Phyllis Diller
Was it me?
Of course we should raise the debt ceiling. We need to raise it to afford TARP.
We began our new majority with a simple, but highly important act. For the first time in recent history, the House gathered together and actually read the Constitution. It served as an important reminder that this institution is the People's House.
We have also adopted new rules to establish a Constitution-focused House of Representatives. From this moment forward, every bill must be accompanied by a statement of Constitutional authority that permits it.
Our new Majority stands for a different and better way. We believe in a government that controls less and spends less. This Congress will be a "cut-and-grow" Congress. We are going to cut spending and job-killing government regulations, and grow the economy and private sector jobs. Click here to watch the Weekly Republican Address, in which I discuss where Congress needs to go.
For too long, families and small businesses across America tightened their belts while the federal government continued its spending spree. Therefore, our first piece of legislation was to cut our own Congressional budgets - saving the taxpayers millions of dollars in the first year alone.
It passed the House overwhelmingly and our first spending cut is now in effect.
This is only the beginning.
Regards,
Rep. Eric Cantor
We began our new majority with a simple, but highly important act. For the first time in recent history, the House gathered together and actually read the Constitution. It served as an important reminder that this institution is the People's House.
We have also adopted new rules to establish a Constitution-focused House of Representatives. From this moment forward, every bill must be accompanied by a statement of Constitutional authority that permits it.
Our new Majority stands for a different and better way. We believe in a government that controls less and spends less. This Congress will be a "cut-and-grow" Congress. We are going to cut spending and job-killing government regulations, and grow the economy and private sector jobs. Click here to watch the Weekly Republican Address, in which I discuss where Congress needs to go.
For too long, families and small businesses across America tightened their belts while the federal government continued its spending spree. Therefore, our first piece of legislation was to cut our own Congressional budgets - saving the taxpayers millions of dollars in the first year alone.
It passed the House overwhelmingly and our first spending cut is now in effect.
This is only the beginning.
Regards,
Rep. Eric Cantor
"Click here to watch the Weekly Republican Address, in which I discuss where Congress needs to go."
I thought I was going to see a video of YOU until I read to the end.![]()
LOL-whatever~
the new Congress agrees with you.....
The origins of the federal government’s statutory debt limit can be traced back to 1917. Congress has voted to increase the limit numerous times over the decades, including 10 times since 2001.
The present debt limit is $14.3 trillion, and total outstanding debt subject to the limit currently stands at just under $14 trillion. Given that policymakers don’t have the will to immediately cut spending enough to keep the debt from hitting the limit, a political battle over raising the limit is unfolding.
The Obama administration is basically warning that congressional (i.e., Republican) intransigence could potentially lead to the federal government defaulting on the debt. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner warned Congress that failing to increase the debt limit would result in “catastrophic economic consequences that would last for decades.” The president’s chief economic advisor, Austan Goolsbee, warned Congress not to “play chicken” over whether to raise the debt limit as failing to do so would cause “a worse financial economic crisis than anything we saw in 2008…This is not a game.
The debt ceiling is not something to toy with.”
Back in 2006, then-Senator Barack Obama apparently wasn’t concerned about the “catastrophic economic consequences” when he voted against raising the debt limit. ABC News recalls Obama’s stated reason for his “no” vote:
“The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure,” he said on March 16, 2006. “Leadership means that ‘the buck stops here.’ Instead, Washington is shifting the burden of bad choices today onto the backs of our children and grandchildren. America has a debt problem and a failure of leadership. Americans deserve better. I therefore intend to oppose the effort to increase America’s debt limit.”
Rest here
except for tax cuts and repealing health care
except for tax cuts and repealing health care
..."House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, a Republican, said he recognized the need to allow the government to go deeper in debt.
"Will the debt ceiling ... have to be raised? Yes," said Ryan..."
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE70606E20110107?pageNumber=2