Thursday, January 26, 2017

FREEDOMWORKS 01/26/2017 PRUITT UNDER FIRE FROM DEMS!

1. Trump's $10 Trillion Stimulus Plan - by FreedomWorks Senior Economic Contributor Stephen Moore via Investor's Business Daily
All of Washington seems to be in cardiac arrest over news reports late last week that Donald Trump is planning a budget featuring $10 trillion in cuts over the next decade. We can only hope and pray that the reports are accurate.
This is an enterprise that has been borrowing $1 trillion a year for the past decade and is expected to continue to do so for years and decades to come. The national indebtedness will soon exceed $20 trillion, and everyone in Washington is in denial about this metastasizing cancer cell when they should be ordering radiation therapy before it kills off the economy. Read more here...

2. Trump Gets Rid of the Stupidest Part of ObamaCare - via CNBC
Every government program makes promises that are a stretch. But few policy promises stretched the levels of credulity more than Obamacare did with the idea that America's younger and healthier citizens would suddenly step up and buy expensive health insurance plans. And now, President Trump has basically signed the death warrant for the stretch of a policy known as the "individual mandate." He did that by signing an Executive Order on Friday that instructs the Health and Human Services Department to do all it can to "grant exceptions from" or "delay" the enforcement of the mandate. This is basically telling the bureaucracy to let it die from neglect. Read more here...
3. The So-Called "Patient Freedom Act" Is Not an Alternative to ObamaCare - by Jason Pye
Earlier today, a quartet of Republican senators — Bill Cassidy (R-La.), Susan Collins (R-Maine), Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.V.), and Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) — introduced the Patient Freedom Act. The bill, they say, is a comprehensive replacement for ObamaCare after it's repealed, the process for which is currently underway in Congress. Well, the Patient Freedom Act, as introduced, replaces ObamaCare with...ObamaCare. Yes, you read that right. The bill would allow states that maintain ObamaCare as it currently exists, including the costly regulations and Medicaid expansion; develop their own health insurance alternatives with "federal assistance"; or develop their own health insurance alternatives "without federal assistance."
Before we go any further here, let's be clear: there is absolutely nothing that would prevent states on their own from adopting ObamaCare when it's repealed. That's really the beauty of federalism. Keep in mind that ObamaCare was based on the 2006 health insurance law adopted in Massachusetts under then-Gov. Mitt Romney. The law, of course, has largely been a failure, much like ObamaCare. Still, if a state wants to take that route, its lawmakers can do so without federal legislation like the Patient Freedom Act. Read more here...
4. Pruitt Cool Under Fire at Senate Confirmation Hearing - via Competitive Enterprise Institute
On Wednesday, the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee held a hearing on the nomination of Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt to be Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. As expected, several Committee Democrats attacked Pruitt for “litigating against the EPA on behalf of the fossil fuel industry.” President Trump nominated Pruitt precisely because of his leadership in challenging EPA’s regulatory overreach. In effect, Pruitt’s opponents say the Senate should reject him for the very reasons Trump nominated him. They believe that regardless of who is president, or which issues the winner campaigned on, the EPA administrator must always be a bona fide ‘progressive.’
The ‘EPA is our agency’ crowd implicitly argues that elections don’t—or shouldn’t—matter. Rubbish. Congress created the EPA to be run by political appointees who serve at the president’s pleasure. Read more here...
5. Celebrating Copyright Week - by Dr. Wayne Brough
Copyright week memorializes the fight against SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) and PIPA (Protect Intellectual Property Act) five years ago. Over 100,000 websites joined in protest against the overreach of these bills, some going dark, others displaying banners of protest. While piracy raises legitimate concerns, these heavy-handed bills posed a real threat to innovation and economic growth of the internet community—one of the most dynamic sectors of the economy. To further the debate and encourage the development of copyright laws that serve the wider community, Copyright Week highlights five areas of concern: Public Domain and Fair Use: Recognizing this important link between incentives and innovation, the U.S. Constitution allows Congress the ability to provide “inventors and authors” limited monopolies on the works that they create. While copyrights guarantee exclusivity, the rights have always been tempered by the Fair Use doctrine, which allows the use of copyrighted materials under certain circumstances. Additionally, once copyrights expire, the material falls into the public domain. To ensure robust innovation and creativity, copyrights must work in conjunction with fair use and a robust public domain. Read more here...


Jason Pye
Communications Director, FreedomWorks

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