• A tale of two budgets

    In a cruel twist of irony, tax season and Washington, DC's money-gushing budget season usually overlap. This year's irony is crueler than usual. The current budget increases government spending to the highest level since World War II–at 27 percent of our total economic output.
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  • A dictionary of spending

    The approach of springtime is notable for two things in Washington: cherry blossoms and budget season. Washington's famous cherry trees haven't yet emerged from their winter hiatus, but the budget juggernaut is already in full swing. As you can probably imagine, it's not a pretty picture.
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  • Stimulating the national debt

    It's stimulus time again. Congress just passed an $825 billion so-called "stimulus plan". This plan could be more aptly named the "borrow and spend plan". One reason I opposed this legislation is that every additional dollar spent on federal programs and pork-barrel projects is borrowed money that must be paid back–the equivalent of borrowing $10,520 from every family in America.
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  • A bold agenda doesn't have to equal Big Government

    The 111th Congress convenes in Washington this month. As new and returning members of Congress are sworn into office America faces a pressing set of challenges. Our economy is limping along, shedding jobs each month. Home prices are declining at record rates. The federal government is stuck in a mantra of bailout mania.
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  • Restore America's economic strength

    During the summer of 2008 anyone predicting that gas prices would fall by more than half in a few months would have been laughed off the national stage. Anyone suggesting that the federal government would commit $8.5 trillion to bailouts and loan guarantees (when the entire federal budget is only $3 trillion) would have faced a similar fate.
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  • A 21st Century GI Bill that is fit for America's Veterans

    President Ronald Reagan famously declared that "freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free."
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