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Washington Alert (redesign-largerALG)-1

Kudlow: Bernanke and Ethanol Subsidies Sink Egypt

Hoyer «

Hoyer: Republicans Can’t Take Yes For An Answer

GOP Calls for Tax Cuts While Voting Against Hundreds of Billions in Cuts

“[F]ederal taxes are very considerably lower by every measure since Obama became president…. According to the JCT, last year’s $787 billion stimulus bill, enacted with no Republican support, reduced federal taxes by almost $100 billion in 2009 and another $222 billion this year.” – Bruce Bartlett, Domestic Policy Advisor under President Reagan and Treasury Department economist under President George H.W. Bush, 3/19/2010

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act was one of the first pieces of legislation signed into law in the 111th Congress. It included tax cuts for 95% of working Americans and resulted in a 10 percent increase in the average tax refund this year. Republicans voted in opposition against that bill and those tax cuts. And they didn’t stop there. Throughout the 111th Congress, Republicans have stood against numerous tax cuts that will benefit millions of American families and businesses this tax season and beyond. Republicans say we need to cut taxes? Democrats have.  Republicans just can’t take yes for an answer. Read the rest of this entry »

Hoyer: Experts Call Out GOP on Hypocrisy, GOP Owns Up To Legitimacy of Rule

With final passage of health insurance reform quickly approaching, Republicans are making another desperate attempt to distract from the substance of the health care debate. The GOP is hypocritically crying foul on a legislative process that they used more than 200 times under the last two Republican Speakers. Republicans clearly are trying to distract from the unfair insurance process that they support continuing:
• Process that allows insurance companies to cancel coverage when a person gets sick
• Process that allows insurance companies to filibuster consumers’ claims to fair coverage
• Process that makes Americans fight for their health insurance even as they are fighting for their lives.
If Republicans are so sensitive to fair process, they should oppose those unfair insurance procedures and support passage of health insurance reform. And if they don’t do that, then their record on using the same House rules to pass major legislation should be enough to end the legislative process debate. Read the rest of this entry »

Hoyer: GOP Hypocrisy — Watch What I Say, Not What I Do

“Republicans have used [the deeming] process before.”

– Republican Whip Eric Cantor, ABC’s “Good Morning America,” 3/17/10

“Hypocrisy: A Parliamentary Procedure”
As Republicans ramp up efforts to once again distract from the substance of health insurance reform, experts weigh in on the hypocritical nature of the GOP’s “outrage” over procedural tactics they repeatedly used:
“Any veteran observer of Congress is used to the rampant hypocrisy over the use of parliamentary procedures that shifts totally from one side to the other as a majority moves to minority status, and vice versa. But I can’t recall a level of feigned indignation nearly as great as what we are seeing now from congressional Republicans and their acolytes at the Wall Street Journal, and on blogs, talk radio, and cable news. It reached a ridiculous level of misinformation and disinformation over the use of reconciliation, and now threatens to top that level over the projected use of a self-executing rule by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. In the last Congress that Republicans controlled, from 2005 to 2006, Rules Committee Chairman David Dreier used the self-executing rule more than 35 times, and was no stranger to the concept of ‘deem and pass.’ That strategy, then decried by the House Democrats who are now using it, and now being called unconstitutional by WSJ editorialists, was defended by House Republicans in court (and upheld). Dreier used it for a $40 billion deficit reduction package so that his fellow GOPers could avoid an embarrassing vote on immigration. I don’t like self-executing rules by either party—I prefer the ‘regular order’—so I am not going to say this is a great idea by the Democrats. But even so—is there no shame anymore?”  [Norman J. Ornstein, 3/16/10] Read the rest of this entry »

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