I stopped by the National Taxpayers Conference last night for some
free-market fun. Congressman Jeff Flake, Sen. Jim DeMint, and
Congressman -- and 2008 presidential candidate -- Ron Paul were the
main speakers.
Flake praised NTU's efforts to keep elected officials,
especially Republicans, honest. He contrasted their ratings
favorably with the National Journal's, saying "Ron Paul
and I only get about 50 percent" in the latter's scores because
they consider votes in support of the GOP leadership conservative
"which isn't always the case." He made a pitch for earmark reform,
arguing that it drives other bigger spending, and acknowledged that
taxpayers have some tough political fights ahead of them.
DeMint seconded that verdict, delivering the most animated
speech of the group. He also railed against earmarks and urged the
crowd to get involved. The senator mentioned his endorsement of
Mitt Romney but didn't launch into an extended sales pitch.
Paul batted clean-up and received enthusiastic applause as he
took the podium. He opened with a quip: "It's good to be here with
Jeff and Jim. It's a lot friendlier than some other panels I've
been on lately." Paul praised the National Taxpayers Union as one
of the few "inside the Beltway" groups he considers valuable,
though he hoped it could go out of business after he shut down the
IRS and got rid of the income tax. The crowd listened politely to
his foreign-policy comments but seemed to drift as he discussed the
"inflation tax." But they started applauding again when he returned
to his themes of the Constitution and cutting government.
topics:
Business, Earmarks, Constitution, NATO