Tip Sheet
ElisabethMeinecke - Romney Says He'd Undo ObamaCare On First Day if President

Romney Says He'd Undo ObamaCare On First Day if President

Elisabeth Meinecke

Posted at 5:27 PM ET, 5/11/2011
A GOP frontrunner in the party's 2012 primary with a checkered past on health care, Mitt Romney produced a rather bold headline today with his op-ed in the USA Today: As first act, out with ObamaCare.

"If I am elected president, I will issue on my first day in office an executive order paving the way for waivers from ObamaCare for all 50 states. Subsequently, I will call on Congress to fully repeal ObamaCare," Romney writes.

He then gives 5 reforms he would make to the system.

" I believe the better course is to empower the states to determine their own health care futures," Romney also writes.

Still a red flag? Romney has previously justified his ObamaCare-like plan for Massachusetts by saying it's more acceptable to try if in the hands of the state, not the federal government.
 
 
ElisabethMeinecke - GOP Senators File Friend of the Court Brief in Suit Against ObamaCare

GOP Senators File Friend of the Court Brief in Suit Against ObamaCare

Elisabeth Meinecke

Posted at 4:45 PM ET, 5/11/2011
Forty-four GOP senators have signed onto a brief filed in support of several states' challenge to ObamaCare, which is being spearheaded by Florida (this is different from Virginia's lawsuit against ObamaCare that had hearings in the 4th Circuit yesterday).

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's letter to colleagues highlights two key points of the case: first, that the federal government forces Americans to buy something via the individual mandate, an alarming precedent to establish, and, second, that "there will no longer be any meaningful limit on Congress’s power to regulate its citizens under the Commerce Clause." 

"Congress’s specific power under that clause will be transformed into a general police power," the letter says, explaining this basically eliminates the distinction between federal and state regulatory authority.

Here are the senators who signed the brief: Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN), Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-NH), Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY), Sen. Roy Blunt (R-MO), Sen. John Boozman (R-AR), Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC), Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-GA), Sen. Daniel Coats (R-IN), Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK), Sen. Thad Cochran (R-MS), Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), Sen. Bob Corker (R-TN), Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), Sen.  Mike Crapo (R-ID), Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC), Sen. Michael Enzi (R-WY), Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT), Sen. Dean Heller (R-NV), Sen. John Hoeven (R-ND), Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX), Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK), Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-GA), Sen. Mike Johanns (R-NE), Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI), Sen. Mark Kirk (R-IL), Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ), Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT), Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN), Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Sen. Jerry Moran (R-KS), Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH), Sen. James Risch (R-ID), Sen. Pat Roberts (R-KS), Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), Sen. Richard Shelby (R-AL), Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME), Sen. John Thune (R-SD), Sen. Pat Toomey (R-PA), Sen. David Vitter (R-LA), Sen. Roger Wicker (R-MS).
 
 
GuyBenson - It's Official: Newt Is In

It's Official: Newt Is In

Guy Benson

Posted at 4:42 PM ET, 5/11/2011
As we reported on Monday, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich has confirmed that he is a candidate for President of the United States.  His team spread early word of the (now unsurprising) decision on social media sites, and Gingrich will appear on Sean Hannity's Fox News program at 9pm ET tonight to discuss his formal declaration.  As of this writing, his campaign website, www.newt.org, is crashed. 

Newt's online announcement video -- now a regular feature of 21st century political campaigns -- is very straightforward.  It features the candidate talking directly into the camera, with a black background and some light music.  Newt runs through his accomplishments, advances a sunny vision of America's future, and asks for viewers' support:



Gingrich is the first "top tier" candidate to officially enter the race.  (Gary Johnson has also done so). Welcome to the 2012 presidential cycle, America.

 
 
KatiePavlich - Antidote: Star Parker

Antidote: Star Parker

Katie Pavlich

Posted at 3:45 PM ET, 5/11/2011
This is who First Lady Michelle Obama should have invited to the poetry slam. If you're feeling a bit nauseated by my previous post, Parker will make you feel much better.




H/T Helen Whalen-Cohen
 
 
CarolPlattLiebau - Immigration Exploitation

Immigration Exploitation

Carol Platt Liebau

Posted at 3:30 PM ET, 5/11/2011
At the height of his political popularity and power in 2009, President Obama declined to do anything meaningful about the terrible economy and massive joblessness.  Mind you, he also declined to use his muscle to address the immigration issue, despite multiple promises to the Latino community to do so during the 2008 campaign (and the failure hasn't gone unnoticed).  He was too busy imposing the horrendous ObamaCare legislation on all of us.


One wonders whether any of the Latino leadership will protest this transparent exploitation of the hopes and dreams of countless illegal immigrants living in this country.  If the President was serious about doing something, he'd actually be trying to address Republican concerns, rather than ridiculing them.  

Instead, the writing's on the wall: President Obama isn't interested in solving the immigration issue; he's interested in exploiting it for his own personal political gain.  He's intent on demonizing the GOP to convince Latinos they've nowhere else to go, and must vote for them notwithstanding his failure to follow through on the campaign promises he made to them.

Wonder when Latinos are going to tell themselves, "Fool us once, shame on [Obama].  Fool us twice, shame on us" and start giving a hearing to those in the GOP who are interested in stopping the flow of illegal immigrants and then addressing the status of those who are already here.
 
 
KatiePavlich - Keynes vs. Hayek Round II

Keynes vs. Hayek Round II

Katie Pavlich

Posted at 3:30 PM ET, 5/11/2011
Actually, government spending didn't pull us through after WWII.
 
 
ElisabethMeinecke - More Vandalism Against Pro-Lifers

More Vandalism Against Pro-Lifers

Elisabeth Meinecke

Posted at 2:46 PM ET, 5/11/2011
Students for Life has another stunning report of vandalism against a pro-life display on a college campus (remember, there was this harrowing event the week before Easter).

This one occurred at SUNY University at Buffalo, according to the Students For Life blogpost, which also said the university president won't make a public statement until the results of the campus police investigation are revealed.

The vandalism itself? First, the vandals pulled up the crosses and used them to write "Pro-Choice." Then, after the pro-life group corrected the display, the vandals came back again, pulled up the crosses, and wrote, "Love All." Since the pro-lifers agreed with the message, they left those words and simply put back the rest of the crosses in the display. So the vandals came back, this time writing "LOL Babies."

Guess what? Nobody's laughing. "Each time the pro-life display was vandalized, UB Students for Life notified the UB Police Department," said Students for Life in the blogpost.


 
 
KatiePavlich - Cop Killer Praising Rapper

Cop Killer Praising Rapper "Common" Still Coming to White House

Katie Pavlich

Posted at 2:07 PM ET, 5/11/2011
"Common," a rapper being called a "socially conscious artist" by the Left has not yet been dis-invited from the White House for a poetry slam despite having lyrics calling for the assassination of former President George W. Bush and praising convicted Black Panther cop killer Assata Shakur, (JoAnne Chesmard) who has been living in Cuba since breaking out of prison while serving a life sentence.  Common also has a not so convenient connection to Rev. Jeremiah Wright. But of course, the White House isn't planning to revoke the invite and is defending Common and the First Lady's decision to invite him as her guest.


The White House Wednesday condemned some of the lyrics and prose of hip hop star Common, whose invitation to a White House poetry event this evening has brought criticism from some conservatives and police officers.


“The president does not support and opposes the kind of lyrics that has been written about,” White House press secretary Jay Carney said when American Urban Radio’s April Ryan asked him about the controversy.


Carney said the president has “in the past spoken very forcefully out against violent and misogynistic lyrics.”


New Jersey Police are not impressed.

David Jones, the president of the New Jersey State Troopers Fraternal Association, voiced concern to the White House and to ABC News about Common’s invitation given Common’s song extolling Joanne Chesmard, a member of the Black Liberation Army, convicted in 1977 of the first degree murder of a state trooper and sentenced to life in prison. In November 1979, Chesmard escaped from prison.



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Common is also an opponent of interracial marriage along with singer/songwriter Jill Scott, who will also be at the White House poetry slam. Scott and Common have publicly expressed their view that black men should not date or marry white women. 


Black women and Black men struggled together, mourned together, starved together, braved the hoses and vicious police dogs and died untimely on southern back roads together. These harsh truths lead to what we really feel when we see a seemingly together brother with a Caucasian woman and their children. That feeling is betrayed.


My new friend is handsome, African-American, intelligent and seemingly wealthy. He is an athlete, loves his momma, and is happily married to a White woman. I admit when I saw his wedding ring, I privately hoped. But something in me just knew he didn't marry a sister. Although my guess hit the mark, when my friend told me his wife was indeed Caucasian, I felt my spirit...wince. I didn't immediately understand it. My face read happy for you. My body showed no reaction to my inner pinch, but the sting was there, quiet like a mosquito under a summer dress.


Yeah...that's not racist at all.....



 
 
GuyBenson - Uh Oh: Did Mitt Romney Support a Federal Healthcare Mandate in 1994?

Uh Oh: Did Mitt Romney Support a Federal Healthcare Mandate in 1994?

Guy Benson

Posted at 2:06 PM ET, 5/11/2011
As the political world awaits his major healthcare address tomorrow, a new headache has emerged for Mitt Romney:


The day before his big health care speech, Blue Mass Group explodes a depth charge right under Mitt Romney. They point to "Stormin' Mormon," the pre-1994 election profile of Romney by John Judis. That year, running uphill against Ted Kennedy, Romney said he'd support the health care compromise introduced by Sen. John Chafee. That compromise included a mandate to buy health insurance, something Democrats never tired of pointing out in 2009 and 2010 when the Affordable Care Act's compromise was characterized as tyranny or socialism.



Here's Romney's 1994 quote, as reported at the time by The New Republic (emphasis mine):


The question about Romney is where he would stand in Congress's internecine battles. Would he side with Republicans such as John Chafee who have tried to develop constructive alternatives to Democratic legislation or with Republicans such as Phil Gramm and Newt Gingrich who have been willing to paralyze Congress for the sake of embarrassing the Clinton administration? Romney has indicated that he would side with the moderate wing. He endorsed the crime bill and refused to back Gingrich's jejune "Contract with America." He told me he would have backed Chafee's health care bill. "I'm willing to vote for things that I am not wild with," he said.



One of Romney's top defenses of his flagging Massachusetts healthcare law -- which, like Obamacare, includes an individual mandate -- is an appeal to federalism.  He argues that states are afforded a wider berth than the federal government when it comes to policy exploration, and that an experiment in a state-level "laboratory of democracy" may not be constitutional at the national level.  From NRO's preview of tomorrow's speech:


The Romney campaign is emphasizing that Romney’s health care position shouldn’t be seen as a radical departure from his position in 2008, but a continuation of his emphasis that the states, not the federal government, should decide what health care policies to pursue.



If Mitt Romney did, in fact, endorse Congressional legislation that would have instituted an individual mandate at the federal level in the mid-1990's, I'm not sure how to square that with the stance he'll articulate tomorrow.  Many conservatives like and respect Mitt Romney, but are wary of his propensity to adopt positions on multiple sides of an issue, as his immediate political needs dictate.  This revelation (again, if true), will likely inflame those concerns.


I've reached out to the Romney camp for a response to this report.  Once I hear from them, I will update this post immediately.  



UPDATE - I received the following statement from Romney spokesperson Gail Gitcho:



"Governor Romney has made it very clear over the last many years, including during the 2008 presidential cycle, that he opposes a federally imposed individual mandate."


 
 
KatiePavlich - It's Back: DREAM Act Reintroduced

It's Back: DREAM Act Reintroduced

Katie Pavlich

Posted at 2:01 PM ET, 5/11/2011
Senate Democrats have re-introduced the DREAM Act, or the Reform America's Broken Immigration System Act, which if passed will allow children of illegal immigrants, brought here illegally by their parents, to gain amnesty U.S. citizenship if they go to college or join the military. The DREAM Act failed to pass during the lame duck session just before republicans took back the House of Representatives.

Why has Democrat Senate leadership reintroduced the bill?


"We're not giving up," said Sen. Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate and the bill's longtime champion. "This is not just a piece of legislation, it is a matter of justice."


Apparently, democrats are giving republicans the courtesy of debate on the issue in order to ease the burden on President Obama to get the job done:


Some Democratic lawmakers would prefer to avoid the legislative battle and instead press the White House to use its executive authority to advance policies important to the immigrant community.


FLASHBACK: Durbin said in September he would do "everything in his power" to get the DREAM Act passed.

 
 
ErikaJohnsen - President Obama, Portraying Opponents as Caricatures? He Would Never!

President Obama, Portraying Opponents as Caricatures? He Would Never!

Erika Johnsen

Posted at 1:07 PM ET, 5/11/2011
During President Obama's illegal immigration speech in El Paso, Texas yesterday, he made a few choice comments about Republicans and the good people working to secure the border. And I quote:


"You know, they said we needed to triple the Border Patrol. Or now they’re going to say we need to quadruple the Border Patrol. Or they’ll want a higher fence. Maybe they’ll need a moat. Maybe they want alligators in the moat. They’ll never be satisfied."


The President can certainly crack jokes if he wishes, although frankly, I do not think anyone is looking for a Comedian-in-Chief on such a crucial issue, and this play at being lighthearted was more of a 2012-minded, dismissive, deceptive jab at those darn insatiable Republicans. But please, please, do not post on the White House website about how President Obama is working to resolve a caricature-riddled debate by bringing everyone back down to earth. I'm pretty sure that no "real people" have ever proposed the construction of alligator-filled moats along the southern border, and that Republicans would be satisfied if we actually stopped the flow of immigrants illegally entering the United States.

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GuyBenson - Oops: Tim Kaine Stumped on National Debt

Oops: Tim Kaine Stumped on National Debt

Guy Benson

Posted at 1:06 PM ET, 5/11/2011
In today's episode of How To Stump A Democratic Senate Candidate, a tracker asks former Virginia Governor Tim Kaine where the national debt currently stands.  Kaine's answer was...not very good:


Set aside, for just a moment, the fact that Kaine is obviously unaware of the actual figure.  We'll come back to that.  The rest of his answer is just as bad: 


"It's sizable, yeah.  But I think we're going to get it down.  I think we will.  Growth.  And I expect that the Senate, uh, is gonna do some good things."



These are not the words of a man who seems to have anything coherent to say about debt reduction.  I love the throwaway, context-free invocation of the word "growth."  If Kaine is so confident that the Senate will do "some good things" to encourage growth, I assume he's strongly opposed to the Senate majority's plan to raise taxes on families and small businesses by $2 Trillion, right?


In Kaine's defense, he was -- until very recently -- the DNC Chairman, a position that doesn't really require its occupant to worry at all about the national debt.  Indeed, Kaine's task was to help elect people whose policies would explode that debt.  Mission Accomplished.  When Democrats took control of Congress and the federal purse-strings in 2007, when Kaine was still Governor, the national debt stood at an already-unacceptable $8.6 Trillion.  After four years of Reid/Pelosi (with Senator/President Obama there every step of the way), the current number stands at: Ta-Da!   

 
 
GuyBenson - Are Conservatives Imploding (Again) in an Upstate New York Special Election?

Are Conservatives Imploding (Again) in an Upstate New York Special Election?

Guy Benson

Posted at 11:56 AM ET, 5/11/2011
*See updates below*


We told you about this hack last month, and now that he's posing a real risk of playing the spoiler in a GOP-leaning district, eeeevil outside group American Crossroads is going up on air and lowering the boom:


Election Day is two weeks away.  To those Western New York conservatives who may be flirting with supporting this "Tea Party" candidate, let's all take a moment and recall just how committed a Constitutionalist Jack Davis truly is:


Enough said.


UPDATE - I suppose it's worth mentioning that the actual conservative in this race is Republican Jane Corwin.


UPDATE II - Good grief:

In February, David Bellavia, a decorated Iraq war combat veteran and conservative Republican, was passed over by GOP party chairmen as a candidate for New York's 26th Congressional District special election. Bellavia tells THE WEEKLY STANDARD that tomorrow night at a rally in Rochester he will strike a blow against those party bosses--and Jane Corwin, the Republican they nominated--by endorsing another candidate in the race.

"I will endorse a candidate, but it will not be Jane," Bellavia told me during a phone interview this evening. 

Bellavia indicated, without explicitly saying so, that the candidate he will endorse in the May 24 election is Jack Davis, a former Democrat now running as a "Tea Party" candidate. "Jack is a veteran. Jack is a self-made man," Bellavia said. "He's a guy who will leave his factory to his workers when he dies. He's right on immigration. He's right on jobs. The issues that I disagree with Jack, I disagree with all three [candidates]. There's not one pro-life candidate in this race."


With all due respect to Mr. Bellavia, whose valorous service to this country we all admire deeply, this is an indefensible move.  He's bitter that he was passed over for the nomination, so he's planning to exact revenge by...torpedoing the most conservative candidate in the race?  Huh?  If Bellavia is the self-stylized "true" conservative he claims to be, how can he possibly justify shifting his endorsement to an admitted Barack Obama/Nancy Pelosi sycophant?  If he's worried about the absence of a pro-life candidate in the race, why on earth would he support a man who favors partial birth and taxpayer funded abortions?  (Also, Republican establishment, how hard is it to find a pro-life candidate for a pro-life district?)

With polls very tight, and the center-right bloc that comprises a majority the district feuding, this race is starting to feel eerily familiar.

In case you're wondering: How conservative is NY-26?  It favors passage of the Ryan budget by nearly 20 points.  This race shouldn't be close -- but it seems upstate New York conservatives have a very special knack for snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.

UPDATE III - Guess who slammed Jack Davis for "dishonoring" the troops in 2006?  Surprise:

 
 
KatiePavlich - Yet Another Obama

Yet Another Obama "Policy" Speech

Katie Pavlich

Posted at 11:30 AM ET, 5/11/2011
Riding on the coattails of his Osama bin Laden victory, President Obama may give another major policy speech next week about the Middle East.

President Barack Obama could deliver a major policy speech as early as next week laying out his new Middle East strategy following the killing of Osama bin Laden and amid ongoing upheaval in the Arab world, officials said Wednesday.


A key sticking point is whether Obama, who gained a boost in global stature with the death of the al Qaeda chief last week, will use also his coming address to present new proposals for renewed Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking, a source familiar with the administration's internal debate said.



Looking at the post-game botch job the White House communications team has done so far surrounding the bin Laden assassination and relationship with Pakistan, hopefully we won't see an apology from the President or Attorney General Eric Holder for taking action without the permission of Europe and the United Nations. Will it be round two of appeasing the Muslim world?


 
 
KatiePavlich - Herman Cain Climbs in Zogby Poll to Second Place

Herman Cain Climbs in Zogby Poll to Second Place

Katie Pavlich

Posted at 10:23 AM ET, 5/11/2011
According to a new Zogby poll, Herman Cain's impressive performance at the South Carolina Republican presidential debate last week is paying off as he is now second to New Jersey Governor Chris Christie as the top choice among GOP primary voters for the 2012 race to the White House. However, considering Christie isn't running and Cain most likely will, Cain is the winner here.


These results are from an IBOPE Zogby interactivepoll of 1,377 Republican primary voters conducted from May 6-9.




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TownhallcomStaff - Indiana Sets Pace for Sweeping Education Reform

Indiana Sets Pace for Sweeping Education Reform

Townhall.com Staff

Posted at 9:00 AM ET, 5/11/2011
*This post was authored by Kyle Olson*

Of all the states currently working on serious education reform, Indiana may deserve the gold medal.

Gov. Mitch Daniels and state Superintendent Tony Bennett fearlessly led the charge to dramatically reform the state’s education system.

“Are we about funding the education of children or funding the education system,” Bennett often said.

To that end, perhaps the most incredible of the reforms was the establishment of the broadest school voucher program in the country.  Within the next few years, the vast majority of Indiana students will be able to go to the school of their choice and the state-allotted funding will follow them.  Among other reforms includes increasing the number of charter schools, creating a performance pay system for teachers and restricting collective bargaining to pay and benefits.

See EAGtv’s story on the bill signing and interviewswith key players.

Restricting collective bargaining was a major component of the reform effort. As Education Action Group has chronicled many times, union collective bargaining agreements have become ridiculous, with numerous provisions that cost schools millions of dollars and cumbersome rules that prevent schools from innovating and improving.

Daniels’ reforms do away with all of that nonsense and allow school officials to make decisions that prioritize students and their needs.

Daniels and Bennett, along with many state legislators, withstood the attacks from unions, school administrators and others in the educational establishment.  They fought back against “misinformation” campaigns.

See Tony Bennett in Episode 10 of “Kids Aren’t Cars”discussing reform in Indiana.

The reformers delivered a major victory for the children of Indiana and have set an example for other states to mimic.  Thankfully all of the obnoxious protests, particularly the Democratic lawmakers fleeing to Illinois to stall the legislative process,clearly failed.  The landmark changes provide renewed hope for all students of Indiana, particularly those trapped in public schools.

That’s real change the people of Indiana can believe in, courtesy of Gov. Daniels.

 
 
GuyBenson - Senate Democrats: So, Who's Up For A $2 Trillion Tax Hike?

Senate Democrats: So, Who's Up For A $2 Trillion Tax Hike?

Guy Benson

Posted at 8:49 AM ET, 5/11/2011
Remember that 2012 budget alternative Senate Democrats have been so fidgety about releasing to the public?  We now know why they aren't especially eager to share their grand blueprint with taxpayers:

Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) on Tuesday presented a budget proposal to Senate Democrats that calls for an even balance — 50 percent to 50 percent — of spending cuts and tax increases to reduce the deficit.

The emerging consensus on Capitol Hill is there should be at least $4 trillion in deficit reduction over the next 10 years. To meet that goal, Congress would have to increase tax revenues by $2 trillion over the next decade with an equal amount of spending cuts.

Reid said Sen. Conrad presented to the caucus a 50-50 split when asked about the preferred ratio of spending cuts to tax increases.

That's a more even ratio between spending cuts and tax increases than what President Obama's debt commission recommended last fall. It suggested reducing deficits through two-thirds spending cuts and one-third tax increases. 

In a speech last month, Obama suggested a 3-1 ratio between spending cuts and tax increases in laying out his vision for reducing deficits. 

Conrad has moved his budget proposal to the left in order togain the support of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), an outspoken progressive on the budget panel.


As the Hill story above points out, even President Obama's unserious debt-reduction "vision" only calls for a 3-to-1 cut/tax increase ratio; yet Senate Democrats have apparently agreed to spike taxes even further in their proposal in order to win the coveted endorsement of a self-proclaimed socialist.  Wonderful.

Meanwhile, back in adultville, a group of Republican conservatives with sterling fiscal bona fides have rolled out an alternate plan of their own.  It balances the budget (but doesn't eliminate the national debt) within ten years -- without raising taxes -- but also declines to lay a glove on Medicare or Social Security.  Sure, it's politically safer than the Ryan plan, but no entitlement reform?  There's a reason why Paul Ryan has taken the risk of gripping the third rail of American politics, and it ain't just for the fun of it.  Let's face it: Even if the Toomey/Rubio/Lee/Johnson/DeMint plan is enacted in its entirety, the US government will still owe tens of trillions in unfunded obligations to future generations, stretching as far as the eye can see.

Via Allahpundit, watch as Fox's Neil Cavuto grills Sen. Toomey on this point:



Of course, Toomey's plan is still light years ahead of the president's non-plan, or Kent Conrad's taxapalooza.  Remember folks, John Boehner just reaffirmed that all tax increases are off the table.  Hoo boy, these White House budget meetings are going to be something, aren't they?


UPDATE - Here are more details on the Toomey plan:

The proposal offered by freshman Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) and other conservatives would reduce government spending to 18.5 percent of the nation's gross domestic product and assumes a relatively high level of economic growth in order for the country to reach a modest surplus by 2021. Like the House GOP budget, it does not raise taxes.

The Toomey budget would reduce non-defense discretionary spending to 2006 levels in 2012, and freeze it at that level for the next six years. After that point, that spending would be indexed to the consumer price index. 

On Medicaid, it would implement a block-grant program to the states (my note: this is similar to the Ryan plan), while gradually reducing Medicaid spending to $14 billion above fiscal 2008 levels by 2019.

It also would halve the number of individual tax brackets from six to three, with the top rate falling to 25 percent from the current 35 percent level. It also would lower the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 25 percent. It also would index the alternative minimum tax to inflation.

On defense, the plan would adopt the cuts identified by Defense Secretary Robert Gates, and also assumes the complete withdrawal of American forces from Iraq and Afghanistan by 2018. It also would require that any future expenditures of supplemental war spending after that exit would have to be offset by spending reductions elsewhere.

Mandatory spending not tied to Social Security, Medicare or Medicaid would be reduced under the plan, ultimately falling to slightly more than 2007 levels by 2014. It also calls for fixed annual spending caps on welfare programs.


UPDATE II - The five Senators listed above aren't the only GOP co-sponsors of this budget:

Beyond the press-conference speakers, co-sponsors for the measure include Sen. Tom Coburn (R., Okla.), Sen. Richard Burr (R., N.C.), and Sen. David Vitter (R., La.).



 
 
MikeGallagher - Mike Gallagher Show

Mike Gallagher Show

Mike Gallagher

Posted at 7:00 AM ET, 5/11/2011
  • Chairman of the Health Care Compact Alliance Eric O'Keefe.
  • President Obama says anti-illegal Republicans want a moat with alligators on the border. Stay classy, Barry.
  • The Ultimate Dog Tease: we love our animals.
  •  
     
    GregHengler - The Great Uniter: Republicans Want A Moat With Alligators on Border--Hahaha!

    The Great Uniter: Republicans Want A Moat With Alligators on Border--Hahaha!

    Greg Hengler

    Posted at 5:30 PM ET, 5/10/2011
    Here's the clown prince doing what he does best: Step 1) Building a straw man. Step 2) Mocking the straw man and inviting the audience to join in. Step 3) Burning the straw man and praising his superiority.

    Lather. Rinse. Repeat.

    Paul Ryan has discussed this straw man strategy that the Great Uniter executes every time a Republican peon dares to not kiss his ring.

    As an American, aren't you ashamed that our President of the United States talks as if he is a 3rd grader trying to insult a friend during recess?

    He continues to fundamentally transform America and the esteem of his office.

    What a disgrace!

     
     
    GuyBenson - Was Jon Huntsman

    Was Jon Huntsman "Disloyal" to America?

    Guy Benson

    Posted at 5:23 PM ET, 5/10/2011
    Yesterday, conservative blogger Erick Erickson fired a blistering shot across the bow of former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman's nascent presidential campaign.  Erickson argues that Huntsman does not deserve conservatives' support because of his "disloyal" behavior towards the President of the United States vis-a-vis his Ambassadorship to China and his political aspirations:

    The reason I will never, ever support Jon Huntman is simple: While serving as the United States Ambassador to China, our greatest strategic adversary, Jon Huntsman began plotting to run against the President of the United States. This calls into question his loyalty not just to the President of the United States, but also his loyalty to his country over his own naked ambition.

    It does not matter if you are a Republican or a Democrat. Party is beside the point here. When the President of the United States sends you off to be Ambassador to our greatest strategic adversary in the world, you don’t sit around contemplating running against the very same President you serve. It begs the question of did you fully carry out your duties as Ambassador or let a few things slip along the way hoping to damage the President? Likewise, it begs the question of whether our relations with China have suffered because the President felt like he could not trust his own Ambassador?


    Disloyalty to the country is a very serious charge, and I wonder if Erickson may have unleashed it a bit cavalierly here.  I share several of Erickson's heavily-implied concerns about Huntsman's record on a number of policy issues (which he says are a secondary basis for his opposition to Huntsman's candidacy).  Indeed, if he chooses to run, Huntsman should -- and will -- face a gauntlet of tough questions on issues ranging from immigration, to environmental policy, to the "stimulus," to traditional marriage.  Not to mention his so-called "love letters" to President Obama.

    But an impure conservative record does not equate to disloyalty.  To reinforce the weightier accusation, Erickson cites a number of news accounts suggesting that a team of political operatives began to assemble a campaign apparatus while Huntsman was serving in China.  Team Huntsman vehemently denies there was any collaboration between Ambassador Huntsman and those working state-side (indirectly) on his behalf.  A source close to the Huntsman operation tells me that Huntsman was largely unaware of the groundwork others were laying for him: "When he returned [from China], Gov. Huntsman was stunned by the number of people encouraging him to run and the scope of what they had built." 

    I've yet to see any information contradicting this assertion.  I'm also unaware of any evidence that Huntsman's political ambitions resulted in any form of dereliction of duty or conflict of interest as he served as our ambassador to China.  Surely, it's not a crime for a politician to think about his future while serving in another administration, right?  That would be an unreasonable standard of loyalty in my view.

    Finally, Erickson offers this point against Huntsman:


    And don’t tell me that Jon Huntsman was not thinking of running for President and contemplating that while still in office. On May 5, 2009, the Washington Post reported McCain adviser John Weaver was giving Huntsman strategic guidance on running in 2012. This came before Huntsman went to China.



    As this paragraph notes, Huntsman was widely known to already be considering a presidential bid before he left for China.  It would therefore follow that President Obama -- ever the savvy political fellow -- knew full well that Jon Huntsman, an ambitious politician, might be contemplating a run at him several years later...and appointed him to the important post anyway. 


    Unless and until evidence is produced that Huntsman knowingly and unethically colluded with a domestic political team while in China, or that his political maneuvering in some way interfered with his sworn duty to zealously and loyally represent the United States in Beijing, accusations of disloyalty seem misplaced and unfair.

     
     
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