Submitted by: Debbie Beatty
House Republicans About to Put Democrats on the Defensive
Through
a series if bills aimed
at reducing the public’s exposure to the power and abuse of the federal
government, Rep. Eric Cantor has announced there will be debate and
votes on them next week. Not one of them will become law, mostly
because
liberals are using that corruption
to further their agenda, but many will be embarrassed when the time
comes to justify their votes. The republicans can pass them all in the
House and even if by some miracle, enough democrats vote for it in the
senate, Obama will never sign away the power he wields through
corrupting the executive branch. Besides, Harry Reid can simply not
allow the bills onto the senate floor.
- Keep the IRS Off Your Health Care –H.R. 2009, authored by Rep. Tom Price, prevents the IRS from implementing any portion of Obamacare.
- Keep Federal Bureaucrats from Ruining the Economy and Lowering Wages – H.R. 367,
the Regulations From the Executive in Need of Scrutiny (REINS) Act,
authored by Rep. Todd Young requires Congressional approval of
regulations that cost over $100 million.
- Citizen Empowerment Act –The Citizen Empowerment Act, H.R. 2711
authored by Rep. Lynn Jenkins, creates an affirmative right for
individuals to record their meetings and telephone exchanges with
federal regulatory officials engaged in enforcement activities and
requires that individuals be notified of such right.
- Government Employee Accountability Act –H.R. 2579,
authored by Rep. Mike Kelly gives agencies the option to place
employees on unpaid leave when they are under investigation for certain
serious offenses.
- Government Customer Service Improvement Act –H.R. 1660
sponsored by Rep. Henry Cuellar requires agencies to adopt customer
service standards and to use customer service feedback in agency and
personnel reviews.
- Government Spending Accountability Act – H.R. 313,
sponsored by Rep. Blake Farenthold, increases transparency with respect
to taxpayer-funded conferences, places limits on federal conferences,
and requires agency head approval for the most expensive conferences.
- Common Sense in Compensation Act –H.R. 1541,
sponsored by Rep Mark Meadows would not only place limits on the size
of bonuses but also limit the number of senior agency employees who may
receive bonuses in any given year.
- Stop Targeting Our Politics IRS Act – H.R. 2565,
sponsored by Rep. Jim Renacci would provide for the termination of
employment of IRS employees who take official actions for political
purposes
- Stop Playing on Citizen’s Cash Act –H.R. 2533, sponsored by Rep. Peter Roskam imposes a moratorium on IRS conference until the IG’s recommendations are implemented.
- The Taxpayer Bill of Rights – H.R. 2768, sponsored
by Rep. Peter Roskam would specify the rights that citizens have when
dealing with the IRS, including a right to privacy and confidentiality.
It is an exercise in futility, but remember that the consensus is
that exercise is good for you. If nothing else it will provide some
good commercials for the 2014 election. And if we gain the senate, we
could do even more of this and dare senate democrats to vote no.
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