December 3, 2007

Rudy Giuliani Watch: The Meaning of Fiscal Conservatism

Republican presidential hopeful, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, shares a laugh with customers after refusing to sign a Boston Red Sox hat Sunday, Dec. 2, 2007, at the Country View Restaurant in Greenland, N.H.

Rudy Giuliani pens this op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal today:

With economic uncertainty weighing on the minds of many Americans, Congress is preparing to recess after another year of profligate spending, protectionist talk and promises of higher taxes. No wonder some people feel like we’re moving in the wrong direction. But I’m optimistic as I look to the future. It’s not our country that’s moving in the wrong direction — it’s Congress, and Washington’s culture of wasteful spending.

Over the last decade, nondefense spending has increased by 65% — the federal government currently spends $24,000 per household — while the number of earmarked pork projects rocketed from close to 1,000 to a height of nearly 14,000. This year, with only one appropriations bill enacted, earmarks already number 2,161.

A return to fiscal conservative principles can put America back on the right track, while giving Washington a much-needed dose of discipline.

Fiscal conservatism is based on two fundamental principles — cutting taxes and controlling spending. In recent years, the Republican Party has successfully cut taxes, but we have fallen short when it comes to controlling spending. The next president will need to strengthen both sides of the fiscal conservative equation, while reforming the culture of wasteful government spending with transparency and accountability. I believe I can do it because I’ve done it, and in a place that might even be more difficult than Washington.

We need to keep taxes low for our economy to grow. It’s not just a theory for me. I cut taxes 23 times as mayor of New York City with a Democratic City Council and State Assembly, and saw that lower taxes can result in higher revenue. Amid fears of an economic slowdown, now is the time to cut taxes, not raise them. But the Democratic presidential candidates all seem determined to impose an unprecedented $3 trillion tax hike on the American people.

Republicans have a clearer understanding of how our economy works. This summer, I unveiled my tax plan, which committed to making the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts permanent, while aiming for still-lower marginal rates. We’ll give the death tax the death penalty, index the Alternative Minimum Tax for inflation as a step toward eliminating it entirely, expand tax-free savings accounts, and expand health-care choice through tax reform. We also need to reduce the corporate tax rate — which is currently the second highest in the industrialized world, behind Japan — to at least the average of the other Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development nations, or 28%. These actions will protect American jobs, empowering us to compete and win in the global economy.

Controlling spending must be a chief executive’s priority or it doesn’t get done. That’s a lesson I learned from Ronald Reagan, and put into action when I was mayor. Real per capita spending actually fell during my administration. We cut the city bureaucracy by 20%, excluding cops on the street and teachers in the classroom.

We can do the same thing in Washington. Over the course of the next two terms, 42% of the federal civilian workforce is due to retire. We’ll only hire back half, taking the opportunity to right-size government by taking advantage of technology like the private sector did in recent years, and ultimately save taxpayers $21 billion annually.

We also need to return to spending controls and caps, a proven way to make Washington set priorities. As president, I will direct all federal agency heads to find 5% to 10% efficiency savings. If they come back to me and say it’s impossible to find 5% savings in a $2 billion agency, I’ll call on the Office of Management and Budget to identify the cuts. It’s time to put the “M” back in OMB.

Reforming a culture of wasteful spending requires standing up to special interests and insisting on transparency and accountability. Congress spent $29 billion on earmarks last year alone. Earmarks are the broken windows of the federal budget, signs of dysfunction and distress. Recent examples range from the absurd ($1.1 million in 2005 for researching baby food made from salmon) to the self-congratulatory ($2 million for the Charles B. Rangel Center for Public Service). The American people want us to end earmarks once and for all.

But more needs to be done. We need to root out wasteful spending and fraud in benefit payments and contracts by convening a Government Waste Commission, such as the one that closed military bases. It can require Congress to vote up or down on a whole package of recommended cuts, beginning by considering the 3% of programs currently rated “ineffective” by the federal government itself.

Finally, we can both save money and provide better services by consolidating duplicative programs. We don’t need 342 economic development programs or 130 programs serving at risk youth or 72 federal programs dedicated to ensuring safe water (according to a 2004 report). No doubt many of these programs are worthy, but citizens shouldn’t have to navigate a maze of overlapping bureaucracies. Digital one-stop-shop centers will provide better citizen service at lower cost, while transforming industrial age bureaucracies to fit the information-age citizen.

Returning to principles of fiscal conservatism is not an end to itself. We believe these ideas ultimately help government work better for all Americans. Cutting taxes and controlling spending creates a government that is smaller and smarter, more efficient and more effective. It can help balance the budget and reduce the deficit. Most of all, a healthy combination of pro-growth policies and fiscal discipline unleashes the genius of America’s free-market economy — empowering not government, but the citizens it exists to serve.

**********

Previous:

Rudy Giuliani Watch: New Hampshire Troopers Endorse Rudy

California Young Republicans Endorse Rudy Giuliani For President

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Team Rudy

Rudy Giuliani Watch: What Are You Going to Do About Putin?


Technorati Tags:

Your comments are welcome below and at My Dental Forum

Follow Flap at Twitter

by @ 10:30 am. Filed under Media, Speeches

October 8, 2007

Rudy Giuliani Confirmed for Values Voter Summit

The B-52’s - Tell It Like It T-I-IS

Giuliani Now Confirmed for Value Voters Event

And with those words, all eyes will now be on this event. I am told Giuliani will speak Saturday morning. There will be a straw poll at the event and the results will be announced sometime Saturday afternoon.

You can say whatever you want about Giuliani but give him this much: he’s not backing down. This is typical of him and his campaign. They will not concede the social conservative vote. They believe (as documented in this space before) that they can win over quite a few social conservatives. They are not rolling over.

And most of the voters, although they may not agree with Rudy on all issues, will I am positive WILL with him on 90% of them. Rudy will tell it like it is.

Rudy will NOT win the straw poll, but so what?

Both will need each other in order to beat Hillary Clinton.

Previous:

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Southwest Florida Today

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Rudy at Americans for Prosperity Foundation

Rudy Giuliani on the Rush Limbaugh Phony Soldier Attack

Rudy Giuliani Leads in 3Q GOP Presidential Fundraising

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Is a Clinton Presidency Inevitable Like 1992?

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Rudy Assails Hillary Clinton for Southern Accent Pander

Giuliani Poll Watch: New Hampshire - Rudy Gains as Romney Declines

Mitt Romney Lead in New Hampshire Collapses


Technorati Tags:

by @ 1:32 pm. Filed under Media, Speeches

August 17, 2007

Rudy Giuliani Watch: “Leave My Family Alone” Rudy Tells Derry New Hampshire Mother Katherine Prudhomme-O’Brien

giulianiaugust16g

Five year-old Abby O’Brien waits for Republican presidential candidate and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani to arrive for a campaign stop in Derry, New Hampshire August 16, 2007.

Derry, New Hampshire Mother mother Katherine Prudhomme-O’Brien questioned Mayor Rudy Giuliani today at a town-hall meeting: why the presidential candidate should expect loyalty from voters when he doesn’t get it from his children.

Giuliani has a daughter who has indicated support for Democrat Barack Obama and a son who said they didn’t speak for some time. His ugly divorce from their mother, Donna Hanover, was waged publicly while Giuliani was mayor of New York. Giuliani has since remarried.

Answering questions at a town-hall meeting, Giuliani was asked why he should expect loyalty from GOP voters when his children aren’t backing him.

“I love my family very, very much and will do anything for them. There are complexities in every family in America,” Giuliani said calmly and quietly. “The best thing I can say is kind of, ‘leave my family alone, just like I’ll leave your family alone.’”

His comments were greeted with a smattering of applause from the audience of about 120 people. Giuliani urged them to judge him based on his performance as mayor and a federal prosecutor, and he launched into a list of his successes such as reducing crime and welfare and prosecuting organized crime figures and drug dealers.

But, Katherine Prudhomme-OBrien is a Conservative FREAK. She SET-UP the Mayor to embarass him publicly.

Who is she?

Prudhomme- O’Brien is a Tom Tancredo supporter and a NUT.

The Mayor should have told the BITCH to get LOST. He won’t but Flap will.

Previous:

Giuliani Notes: Florida - Rudy 34% Thompson 18% Romney 10% McCain 8%in Latest Strategic Vision Poll

Rudy Giuliani Watch: California Field Poll Has Rudy With 21 Point Lead

Rudy Giuliani Watch: New Radio Ad Highlights Illegal Immigration

Rudy Giuliani Watch: I’ll Stop the Invasion

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Rudy and Huckabee To Be 2008 GOP Presidential Ticket?

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Rudy 38% Thompson 18% Romney 13% McCain 12% in Latest CBS GOP Poll

Rudy Giuliani Watch: You Tube Debate Rescheduled?

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Iowa and New Hampshire Ready to Set Primary Dates

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Ames Straw Poll is Over

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Why Rudy Did Not Go To Ames #1

Rudy Giuliani Watch: Grassley - Mistake for Rudy to Skip Ames Straw Poll?

Rudy Giuliani Watch: John Edwards Attacks Rudy Over 9/11

Representative Charles Rangel Calls Rudy Giuliani a Bum

In California Giuliani Now Leads Thompson 2 to 1 and Romney 4 to 1

Technorati Tags: ,

by @ 6:54 pm. Filed under Media

March 14, 2007

Giuliani Notes: Rudy’s Lead Fragile?

giulianimarch12aweb2

Republican Presidential Rudy Giuliani, right, and his wife Judith Nathan, center, listen as former U.S. Solicitor General Theodore Olson speaks during a news conference in Washington, Monday, March 12, 2007.

GOP Insiders See Giuliani’s Lead In Polls As Fragile

Despite former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s lead in the polls, Republican insiders say the GOP base is so divided and Giuliani’s ascension is so fragile that the party’s presidential nomination for 2008 is totally up for grabs.

“I’ve never seen the party so split,” says a GOP strategist with close ties to evangelical Christians.

One anonymous alleged strategist tied to another campaign thinks what?

Please…….

If you want to “PLANT” a story at least cite some facts - like a poll result or a trend line.

The fact is: Rudy is leading by double digits in most national and many state GOP polls. Rudy is the only GOP candidate who consistently beats Hillary Clinton AND Barack Obama in head to head match-ups.

Who are these folks at CBS News trying to fool?

Or are they still trying to authenticate that Bush National Guard memo?

Cross Posted from the FullosseousFlap’s Dental Blog

Previous:

The Rudy Giuliani Files


Technorati Tags:
by @ 7:06 am. Filed under Media

Blogroll

Official Site

JoinRudy2008

Main

Meta Data



Design By