Posts Tagged ‘Jim Talent’

We need a leader, not a politician

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Here is one thing to add to Governor Romney’s OpEd in USA Today on Obama and the Gulf.

It is important to understand that many political leaders really have no concrete idea what to do about problems that government is supposed to solve.  Education is an example:  they talk about the need for better education, but they wouldn’t bet ten cents of their own money that anything they propose will actually work.  Now, when a crisis occurs that the politician doesn’t know how to fix, he does two things.  First, he tries to ignore it.  If that doesn’t work – if he can’t stay below the surface so the problem is never associated with him – he then focuses on blaming someone else.  Does this sound familiar?  President Obama doesn’t know what to do about the oil spill.  He has no confidence whatsoever that he can fix it, and no idea how to go about doing so.  So first he tried to ignore it, and now he is using his energy to try to shift the blame.   Meanwhile the oil keeps pumping into the gulf.  Of course BP is liable.  But at this point the government – the President — is responsible for finding a solution.

Where are the jobs?

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

It was not surprising that the markets tanked after Friday’s jobs report. Of the 431,000 jobs created, just 41,000 of them were private sector jobs – the rest: temporary Census workers. As Chair of the House Committee on Small Business, Sen. Talent learned how the small business owner thinks. They are risk takers, but they are not foolish. The current uncertainty caused by changing regulations and health care burdens has caused them to pull back in a big way.The private sector can’t be the economic engine that we need it to be, until the government realizes the best thing it can do for the economy is provide a reasonable (and certain) regulatory frame work and cut burdensome taxes.
These disjointed government policies are a living example of Obama’s lack of executive and management experience.

Administration misses ObamaCare deadlines

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

The Administration has already missed many deadlines imposed in ObamaCare.  Know that Obama’s own number crunchers have said that the bill will cost more than originally estimated to implement and will not decrease the deficit, this may be a good thing.  When will there be a consensus for repeal?

Suspicious of the Free Market

Monday, May 24th, 2010

There is a punitive mindset in Washington:  an attitude of suspicion towards the private market.  The funny thing is how reactionary that attitude is.  In the last thirty years, the whole world has come to understand the value of entrepreneurial capitalism.  Eastern Europe, China, South America – all have come to understand that governments need revenue, that free markets produce revenue, and the government therefore needs free markets.  The only place they don’t get it is the current left wing of the current Democratic Party.

Results of YouCut

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Rep. Eric Cantor is doing something that the Democrats in Washington have failed to do – he is listening to the people.  His new program – YouCut lets citizens vote on various programs to be cut fro the federal budget.  You can vote online at http://republicanwhip.house.gov/YouCut/.  This weeks winner: Emergency Contingency Fund for State Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Programs.  This emergency welfare has been used to buy iPods in some cases.  Jim Talent was a leader in welfare reform in the 1990′s.  Congress reigned in programs without disrupting benefits for those who needed it.  This program undermines the good, bipartisan work of the 1990s reforms.

Deficit drives public policy

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Here is yet another way the deficit is driving policy in Washington.  I can guarantee you that the provision driving the paperwork avalanche was put in the health care law for one reason and one reason only:  the Congressional “scoring” organizations – the government bodies that compute the cost and revenue raised by proposed legislation — were willing to score it as raising money because it supposedly tightens compliance and will capture revenue that is leaking out of the system.  If you want to pass something in Washington, all you have to do is get it scored as raising money in a way that Congress can say is not a tax increase.  It doesn’t matter whether the measure actually will raise the money; it doesn’t matter how unfair or unenforceable it is, or what effect it has on small business or the economy.  In fact, we have no idea what the effect of this provision will be, except that it will hurt the economy, demoralize small business, and add to the perception that everyone in the Congress is crazy.

This is why I say that, increasingly, the debt is running national policy.  Yet the Obama Administration is, every day, digging us into a deeper and deeper hole – to the detriment of its own practical interests and objectives.  Why would people who want government to grow pursue policies which bankrupt the government?  What do they think is going to happen?  It is the triumph of ideology, inexperience, and incompetence over reality.”

Sen. Talent on with Lars Larson

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Last week I talked with national radio host Lars Larson about the failed terrorist attack in New York’s Time Square.  Now we know that he was trained and funded by the Pakistan Taliban.  While I am thankful that this event failed, it is just another example of the persistence and dedication of those who wish to destroy freedom and democracy.

Talent050610

ObamaCare’s phony “deals”

Monday, May 10th, 2010

Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder of Missouri has filed suit against ObamaCare. The new health law is full of phony deals, including this example of a Medicad “deal” for the states. I’m confident (like many others) that these challenges will be heard by the Supreme Court.

“Doc Fix” wasn’t fixed

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

The doctor pay issue is one reason why it was patently obvious the health care bill was not “deficit neutral.”  The sponsors of the bill figured proposed Medicare cuts as “savings” but never counted likely extra Medicare expenses  — the most prominent of which was this doctor pay issue — as costs.  It would be like “balancing” your family budget by assuming you would eliminate expenditures that you intended to keep and ignoring extra expenditures you surely would make.

For the third time this year, Congress has just days to avert a scheduled 21 percent cut in pay to doctors who treat seniors and others on the Medicare program.

Reduce the debt through spending cuts, not new taxes

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

The President’s Commission on Fiscal Responsibility is under way and it appears that tax increases will inevitably be the recommendation of the Commission.  They are missing the point.  The budget crisis wasn’t created by not taxing people enough, it was created by the government’s irresponsible spending habits.  When you are in a hole and you want to get out; stop digging.