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What Are the GOP Plans for the Country

 
 
Reply Mon 19 Jul, 2010 03:06 pm
The GOP leadership urges its members not to give specifics on what the party will do should it take over congress. However, many in the GOP promise the repeal of such things as health-care and financial reform, stimulus, etc. They also discuss the restoration of Bush policies. To me, this void, if you will, is truly stunning.


The 2010 midterm elections are just four months away, and with Republicans excited at the prospect of picking up seats and perhaps even gaining a majority in at least one -- and possibly both -- legislative chambers, talk is now turning to what the GOP will do if it takes over. Several of their "plans" so far include vapid talking points about "standing with the American people back home" and hollow gimmicks to "listen" to the American public for policy ideas. If elected back into leadership positions, many members of the Republican Party would like to extend their "Party of No" agenda and put their partisan ideologies over the best interests of the American public. There are already rumblings that the GOP would try to repeal significant portions of President Obama's agenda -- including health care reform, the stimulus, and financial regulatory reform -- and take the country back to the days of the Bush administration.

AVOIDING POLICY ISSUES: On a daily basis, many Republicans are out telling their constituents and the national media that Democratic policies are dangerous. Republican Ken Buck, who's running for the U.S. Senate in Colorado, recently said that the "greatest threat to our liberty" is "the progressive liberal movement that is going on in this country." Mississippi state Sen. Alan Nunnelee (R), who is running for a congressional seat in the northern part of his state, said last month that Democratic policies are "more dangerous" than 9/11 or Pearl Harbor. So what's the GOP alternative? If some Republicans get their way, those ideas will be kept secret. Last week, Rep. Peter King (R-NY) told radio host Bill Bennett that Republicans shouldn't "lay out a complete agenda" because then people would be able to scrutinize it and make it "a campaign issue." And far-right candidates like Sharron Angle and Rand Paul are avoiding taking tough questions from traditional media outlets. According to the Washington Post, behind the scenes, GOP leaders are urging their members to "avoid issues at all costs." Underscoring the intellectual deficit in the GOP leadership, yesterday on NBC's Meet the Press, host David Gregory asked Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) and Rep. Pete Sessions (R-TX) -- the Party's congressional campaign committee chairs -- what Republicans will do if they return to power. Sessions simply said that the public "understand[s]" the GOP will be "standing with the American people back home," and the two men were unable to name a single "painful choice" that Republicans would be willing to make to live up to their deficit-cutting rhetoric. After Labor Day, House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) will reportedly roll out "a blueprint of what Republicans will do if they take back control of the chamber," but it's unclear if candidates will "actually want to run on those ideas."

EMPTY GIMMICKS: So far, the much-ballyhooed policy initiatives of congressional Republicans have been hollow gimmicks billed as a way to listen to the American public for policy prescriptions. First there was YouCut, a site that allows people to choose from a pre-selected list of programs that they would like to see eliminated from the federal budget. In late May, the program that received the most votes was a successful jobs program, and more recently, users voted to prohibit "hiring new IRS agents to enforce health care law," which the site claims would save $15 billion -- even though IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman has testified before Congress that agents won't be going after people to see if they have acceptable health care. More recently, Boehner launched "America Speaking Out," an initiative involving a website and public town halls to solicit ideas for the GOP agenda. The project is rather farcical, however, since Republicans have admitted that they won't incorporate any public ideas with which they disagree. The site has largely been a joke since its launch, with ideas including, "Don't let the illegals run out of Arizona and hide. ... I think that we should do something to identify them in case they try to come back over. Like maybe tattoo a big scarlet 'I' on their chests -- for 'illegal'!!!"

BACK TO THE BUSH YEARS: The one thing Republicans have made clear is that they're yearning for the good ol' days of President Bush. Cornyn recently told C-SPAN that Bush's "stock has gone up a lot since he left office. ... I think a lot people are looking back with more fondness on President Bush's administration, and I think history will treat him well." They are also clinging to the notion that the government can cut taxes and not offset the spending -- despite all their deficit-cutting rhetoric and criticisms that Obama is "spending trillions of dollars we do not have on things we do not need." Showing that he is a deficit fraud, Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) recently said, "[Y]ou should never have to offset cost of a deliberate decision to reduce tax rates on Americans." Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) said that continuing Bush's tax cuts "isn't a cost," and Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN) admitted that he's willing to vote against unemployment benefits for out-of-work Americans unless they're offset while waving through tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans. Many Republicans have also said they're interested in repealing the progress of the past year, including health care reform, the stimulus, and financial regulatory reform. Rep. Paul Broun (R-GA) has even talked about repealing the 16th and 17th amendments -- which would eliminate the income tax and end direct election of U.S. senators. Last week, Vice President Biden summed up their strategy: "Repeal and Repeat: Repeal everything positive done, and repeat the polices of the previous eight years of the Bush administration." It's also possible that if voters oust Democrats in November, far-right conservatives will take over Congress. Last week, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) filed papers to start and lead a Tea Party Caucus in the House, and U.S. Senate candidate in Kentucky Rand Paul has said that he would like to do the same if he is elected. Bachmann has also hinted at a bid to overthrow the current GOP leadership and install "constitutional conservatives." A look at the ranking Republicans on top House committees and subcommittees, who would likely become chairs if their Party wins in November, includes Texas' Joe Barton (who famously apologized to BP), Iowa's Steve King (who said that Obama "favors the black person"), and Texas' Louie Gohmert (who said that hate crimes legislation would lead to Nazism and the legalization of necrophilia, pedophilia, and bestiality).

-- americanprogressaction.org
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Type: Question • Score: 2 • Views: 1,047 • Replies: 6
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farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Mon 19 Jul, 2010 03:29 pm
@Advocate,
Quote:
BACK TO THE BUSH YEARS
Theres a topic for a A Stephen King novel.
0 Replies
 
JTT
 
  1  
Reply Mon 19 Jul, 2010 03:51 pm
@Advocate,
Quote:
Republican Ken Buck, who's running for the U.S. Senate in Colorado, recently said that the "greatest threat to our liberty" is "the progressive liberal movement that is going on in this country."


Much better a "regressive conservative movement". Personally, I'd like to go back to the time when there was slavery.

What with the high costs of labor, I could use a slave or two around the place. And my neighbors, an Indian reservation, well, I need a little more land. Has anyone got some smallpox infested blankets they aren't using?
rabel22
 
  1  
Reply Mon 19 Jul, 2010 10:29 pm
@JTT,
Sometime you speak sense but most times you speak republican conserative.
JTT
 
  1  
Reply Mon 19 Jul, 2010 10:33 pm
@rabel22,
Quote:
Sometime you speak sense but most times you speak republican conserative.


I'll take your comment, the last part, Smile as being as tongue in cheek as mine, Rabel.
0 Replies
 
jcboy
 
  1  
Reply Wed 21 Jul, 2010 03:58 pm
What are their plans? I have no idea but I believe they have done enough damage the last eight years.
0 Replies
 
Advocate
 
  1  
Reply Thu 22 Jul, 2010 08:01 am
@JTT,
JTT wrote:

Quote:
Republican Ken Buck, who's running for the U.S. Senate in Colorado, recently said that the "greatest threat to our liberty" is "the progressive liberal movement that is going on in this country."


Much better a "regressive conservative movement". Personally, I'd like to go back to the time when there was slavery.

What with the high costs of labor, I could use a slave or two around the place. And my neighbors, an Indian reservation, well, I need a little more land. Has anyone got some smallpox infested blankets they aren't using?


Wow! I love your irony. Very witty!
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