The shining star from Indiana, House Republican Study Committee
Chairman Rep. Mike Pence, isn't letting up. The RSC released its
legislative agenda. It's bold, principled, and ambitiously
conservative, in ways we hope other pols in this town would be:
1. Make the Tax Cuts Permanent, including the
repeal of the marriage-tax penalty and the death tax and pass
fundamental tax reform.
2. Pass Budget Process Reform, which includes
budgeting for emergencies with a rainy day fund, instituting a
sunset commission for federal programs, instituting a
constitutional line-item veto, and making the budget resolution
carry the force of law.
3. Pass another Deficit Reduction Bill in the
form of budget reconciliation, to reign in autopilot spending,
which has risen from 25% of all federal spending in 1963 to 54%
today, and is expected to reach nearly 60% in 2014.
4. Pass Ethics Reform that requires
transparency and earmark reform that permits Members of Congress to
strike earmarks on the House floor.
5. Pass the Marriage Protection Amendment, to
ensure that marriage, the union of a woman and a man as husband and
wife, is not redefined by activist judges.
6. Pass a Balanced Budget Amendment to put our
fiscal house in order.
7. Offset all emergency supplemental spending
with spending reductions and offset all new programs with
simultaneous, equivalent reductions in, or eliminations of,
existing programs.
8. Defend the Sanctity of Human Life, which
includes banning all human cloning, passing the Unborn Child Pain
Awareness Act, promoting ethical adult stem cell research, and
preventing federal funding for destructive embryonic stem cell
research.
9. Pass Protections for Religious Freedom, such
as the Pledge of Allegiance, the Ten Commandments, and religious
expression in the public square.
10. Pass legislation that stops the raid on the Social Security
Trust Fund and allows Americans to own a Personal Social
Security Account.
There's no question. Pence and Co. should be the folks calling
the shots here. They know what their priorities are, and they're
still in the trenches with the spirit of '94.
topics:
Earmarks, Social Security, Constitution, Law