Posts Tagged ‘Republicans’
CALL YOUR REPUBLICAN SENATOR NOW: Support Senator Jim DeMint’s Earmark Ban
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(I took this post off of RedState blog because it is of such importance. It was posted there by Erick Erickson.)
Senator Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) is offering an resolution next Tuesday during the first meeting of Senators serving in the 112nd Congress. The DeMint Resolution would be a statement that the Senate Republican Conference will not take earmarks for the next two years. RedState readers could be the difference between this resolution passing or failing. Consider this your call to action.
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kent.) is opposing this measure and whipping his members to beat back the effort by DeMint for a two year earmark moratorium. McConnell isn’t the only Senator calling other members to oppose this new conference resolution. Just look at the roster of Republicans on the Senate Appropriations Committee to see members working the phones to defeat this measure.
Here is what I need you to do. Call your Republican Senator at 202-224-3121and ask him or her if she is going to vote for the DeMint resolution. If you don’t have a Republican Senator in your state and you want to help, adopt a Senator. If you want to call one of the new members, look up the phone number on the Senate website and give them a call.
Next, ask for the staffer that handles appropriations. You sound like an insider if you say: “Can I talk to the LA that handles approps for the Senator?” This line will not work for campaigns, but will work well for Senators.
Next, ask specifically if the Senator is supporting Senator DeMint’s resolution to ban earmarks for two years for the Senate Republican Conference. If they dodge, ask for their name and get a specific statement whether they are a Yes, No or Undecided.
Next, log onto RedState and publish a comment to this post with your report. Who you spoke to. What they said and any other relevant information.
Here is what we know right now. Senators who we know are supporting this effort are the Republican cosponsors of the DeMint resolution and they are the following:
* Senator Tom Coburn (R-Oklahoma)
* Senator Michael Enzi (R-Wyoming)
* Senator John Ensign (R-Nevada)
* Senator-Elect Marco Rubio (R-Florida)
* Senator-Elect Pat Toomey (R-Pennsylvania)
* Senator-Elect Mike Lee (R-Utah)
* Senator-Elect Kelly Ayotte (R-New Hampshire)
* Senator-Elect Ron Johnson (R-Wisconsin)
* Senator-Elect Rand Paul (R-Kentucky)
* Senator John Cornyn (R-Texas)
* Senator Richard Burr (R-North Carolina)
* Senator Jeff Sessions (R-Alabama)
* Senator Bob Corker (R-Tennessee)
Those are the good guys.
Here are the bad guys:
* Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky)
* Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tennessee)
* Senators Thad Cochran and Roger Wicker (R-Mississippi)
* Senator-Elect John Hoeven (R-North Dakota)
* Senator-Elect Rob Portman (R-Ohio)
* Senators Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins (R-Maine)
* Senators Johnny Isakson and Saxby Chambliss (R-Georgia)
* Senator Lindsay Graham (R-South Carolina)
* Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas)
* Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa)
* Senator-Elect Jerry Moran and Senator Pat Roberts (R-Kansas)
* Senator Scott Brown (R-Massachusetts)
* Senators Mike Crapo and Jim Risch (R-Idaho)
* Senator David Vitter (R-Louisiana)
* Senator John Thune (R-South Dakota)
* Senator Richard Shelby (R-Alabama)
* Senator Jim Inhofe (R-Oklahoma)
* Senator Richard Lugar and Senator-Elect Dan Coats (R-Indiana)
* Senator-Elect Roy Blunt (R-Missouri)
* Senator Orin Hatch (R-Utah)
Right now Republican Leadership and Appropriators are bragging that they have this won. RedState has other plans. Let’s see if we can win this one for all taxpayers.
To All US Veterans on Their Special Day
To all of those whose have served, and especially those who gave the supreme sacrifice, thanks from a grateful nation.
GOD BLESS ALL THE FALLEN SOLDIERS IN IRAQ & AFGHANISTAN
Two Things For Conservatives to Remember On Election Day 2010
Today is the day the citizens of the United States give their mandate to the president and both houses of Congress for the next two years. Liberals shout they are winning and conservatives do the same.
Depending on who’s rhetoric you listen to, both sides are going to be clear winners. Fact of the matter is, we won’t have an accurate idea of how it turned out until the dust settles on November 3rd.
The first thing I would like to point out to voters is this:
Make sure you are part of that final decision – VOTE.
Plenty of victories have been proclaimed in the polls and by the pundits, but all that does not mean a thing until the final ballots are tallied. Now is not the time for complacency. Your preferred candidate could still lose as easy as win if there is a skewed voter turnout.
The second thing to remember is this:
On 3 November, 2010, the politicking is over and the work begins – no matter which side of the aisle the winners stand on.
You have every right to expect your elected representative to be on the job and off the campaign trail come Wednesday morning. I’m sure I’m not alone in the full-belly I have for the seemingly endless campaigning. Get over it guys and gals, you either won or lost, now let’s get on the clock.
I realize there is a transition period between now and January, but the American don’t need to listen to more of what politicians are going to do but instead need to see what they are doing.
Henry Ford said it best, “Reputations are not built on what you are going to do.”
Just remember these two things and then go on about your business as usual:
1 – Make sure you vote
2 – Hold the newly elected (re-elected) candidates feet to the fire beginning on 3 November, 2010.
To Vote or Not To Vote, That Is The Question
This is a re-post from one of my favorite bloggers, Seth Godin with a message to all voters; left and right.I hope everyone who sees this post takes heed of it and exercises their right to vote.
Voting, misunderstood
This year, fewer than 40% of voting age Americans will actually vote.
A serious glitch in self-marketing, I think.
If you don’t vote because you’re trying to teach politicians a lesson, you’re tragically misguided in your strategy. The very politicians you’re trying to send a message to don’t want you to vote. Since 1960, voting turnouts in mid-term elections are down significantly, and there’s one reason: because of TV advertising.
Political TV advertising is designed to do only one thing: suppress the turnout of the opponent’s supporters. If the TV ads can turn you off enough not to vote (“they’re all bums”) then their strategy has succeeded.
The astonishing thing is that voters haven’t figured this out. As the scumminess and nastiness of campaigning and governing has escalated and the flakiness of candidates appears to have escalated as well, we’ve largely abdicated the high ground and permitted selfish partisans on both sides to hijack the system.
Voting is free. It’s fairly fast. It doesn’t make you responsible for the outcome, but it sure has an impact on what we have to live with going forward. The only thing that would make it better is free snacks.
Even if you’re disgusted, vote. Vote for your least unfavorite choice. But go vote.
Sunday’s Calm Before Tuesday’s Storm?
By abandoning his own rhetoric of bipartisanship, did President Obama divide America and set the course for a heavy Democratic defeat in Tuesday’s midterm elections? Yes he did, argues Toby Harnden.
All rhetoric aside, the simple mathematics of the economic climate do not bear out what the Democrats as touting as their achievements.
US midterm elections: Barack Obama’s world turned upside down as Democrats face electoral disaster

