iraq war, “for either
base or misguided reasons[,] really does wish us to lose.”
Both the New
York Times and the Washington
Post detail the financial woes stemming from
the erroneous and misleading financial disclosure of
Congressman Alan Mollohan.
The Wall Street Journal recaps the
details of the president’s surprise visit to Iraq.
Alumni from President Reagan’s 1976 presidential primary celebrate the
30th anniversary of his victory at the Reagan Ranch.
AEI’s Veronique de Rugy suggests reforms
Congress should enact to curb supplemental spending.
Steve Masty, a former speechwriter to President Reagan, argues that
the U.S. is losing the war on terror because we alienate
moderate Muslims from politics and civic engagement.
By Traylor
Thebaut with Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
June
28, 2006
Death
Tax Wrap-up
Last week the House passed the
Permanent Estate Tax Relief Act (HR 5638), 269-156. The Senate read the
bill on Monday for a second time and placed it on its legislative
calendar.
The House Ways and Means Committee details (PDF)
the bill’s tax relief provisions.
"Hard working Americans should be able to pass on their
homes and businesses to their loved ones without the federal
government taking an additional cut,” says Speaker
of the House Dennis Hastert.
Bloomberg’s Ryan Donmoyer discusses different
perspectives on the legislation. Many believe that the bill
is a movement in the right direction to relieve all Americans
from an unnecessary and archaic law, while others view
it as the Paris Hilton Act, affecting only the wealthiest
of taxpayers.
Cato's Chris Edwards responds (PDF)
to those who believe that repeal will only help the wealthy.
More information on the death tax is available from the
heroic American
Family Business Institute, whose sole purpose is to eliminate
the death tax.
By Elizabeth
Moody | Comments?
|
June
23, 2006
Kelo Wrap-up
Today (6/23) marks the one-year anniversary of Kelo
v. New London (PDF), the case in which the Supreme
Court drastically curtailed private property rights.
Homeowners and small business owners are sending a letter
to the Senate today asking that
HR 4128, the Private Property Rights Protection Act, be moved
out of committee.
The Boston Globe reports that
the two remaining homeowners in Fort Trumble, CA, have reached
a provisional agreement with the development agency that
wants their homes.
The Institute for Justice notes Kelo's
perverse effect: by opening
the floodgates for developers to capture land, the ruling
also galvanized
efforts for reform.
Investor's Business Daily reports that
eminent domain is now supplanting the very nature of competitive
market forces in one town in California.
The Castle Coalition uncovers the "myths
and realities" of eminent domain abuse in the United
States.
Radley Balko argues that
the idea of a man's home as a refuge, already the victim
of the Kelo ruling, is now even more compromised by the recently
decided case, Hudson v. Michigan.
By Traylor
Thebaut | Comments?
|
June
23, 2006
The
Wrap-up
Which
governor has “one of the most consistently conservative
tenures in recent American political history”? Hint:
he governs the same state President Bush once did, and
his first name is my last name.
$37
million for technology the Pentagon couldn't use and
didn't want?
Free
(ACU board member) Kirby Wilbur, pleads National
Review.
Robert Byrd savors his reputation as the king
of pork, yet his home state of West Virginia remains
at the bottom of every economic indicator.
David Boaz explains the
dissolution of the small-government ideal within the GOP.
Stephen Breyer’s dissenting opinion in Hudson
v. Michigan, the recently and wrongly decided case
concerning illegal no-knock raids, cites Radley Balko’s
worrying study of
warrants increasingly served by SWAT teams, in the wee
hours of the night, armed with "flash bang" grenades,
black masks and overpowering weaponry.
Joe Klein recaps the “relentless
day-to-day ugly” that has consumed the senatorial
tenure of Bill Frist.
A 1997 Cato essay shows why “government-sponsored
entities,” like Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, are corporate
welfare kings and queens.
By Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
June
15, 2006
The
Wrap-up
The WSJ editorial board re-names Congressman
Jerry "Minority Maker" Lewis
(R-CA) the “Earmarker
in Chief.”
Both Heritage and Senator
Coburn’s office detail the emergency supplemental
that recently came out of conference. ACU has the roll
call for the House and
the Senate.
$825,000
for a city swimming pool? Thank appropriator Jerry
Lewis.
Deroy Murdock shows how
the death tax endangers the environment.
The Washington
Examiner observes that while President
Bush has quietly been racking up small victories, the
media continue to report on an administration on the
skids.
John Tierney shows how
immigrants do not eliminate jobs, but create them.
Tom Friedman explains the
geopolitics of environmentalism.
Shmuel Rosner, the chief U.S. correspondent for the Israeli
paper Ha’aretz, offers advice
to the U.S., based on Israel’s experience with its
barrier vis-à-vis the Palestinians, as we embark on
building a fence across our Mexican border.
Nick Kristof extols the economic virtues of the “maligned
sweatshop.”
Charles Krauthammer, who grew up in the bilingual and thus
divisive Canadian province of Québec, argues that
a unifying language—namely, declaring English America’s
official tongue—is a prerequisite for social stability.
Cato’s Roger Pilon reviews a
recent DC Circuit decision that might open the way for patients
to seek potentially live-saving drugs while the F.D.A. drags
its feet.
Radley Balko observes the
hypocrisy of those members of Congress who instantly decried
the F.B.I. raid on one of their colleague’s Capitol
Hill offices.
Is the world running out of oil? Reason’s Ron
Bailey surveys the
evidence.
By Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
June
7, 2006
The
Wrap-up
Is support for the Federal Marriage Amendment bigotry
disguised as principle, as Senator Kennedy alleges?
Is the West Wing of GWB an echo chamber, wherein yes-men
surround the president? The evidence says
otherwise.
Townhall’s Jennifer Biddison finds that
the “culture of corruption” permeates both parties.
David Leonhardt of the NYT finds that
Americans are living in the best of times.
Former congressman John Kasich proposes de-federalizing
the gas tax. An added bonus: this “would eliminate
the most egregious source of money for congressional pork—the
federal highway bill.”
Bloomberg’s Amity Shlaes reviews the
hottest mutual fund—the Free Enterprise Action Fund—which
seeks to hold corporate executives responsible to their shareholders
rather than to special (usually liberal) interest groups,
like environmentalists.
An oldie but goodie: A
History and Overview of Estate Taxes in the United States,
from the Tax Foundation.
By Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
June
1 , 2006
The
Wrap-up
Another common-sense,
good-government idea from Congressmen Henserling and
Pence: reauthorize agency budgets every five years, or
the budgets die.
Put in a few years on the Hill, then become a lobbyist wining
and dining your former bosses. Sound like fun? Then sign-up
for the “revolving
door” that is the House Appropriations Committee.
The FEC upholds free
speech for 527s.
86 percent of the American people say the
FBI should be allowed to search a Congress member's office
if it has a warrant.
America may be ready for a new political party, speculates Peggy
Noonan.
Robert Samuelson picks
up where Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation left
off in running the numbers on the Senate's immigration
bill. But like his Cato colleague Alan
Reynolds, Dan Griswold takes a
sledgehammer to these alarmist analyses.
Iran dismisses America's
offer for direct nuclear talks as a “propaganda move.”
The distortions from Fahrenheit 9/11 keep coming:
this time, a veteran who lost both his limbs in Iraq alleges that
Michael Moore falsely portrayed him as anti-war.
More praise for the Pence
plan on immigration, from the Indianapolis
Star editorial
board.
Jeff Jacoby joins the
ever-expanding chorus of disgruntled fiscal conservatives.
Hillary Clinton “defies easy characterization”?
So says a front-pager
in the Post.
Cato’s energy experts, Jerry Taylor and Peter van
Doren, continue to
debunk myths about high oil prices.
By Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
May
31, 2006
Exxon
Exposed?
Truth never seems to get in the way of the extreme Left
when it comes to demonizing American capitalism and industry.
Such was the case this week when a cadre of environmental
groups got together to accuse ExxonMobil and President Bush
of having conspired to invade Iraq in order to gain access
to that country’s oil reserves.
At a Dallas, Texas, press conference held on May 30th, Valley
Reed, the spokeswoman for an outfit called Consumers for
Peace (is there also a group called Consumers for War?
Never mind.), declared, “We believe that ExxonMobil
. . . has been involved in conceiving of and then promoting
the invasion and occupation of Iraq. When the Iraq war was
being cooked up, we think ExxonMobil was in the kitchen.”
Ms. Reed conveniently ignores that “regime change” in
Iraq was the official policy of the environmental movement’s
favorite president, Bill Clinton. As Clinton said on February
17, 1998:
"If Saddam rejects peace and we have to use force,
our purpose is clear. We want to seriously diminish the threat
posed by Iraq's weapons of mass destruction program."
Similarly, recall the words of Clinton’s Secretary
of State Madeline Albright (February 18, 1998):
"Iraq is a long way from [here], but what happens there
matters a great deal here. For the risks that the leaders
of a rogue state will use nuclear, chemical or biological
weapons against us or our allies is the greatest security
threat we face."
And what has Al “Inconvenient Truth” Gore
had to say about Iraq?
"We know that he [Saddam] has stored secret supplies
of biological and chemical weapons throughout his country.
Iraq's search for weapons of mass destruction has proven
impossible to deter and we should assume that it will continue
for as long as Saddam is in power” (September 23, 2002).
Was Al Gore fronting for American energy companies when
he sought the overthrow of Saddam during the first Gulf War?
Here’s what the former vice president said on September
23, 2003:
“I was one of the few Democrats in the U.S. Senate
who supported the war resolution in 1991. And I felt betrayed
by the first Bush administration's hasty departure from the
battlefield” (September 23, 2003).
Al Gore felt “betrayed” because the first Bush
administration did not take out Saddam? In whose “kitchen” was
Gore cooking?
So much for the ExxonMobil/Bush conspiracy.
Another brilliant participant in the May 30th press conference
was Shawnee Hoover, campaign director of a project called
Exxpose Exxon. In her remarks Ms. Hoover opined that, “ExxonMobil
is using its profits and its power to continue to keep this
country addicted to oil.”
Earth to Shawnee: the world runs on oil. The world today
consumes the equivalent of close to 230 million barrels of
oil per day. By the year 2030, with population growth and
the ever-expanding world economy, world energy needs are
expected to reach nearly 335 million barrels per day of oil-equivalent.
That’s about a 50-percent increase in the next 25 years.
Where will the energy come from? Global oil use will expand
about 1.4 percent annually, held down by major improvements
in vehicle fuel economy (a tip of the hat to the great folks
in Detroit!).
Natural gas and coal use will each expand annually at about
1.8 percent as the world’s need for electricity mushrooms.
Nuclear power, hydro power and biomass are expected to grow
respectively about 1.4 percent, 2 percent and 1.3 percent
annually.
Ms. Hoover will be pleased to know that wind and solar energy
growth will likely average about 11 percent per year! Isn’t
that wonderful? Sure is, but even with this impressive growth,
wind and solar energy will make up only about 1 percent of
total world energy by 2030.
Creating all this new energy will require huge investments.
In 2005 ExxonMobil spent over $700 million in technology
R&D, and $3.2 billion since 2001. And they are not alone—together
the major oil companies are spending billions each and every
year on research into better, more efficient, more environmentally
responsible ways to produce energy.
The truth of the matter is that ExxonMobil is a global company
with a presence in about 200 countries. The company has the
largest inventory of discovered oil and gas resources of
any energy company in the world as well as being the largest
refiner and marketer of petroleum products. Oh yeah, they
also generate electric power in Hong Kong.
I’d say, thank goodness America and the world has
ExxonMobil.
By Bill
Lauderback | Comments?
|
May
30, 2006
The
Wrap-up
As
Sensenbrenner goes, so goes immigration legislation,
observes the Weekly Standard's Matthew Continetti,
author of the new book, The K Street Gang.
John Fund calls Congressman Pence's immigration
plan a "workable
compromise."
The Washington Times reports
on the reaction of conservatives to the F.B.I. raid
of Congressman William Jefferson's Capitol Hill office.
Tom Friedman explains why
he refuses to give up on the Iraq war.
The NYT highlights the "battle
for the soul" of the GOP: fiscal conservatives vs. appropriators.
Cable companies should finally join the marketplace and
compete for subscribers, argues Phil
Kerpen of the Free Enterprise Fund.
Tax dollars fund advocacy of illegal immigration, finds Citizens
against Government Waste.
The co-founder of Greenpeace, Patrick Moore, comes
out for nuclear energy.
By Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
May
25, 2006
The
Wrap-up
Senator Rick Santorum calls the
immigration bill in his chamber the “worst possible
way to reform our system.”
The Wall Street Journal reports on “cracks
in Republican unity,” and CongressDailyAM names names.
Ed Meese explains why
the Senate immigration bill is an “amnesty by any other
name.”
Harold Meyerson observes the
ironies of neoconservativism.
Peter Wehner, director of the White House’s Office
of Strategic Initiatives, debunks the
perennial criticisms of the Iraq war.
Michael Novak salutes GWB,
the “bravest president.”
Time.com reports on
Congressman Mike Pence’s proposal
for immigration reform.
Cato’s Alan Reynolds challenges the
immigration stats alarmingly compiled
by Robert Rector of Heritage.
By Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
May
22, 2006
The
Wrap-up
On the heels of a George
Will op-ed, Ed Crane considers the
implications of John McCain’s preference for “clean
government” over the First Amendment.
The Hartford Courant details how
conservatives are dominating Congress’ agenda.
Harry Alford, the president and CEO of the National Black
Chamber of Commerce, argues that
a windfall profits tax will only hurt consumers.
Cato’s Jerry Taylor and Peter Van Doren note the
hypocrisy of Republican do-somethingism over gas prices.
Peggy Noonan thinks a
November defeat for the GOP would be a victory for fiscal
responsibility.
Colin McNickle, editor of one of the few libertarian editorial
newspaper pages (the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review), reflects on
the connection between ignorance and the price of gas.
By Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
|
May
19, 2006
Immigration
Wrap-up
Earlier this week President Bush addressed the
nation.
The White House offers an
overview of the president’s plan.
The Los Angeles Times analyzes the
president’s National Guard proposal and observes that
the recent push for reform is a way to court GOP and Latino
voters.
The New York Times opines that
immigration is Bush’s “last major domestic issue
and a test of his remaining powers as president.”
Charles Krauthammer argues that
the president's idea of border enforcement is "farcical."
The Senate voted yesterday (5/18) to make English the national
language of the United States, reports the Washington
Post.
By Elizabeth
Moody | Comments?
|
May
17, 2006
Isakson
Amendment Exposes Election Year Politics
Yesterday afternoon Senator Isakson (R-GA) offered his “secure
the borders first” amendment to the immigration legislation
to prohibit the granting of legal status, or adjustment of
current status, to any individual who enters or entered the
United States in violation of federal law, unless the border
security measures the bill authorizes are fully completed
and fully operational.
The amendment failed (40 yeas, 55 nays, five abstentions).
Its defeat is being hailed as a victory for the president’s
position and foreshadows the margin by which the overall
bill will pass in the senate.
On this particular vote, the Democrats carried the day for
the president. 37 Dems (including Jeffords) voted against
the amendment, seven voted for it, and Senator Rockefeller
(D-WV) abstained. By contrast, only 18 Republicans voted
against the amendment, and a majority of them (33) voted
for it, with four abstaining.
Of the seven Democrats who voted affirmatively, four face
re-election in November:
Byrd (D-WV)*
Conrad (D-ND)*
Nelson (D-NE)*
Stabenow (D-MI)*
* indicates re-election in November 2006
(It’s tempting to argue that the three Dems who voted
affirmatively but are not up for re-election this year—Dorgan
(D-ND), Landrieu (D-LA) and Wyden (D-OR)—reliably vote
against anything the president is for.)
Of the five senators who abstained, four were Republicans:
Cochran (R-MS)
Gregg (R-NH)
Lott (R-MS)*
McCain (R-AZ)
Of the 18 Republicans who voted against the amendment, four
face re-election in November: Chafee (R-RI); DeWine (R-OH);
Lugar (R-IN) and Snowe (R-ME).
The Republicans voting negatively were:
Bennett (R-UT)
Brownback (R-KS)
Chafee (R-RI) *
Coleman (R-MN)
Collins (R-ME)
Craig (R-ID)
DeWine (R-OH)*
Graham (R-SC)
Hagel (R-NE)
Lugar (R-IN)*
Martinez (R-FL)
Murkowski (R-AK)
Shelby (R-AL)
Snowe (R-ME)*
Specter (R-PA)
Stevens (R-AK)
Voinovich (R-OH)
Warner (R-VA)
A majority of Republicans voted against the immigration
bill as it came out of the Judiciary Committee. It appears
that the bill now being debated on the floor may pass with
a majority of Republicans again voting against it.
By Bill
Lauderback | Comments?
|
May
16, 2006
The
Wrap-up
Robert Rector of Heritage asserts that
the Senate immigration bill will allow 100 million new legal
immigrants over the next 20 years.
The Los Angeles Times investigates how
Congressman Ken Calvert (R-CA) profited from his earmarks.
Radley Balko observes that
the recommendations of investment guru Jim Cramer derive
not from a company’s performance in the marketplace
but its ability to lobby Washington.
David Brooks concedes that
conservatives have abandoned their Reagan-Goldwater heritage.
Cato’s Ted Carpenter calls the
Bush administration myopic for snubbing the Taiwanese president
during his recent trip here.
George Will shows that
even John McCain admits, quote, campaign finance reform,
unquote, is unconstitutional.
Tim Lee tells the
advocates of “net neutrality” to calm down.
FreedomWorks explains the
debate over “net neutrality.”
By Jonathan
Rick | Comments?
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May
1, 2006
Corporate
Welfare of the Worst Kind
Is $500 million for Northrop
Grumman necessary to save this defense contractor?
Go to www.stockcharts.com and
look up the stock (ticker symbol is NOC). You’ll see
that at the time of Hurricane Katrina, Northrop’s stock
was trading at about $54/share; after Katrina, it bottomed
out at $52.17 (October 11, 2005). In recent days it has traded
as high as $71.37/share (April 24, 2006).
Northrop closed today at $67.24, up $0.34 on the day. Its
capitalization is $23.84 billion. By contrast, at the time
of Katrina, Northrop’s market capitalization was about
$19.15 billion. Thus, since Katrina, Northrop’s market
cap has exploded by $4.69 billion, or a whopping 24.5% in
just seven months.
And this company needs a $500 million bailout? Its ship
building division, to which the money is earmarked, reported
1Q06 sales of about $1.1
billion and a profit margin of 6%. That is down only
slightly from the 7.1% margin the division posted in 1Q05.
The prudent investor, recognizing the strength of this great
American company, would have been wise to invest in Northrop
imediately after Katrina artificially caused its stock price
to slide slightly. That investor would have realized a gain
of about 25% in seven months—an annualized return of
about 43%!
Good luck to Senator Coburn in his efforts tomorrow to remove
the earmark for Northrop from the supplemental.
By Bill
Lauderback | Comments?
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April
19, 2006
How
Mexico Treats Its Immigrants
As the debate on immigration reform continues in the U.S.
Senate, it might be instructive for the senators to read
the Constitution of Mexico. Consider Article 33:
“[T]he Federal Executive shall have the exclusive
power to compel any foreigner whose remaining he may deem
inexpedient to abandon the national territory immediately
and without the necessity of previous legal action.”
Can one even imagine President Bush or the Attorney General
having such blanket authority to expel foreigners—those
here legally and illegally—without due process? No
way.
Such a thing could never—and should never—happen
in the United States. Yet the Mexican Constitution explicitly
authorizes this power.
In recent weeks, hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants
and their supporters have engaged in mass demonstrations
in the U.S. to pressure our senators into allowing them amnesty.
How would these protestors be treated in Mexico? According
to Article 33,
“Foreigners may not in any way participate in the
political affairs of the country.”
It’s rather ironic, isn’t it? Illegal immigrants
who have taken to the streets in the U.S. to demand amnesty
would be arrested for doing the same thing in Mexico.
Indeed, the Mexican Constitution
actually grants Mexican citizens the right to arrest illegal
immigrants. Article 16 states,
“In cases of flagrante delicto,
any person may arrest the offender and his accomplices, turning
them over without delay to the nearest authorities.”
Can one imagine the U.S. government granting such a right
to the Minutemen who
voluntarily patrol our borders? Absolutely not.
With respect to issues of employment
and receiving government benefits, Article 32 of the Mexican
Constitution provides:
“Mexicans shall have priority
over foreigners under equality of circumstances for all classes
of concessions and for all employment, positions, or commissions
of the Government in which the status of citizenship is not
indispensable.”
Let’s face it: the United States is—and always
has been—the most immigration-friendly country in the
world. We welcome the
tired, the poor and the huddled masses of the world yearning
to breathe free. We are a nation of immigrants. And that
should not change.
But, at the same time, we should not be afraid to demand
law and order and to secure our borders.
Posted
by Bill Lauderback | Comments?
|
April
13, 2006
"The
Minority Maker"
Dear Fellow Conservatives,
It is becoming ever more apparent that the House Republican
leadership is dangerously out of touch with the
responsibilities of governing. The latest refusal by House
Speaker Dennis Hastert, House Majority Leader John Boehner,
and Majority Whip Roy Blunt to honor their commitment to
conservatives on the budget is tantamount to surrender. The
refusal by Jerry Lewis, chairman of the House Appropriations
Committee, to rein in spending is a slap in the face to the
efforts of conservative House members, led by Republican
Study Committee Chairman Mike Pence, to re-instill fiscal
sanity.
While it is rare for ACU to send
our members an editorial, we believe that the below one,
from today’s Wall Street Journal, merits your
attention.
****
The Minority Maker
The Wall Street Journal
April 13, 2006
If Republicans lose control of Congress in November, they
might want to look back at last Thursday as the day it was
lost. That's when the big spenders among House Republicans
blew up a deal between the leadership and rank-in-file to
impose some modest spending discipline.
Unlike the collapse of the immigration
bill, this fiasco can't be blamed on Senate Democrats. This
one is all about Republicans and their refusal to give up
their power to spend money at will and pass out "earmarks" like
a bartender offering drinks on the house. The chief culprits
are the House Appropriators, led by Committee Chairman Jerry
Lewis of California and his 13 subcommittee chairmen known
as "cardinals." If Republicans lose the House—and
they are well on their way—Mr. Lewis deserves the moniker
of the minority maker.
****
Continue reading here.
See Lewis's reponse here,
courtesy of our good friends at Human Events.
Posted
by Bill Lauderback | Comments?
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March
31, 2006
What
a Difference a Quarter Makes
On January 1, 2006, when the first quarter of the calendar
year began, the federal debt stood at $8.170 trillion. Today,
the last day of the first quarter, the federal debt stands
at $8.365 trillion—an increase of $195 billion in just
three months.
According to the latest baseline estimates from the Congressional
Budget Office, federal spending over the next five fiscal
years (2007-2011) will total $14.9 trillion. The CBO further
estimates that the aggregate deficits for these same five
years will total $1.07 trillion.
But fear not fellow conservatives: the House Committee on
the Budget has a “plan” to
tackle this problem.
According to the committee’s Fact Sheet, the FY
2007 House Budget Resolution will allow for $2.732
trillion in new budget authority in which “discretionary” spending
will increase 3.6% and so-called mandatory spending will
increase 3.8%.
The budget committee calls the 3.6% increase in “discretionary” spending
a “near freeze.” Hmmm. When the nation’s
gross domestic product increases at an annual rate of 3.6%,
do economists call this a “near freeze”? Current
estimates for our 2006 GDP are 3.4%—a rate that President
Bush said “looks
very strong.”
The budget committee is proudly predicting that during reconciliation
this year, the budget will include “$6.8 billion in
savings in mandatory spending over five years.” Now
that’s something to stand up cheer—$6.8 billion
in “savings” over five years! Is one to conclude
that the “$39.5 billion in savings over five years” in
last year’s approved reconciliation package was too
much for the budget committee to swallow again this year?
So how much of a reduction is $6.8 billion? A whopping 0.04%
off the projected $14.9 trillion that the CBO estimates Congress
will spend during the next five years.
That, my friends, is what we call “fiscal discipline.”
Posted
by Bill Lauderback | Comments?
|
March
24, 2006
Krauthammer
Deserves a Pulitzer
He hasn't won a Pulitzer since
1987, but Charles Krauthammer's recent essays (off
the top of my head) on Harriet
Miers, torture, gay
marriage, and civil
war in Iraq, for their unique perspicuity, cogency,
and ability to spur debate, eminently qualify him for this
year's prize for commentary (even
if the first two essays appeared late last year).
If Krauthammer does not receive at least a nomination, then, as is the
case with Victor Danson Hanson—who
has spent the past five years explaining the war on terror with eloquence,
passion and historical context—it seems that the prizes (like the
Oscars) are more political than I thought.
Posted
by Jonathan Rick | Comments?
|
March
21, 2006
Conservative
Big Government?
In 1996, President Clinton proclaimed that “[t]he
era of big government is over.” In recent years,
however, federal spending, and thus the size of government,
has exploded. The following are quotes from recognized
Republicans that seem to explain and sanction this trend:
1. Fred
Barnes, March 2006:
President Bush thinks, and I agree,
that we are not going to have smaller government. Ronald
Reagan tried to do it and gave up. Newt Gingrich did it and
gave up. We are going to have a government of big size. .
. .
[I]t's unrealistic to think it is ever going to happen in
our country. Bush recognizes it. He's going to use big government
for conservative ends.
2. The
chairman and president of the American Enterprise Institute,
late 2005 / early 2006:
Over the past six decades, AEI scholars
have pledged their allegiance to the idea of limited but
energetic government.
3. David
Brooks, Sept. 2005:
Bush has muddled his way toward .
. . a positive use of government that is neither big government
liberalism nor antigovernment libertarianism. He’s
been willing to spend heaps of federal dollars, but he wants
that spending to go to programs that enhance individual initiative
and personal responsibility.
4. Fred
Barnes, Aug. 2003:
[We] believe in using what would normally
be seen as liberal means—activist government—for
conservative ends. And they’re willing to spend more
and increase the size of government in the process. . . .
Big government conservatives prefer to be in favor of
things because that puts them on the political offensive.
Promoting spending cuts/minimalist government doesn’t
do that.
5. William
F. Buckley, July 2001:
What conservatives are going to have
to get used to is that certain fights we have waged are,
quite simply, lost. It is fine, in our little seminars, to
make the case against a federal Social Security program,
but it pays to remind ourselves that nobody outside the walls
of that classroom is going to pay much attention to our Platonic
exercises.
6. George
W. Bush, July 1999:
There is another destructive mindset:
the idea that if government would only get out of the way,
all our problems would be solved. An approach with no higher
goal, no nobler purpose than “Leave us alone.”
Posted
by Jonathan Rick | Comments?
|
March
5, 2006
Taliban:
Yale Welcomes You
If you're a high ranking member of the Taliban, Yale University
welcomes you with open arms. However, if you are a patriotic
American who would like to organize a ROTC (Reserve Officer
Training Corp) chapter at Yale, or want to speak to a military
recruiter on campus, you're told to take a hike.
As sick and shocking as it may sound, that is exactly what is happening
at Yale University. On February 26, according to the New York Times
Magazine, Yale University admitted Sayed Rahmatullah Hashemi, the
Deputy Foreign Secretary of the Taliban, to the University.
This is the same Yale University that actively prohibits students
from organizing ROTC chapters and seeks to deny students the right to
speak to military recruiters on campus.
This Is No Innocent Bureaucratic
SNAFU.
Hashemi may not be a fan of the United States, but he certainly loves
it at Yale. As he told the New York Times: "In some ways
I'm the luckiest person in the world... I could have ended up in Guantanamo
Bay. Instead I ended up at Yale."
And it would appear that Yale loves him too. Or at least his money—that
is... if he's paying to go to Yale?
Here's what some members of the Yale community think:
Benjamin Gonzalez, a Yale freshman told the New York Sun: "If
we didn't accept him and try to learn from him, how could we say we're
this diverse body and institution of higher learning? If we just dismiss
him, what does that say about us?"
Well for starters Mr. Gonzales, it might say that Yale students are patriotic
freedom loving Americans.
Mark Oppenheimer, a Yale graduate and editor of the New Haven Advocate,
told the Sun, "He sounds like a remarkable guy."
A statement like that makes you wonder what this young man thinks of
Josef Stalin or Pol Pot.
Or how about this quote from the Sun taken from an interview
with an official in the Yale admissions office? Richard Shaw said the
admissions office had once had another foreigner of Rahmatullah's caliber
apply for special-student status. "We lost him to Harvard,'' he
says. "I didn't want that to happen again."
Ruhmatullah? Apparently Shaw fancies himself as being on a first name
basis with Hashemi.
Keith Urbahn, a senior at Yale told the Sun that even though
there was a feeling of "consternation" among his conservative
friends that "most people on campus are not really upset."
And What about Our Men and Women in Uniform?
It's no secret that our institutions of higher learning are out of control
and being run—in many cases—by left-wing ideologues who
seek to indoctrinate the youth of America.
According to columnist John Fund:"Larry Summers resigned as president
of Harvard when it became clear he would lose a no-confidence vote held
by politically correct faculty members furious at his efforts to allow
[US military cadets] on campus, his opposition to a drive to have Harvard
divest itself of corporate investments in Israel, and his efforts to
make professors work harder."
And we all know the story of Ward Churchill, who is still on the staff
of the University of Colorado even though he makes statements against
the United States and has been shown to be an academic fraud.
But in this case, Yale has simply gone too far. What kind of message
does this send to our brave young men and women in uniform who fought
and died to bring freedom to the people of Afghanistan?
What kind of message does this send to the families of the victims of
9/11 who lost loved ones in the fight against terror?
What kind of message does this send to the rest of the world?
Posted
by Bill Lauderback | Comments?
|
February
7, 2006
Bush's
Bloated Budget
President Bush submitted his proposed federal
budget for Fiscal Year 2007 to Congress this week and it’s
a whopper—$2.77 trillion. During President Bush’s
first year in office, the federal government spent $1.86
trillion. For 2007 the President is proposing that the federal
government spend 48.9% more than it did when he took office.
Is the President’s budget bloated? You bet it is. The federal government
is expected to take in $2.416 trillion in tax revenue in FY 2007. That’s
money coming directly out of taxpayers’ pockets. But the President’s
number crunchers can’t find a way to run the government on only
$2.416 Trillion. The result will be another monster deficit in 2007 of
about $354 billion.
The President brags that the 114 programs his budget proposes to eliminate
will save $15 billion next year. Hmmm. $15 billion is only one-half of
one percent of $2.77 Trillion. That’s something to brag about?
But according to the liberals in congress the President is to be shamed
for not spending enough!
Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid immediately lambasted the budget,
calling it “immoral” and “irresponsible” because
it proposed some modest reductions in some social programs. What utter
nonsense. During Bush’s first five years in office, anti-poverty
spending has surged 39% to a record 16% of all federal spending.
Here’s the math: In five years under George W. Bush, Health Care
Assistance spending has increased 40%; Food Assistance is up 49%; Housing
Assistance is up 26%.
Liberals have never seen a spending increase they did not love, nor a
spending reduction (except when it comes to the military) they did not
despise.
One can only imagine the level of spending we’d be seeing if a
President John Kerry were now submitting his proposed 2007 budget. Senator
Kerry issued a statement on February 6th saying the President’s
proposed budget "undermines the values of compassion, community
and responsibility that define the best of America.”
To translate Senator Kerry’s statement, replace the words “compassion,
community and responsibility” with “making more Americans
dependent on the federal government for everything.” Thus: “Undermines
the values of making more Americans dependent on the federal government
for everything that defines the best of America.”
Stay tuned as this blog will have much more to say about federal spending
as the budget process gets officially underway.
Posted by Bill
Lauderback | Comments?
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