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Little-Acorn
09-21-2010, 07:53 PM
It's about time.

Republicans have been waffling along for years, enacting as much liberal stuff as conservative stuff, and they got kicked out of majorities in 2006 as a result. And they deserved it.

And to date, we haven't seen anything definite from them, indicating they are going to change any of that. If they don't start becoming solidly conservative soon, they are dead ducks. Why should anybody vote for quasi-liberals like GWB, Arlen Specter etc., when they can vote for real ones like Obama, Pelosi, Reid etc.?

I hope whatever they roll out here is conservative - that is, stuff that clearly reduces government, Federal spending, unconstitutional regulation etc. And I hope they openly ask ALL congressmen to sign on to it, and publish the names of those who do and don't.

And they'd damned well better achieve at least a 75% record in KEEPING the promises they make here. (They kept 100% of the 1994 Contract With America promises, but then fell off the wagon and turned liberal a few years later).

And they'd better be CONCRETE promises, like "If Republicans are elected into a majority in the House, we will introduce legislation to repeal the insurance mandate in Obamacare, and bring it to the floor of the House for an up-or-down vote." Etc. Not just "We will work to simplify government" - that's way too vague.

Ball's in your court, Republicans - maybe for the last time. You've got a lot to answer for.

Better make it good.

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http://politics.blogs.foxnews.com/2010/09/20/gop-set-roll-out-formal-agenda

GOP Set to Roll Out Formal Agenda

by Shannon Bream | September 20, 2010

After months of being bashed for having no agenda, other than attacking Democrats, Republican leaders are gearing up to unveil a detailed "governing document" of their own.

While it's drawing comparisons to 1994's "Contract with America," sources say this new document is very different. There will be no grand unveiling on the steps of the U.S. Capitol, with scores of lawmakers and candidates signing on the dotted line. Instead, the new plan will be rolled out at a suburban Virginia lumber yard just outside Washington.

Themes are expected to include: job creation, cutting government spending and repealing or counteracting recent health care legislation. That's welcome news to the man who is the president of Tart Lumber Company, Craig Fritsche. Come Thursday, he's hoping to hear GOP leaders say that they plan to push to extend Bush-era tax cuts - for all income levels.

The GOP is expected to outline roughly 20 items, most of them legislative in nature. Others will be aimed at how Congress itself operates: forcing authors of bills to articulate their constitutionality and a mandatory 72-hour reading period for House members before any bill goes to the floor for a vote.

Bradley Blakeman, a Republican strategist, says it's time to get back to basics, "What makes us a party, our core beliefs, where we've strayed and what do we have to concentrate on to win."


(Full text of the article can be read at the above URL)

actsnoblemartin
09-21-2010, 11:27 PM
its about dam time


It's about time.

Republicans have been waffling along for years, enacting as much liberal stuff as conservative stuff, and they got kicked out of majorities in 2006 as a result. And they deserved it.

And to date, we haven't seen anything definite from them, indicating they are going to change any of that. If they don't start becoming solidly conservative soon, they are dead ducks. Why should anybody vote for quasi-liberals like GWB, Arlen Specter etc., when they can vote for real ones like Obama, Pelosi, Reid etc.?

I hope whatever they roll out here is conservative - that is, stuff that clearly reduces government, Federal spending, unconstitutional regulation etc. And I hope they openly ask ALL congressmen to sign on to it, and publish the names of those who do and don't.

And they'd damned well better achieve at least a 75% record in KEEPING the promises they make here. (They kept 100% of the 1994 Contract With America promises, but then fell off the wagon and turned liberal a few years later).

And they'd better be CONCRETE promises, like "If Republicans are elected into a majority in the House, we will introduce legislation to repeal the insurance mandate in Obamacare, and bring it to the floor of the House for an up-or-down vote." Etc. Not just "We will work to simplify government" - that's way too vague.

Ball's in your court, Republicans - maybe for the last time. You've got a lot to answer for.

Better make it good.

----------------------------------------

http://politics.blogs.foxnews.com/2010/09/20/gop-set-roll-out-formal-agenda

GOP Set to Roll Out Formal Agenda

by Shannon Bream | September 20, 2010

After months of being bashed for having no agenda, other than attacking Democrats, Republican leaders are gearing up to unveil a detailed "governing document" of their own.

While it's drawing comparisons to 1994's "Contract with America," sources say this new document is very different. There will be no grand unveiling on the steps of the U.S. Capitol, with scores of lawmakers and candidates signing on the dotted line. Instead, the new plan will be rolled out at a suburban Virginia lumber yard just outside Washington.

Themes are expected to include: job creation, cutting government spending and repealing or counteracting recent health care legislation. That's welcome news to the man who is the president of Tart Lumber Company, Craig Fritsche. Come Thursday, he's hoping to hear GOP leaders say that they plan to push to extend Bush-era tax cuts - for all income levels.

The GOP is expected to outline roughly 20 items, most of them legislative in nature. Others will be aimed at how Congress itself operates: forcing authors of bills to articulate their constitutionality and a mandatory 72-hour reading period for House members before any bill goes to the floor for a vote.

Bradley Blakeman, a Republican strategist, says it's time to get back to basics, "What makes us a party, our core beliefs, where we've strayed and what do we have to concentrate on to win."


(Full text of the article can be read at the above URL)