![]() |
|||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
26-Member Coalition Calls
June 6, 2007 |
|
|
Dear Member of Congress: Elections have consequences, and election results have causes. One clear cause of the November election result was that the Democratic Party convinced large numbers of Americans that they would be more fiscally prudent than the Republicans had been. We the undersigned applaud their new stand, and stand ready to help. Certainly the Congress under Republican leadership gave the voters plenty of reason to be receptive to Democratic overtures on spending. One simple example -- from 2001 through the 2006 Budget, the Republican-led Congress shamelessly raised its own spending by an average of 6.3 percent a year, more than twice the rate of inflation. The recent Emergency War Supplemental demonstrated a clear lack of fiscal discipline on the part of the Democratic Leadership in Congress. And the Senate and House Budget Resolutions propose to raise taxes; create new "reserve funds" to raise taxes further; employ budgetary gimmicks they themselves have criticized; and all while ignoring the impending crises in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. We call on Democrats in Congress to live up to their campaign vows of fiscal discipline, and we call on Republicans in Congress to return to their foundational belief in smaller government and spending restraint. If the Congress fails to strip away pork-barrel spending and hold the line on discretionary spending, or if it tries to hike taxes on the already over-burdened American taxpayer, then we urge the President to exercise his veto. The President must draw a clear line in the sand on spending consistent at least with the restraint he demonstrated in his February Budget. This is a watershed moment for this Congress and for the balance of the President's term. The discipline of spending restraint must be established here and now. Failure to exercise discipline will be highlighted by us in the present and remembered by the American voters come November of 2008.
Sincerely,
James L. Martin
Gary J. Palmer
J. William Lauderback
Tim Phillips
Grover Norquist
Robert Painter
David Hansen
Paul M. Weyrich
Mitchell B. Pearlstein, Ph.D.
Patrick J. Toomey
Matthew J. Brouillette
Thomas Schatz
Bob Williams
Tom McClusky
Matt Kibbe
Richard O. Rowland
Greg Blankenship
Thomas A. Giovanetti
Bob McClure
Forest Thigpen
Dr. Don Racheter
Paul Gessing
Ryan Alexander
John Taylor
Paul Guppy |
|