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(E-mail
just received)
Rodger, in 2010, you and millions of Americans put your faith in
Republicans to get our nation's fiscal house in order by electing a GOP
majority to the U.S. House. These men and women didn't come to
Washington for a career -- they came for a cause that's bigger than you
or me.
It's the cause to get this country on the right track by paying off our
spiraling debt, fulfilling the mission of retirement security and
getting the economy growing again.
Republicans in the U.S. House are working hard to keep our charge.
We've made steady progress by passing a 2012 budget that cuts spending
so government lives within its means, reduces the deficit, unleashes
the forces of the free market to create jobs, reforms the tax code so
it's fairer and tackles entitlement reform.
Unfortunately, our budget doesn't have a chance of getting a fair shake
by Harry Reid in the Democrat-controlled U.S. Senate -- let alone of
surviving President Obama's veto pen unscathed.
The only way Republicans can right our ship and get America on a
sustainable path to economic growth and prosperity is to expand our
majority in the U.S. House, recapture the U.S. Senate and elect a
Republican president in 2012.
[Blah-blah ask for money]
Sincerely,
Paul Ryan
Congressman (WI-1)
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Paul
Ryan Backs Boehner's Plan
Wednesday, 27 Jul 2011 07:49 AM
House Speaker John Boehner's deficit reducing plan has picked up one
key supporter, Rep. Paul Ryan, according to his Op-Ed
column in the
National Review.
"The Budget Control Act takes an important step in the right direction
by cutting $1.2
trillion in government spending over the next decade,"
Ryan writes. "Critically, it does this without resorting to Senator
Reid’s gimmicks and without imposing the president’s preferred tax
increases on American families and the struggling economy."
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From the Cato
Institute:
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Actually, the revised Boehner plan doesn’t
cut spending at all. The chart shows the discretionary spending
caps in the new Boehner plan. Spending increases every year—from $1.043
trillion in 2012 to $1.234 trillion in 2021. (These figures exclude the
costs of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan). |
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