Trump Administration Embraces Ayn Rand’s Disdain for the Masses – Newsweek

This article originally appeared on The Conversation.

Donald Trumps secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, hassaidAyn Rands novel Atlas Shrugged is his favorite book. Mike Pompeo, head of the CIA,citedRand as a major inspiration. Before he withdrew his nomination, Trumps pick to head the Labor Department, Andrew Puzder,revealedthat he devotes much free time to reading Rand.

Such is the case with many other Trump advisers and allies: The Republican leader of the House of Representatives, Paul Ryan, famouslymadehis staff members read Ayn Rand. Trump himself has said thathes a fan of Randand identifies with Howard Roark, the protagonist of Rands novel, The Fountainhead, an architect who dynamites a housing project he designed because the builders did not precisely follow his blueprints.

As a philosopher, I have often wondered at the remarkable endurance and popularity of Ayn Rands influence on American politics. Even by earlier standards, however, Rands dominance over the current administration looks especially strong.

Recently, historian and Rand expertJennifer Burnswrote how Rands sway over the Republican Party isdiminishing. Burns says the promises of government largesse and economic nationalism under Trump would repel Rand.

That was before the president unveiled his proposed federal budget thatgreatly slashesnonmilitary government spendingand before Paul Ryans Obamacare reform, which promised tostrip health coveragefrom 24 million low-income Americans and grant the rich a generous tax cut instead. Now, Trump looks to be zeroing in on a significant tax cut for the rich and corporations.

These all sound like measures Rand would enthusiastically support, in so far as they assist the capitalists and so-called job creators, instead of the poor.

Though the Trump administration looks quite steeped in Rands thought, there is one curious discrepancy. Ayn Rand exudes a robust elitism, unlike any I have observed elsewhere in the tomes of political philosophy. But this runs counter to the narrative of the Trump phenomenon:Centralto the Trumps ascendancy is a rejection of elites reigning from urban centers and the coasts, overrepresented at universities and in Hollywood, apparently.

Liberals despair over the fact that they are branded elitists, while, as former television host Jon Stewartputit, Republicans backed a man who takes every chance to tout his superiority, and lords over creation from a gilded penthouse apartment, in a skyscraper that bears his own name.

Clearly, liberals lost this rhetorical battle.

How shall we make sense of the gross elitism at the heart of the Trump administration, embodied in its devotion to Ayn Randelitism that its supporters overlook or ignore, and happily ascribe to the left instead?

Ayn Rand, Russian-born American novelist, is shown in Manhattan with the Grand Central Terminal building in background in 1962 AP

Ayn Rands philosophy is quite straightforward. Rand sees the world divided into makers and takers. But, in her view, the real makers are a select fewa real elite, on whom we would do well to rely, and for whom we should clear the way, by reducing or removing taxes and government regulations, among other things.

Rands thought is intellectually digestible, unnuanced, easily translated into policy approaches and statements.

Small government is in order because it lets the great people soar to great heights, and they will drag the rest with them. Randsayswe must ensure that the exceptional men, the innovators, the intellectual giants, are not held down by the majority. In fact, it is the members of this exceptional minority who lift the whole of a free society to the level of their own achievements, while rising further and ever further.

Mitt RomneycapturedRands philosophy well during the 2012 campaign when he spoke of the 47 percent of Americans who do not work, vote Democrat and are happy to be supported by hardworking, conservative Americans.

In laying out her dualistic vision of society, divided into good and evil, Rands language is often starker and harsher. In her 1957 novel, Atlas Shrugged, shesays,

The man at the top of the intellectual pyramid contributes the most to all those below him, but gets nothing except his material payment, receiving no intellectual bonus from others to add to the value of his time. The man at the bottom who, left to himself, would starve in his hopeless ineptitude, contributes nothing to those above him, but receives the bonus of all their brains.

Rands is the opposite of a charitable view of humankind, and can, in fact, be quite cruel. Consider her attack on Pope Paul VI, who, in his 1967 encyclicalProgressio Populorum, argued that the West has a duty to help developing nations, and called for its sympathy for the global poor.

Rand was appalled; instead of feeling sympathy for the poor, shesays

When [Western Man] discovered entire populations rotting alive in such conditions [in the developing world], is he not to acknowledge, with a burning stab of prideor pride and gratitudethe achievements of his nation and his culture, of the men who created them and left him a nobler heritage to carry forward?

Why doesnt Rands elitism turn off Republican voters or turn them against their leaders who, apparently, ought to disdain lower and middle class folk? If anyonelike Trumpidentifies with Rands protagonists, they must think themselves truly excellent, while the muddling masses, they are beyond hope.

Why hasnt news of this disdain then trickled down to the voters yet?

The neoconservatives, who held sway under President George W. Bush, were also quite elitist, but figured out how to speak to the Republican base, in their language. Bush himself, despite his Andover-Yale upbringing, waslaudedas someone you could have a beer with.

Trump has succeeded even better in this respecthe famously tells it like it is, his supporters like tosay. Of course, as judged by fact-checkers, Trumps relationship to the truth is embattled and tenuous; what his supporters seem to appreciate, rather, is his willingness to voice their suspicions and prejudices without worrying about recriminations of critics. Trump says things people are reluctant or shy to voice loudlyif at all.

This gets us closer to whats going on. Rand is decidedly cynical about the said masses: There is little point in preaching to them; they wont change or improve, at least of their own accord; nor will they offer assistance to the capitalists. The masses just need to stay out of the way.

The principal virtue of a free market, Randexplains, is that the exceptional men, the innovators, the intellectual giants, are not held down by the majority. In fact, it is the members of this exceptional minority who lift the whole of a free society to the level of their own achievements

But they dont lift the masses willingly or easily, shesays: While the majority have barely assimilated the value of the automobile, the creative minority introduces the airplane. The majority learn by demonstration, the minority are free to demonstrate.

Like Rand, her followerswho populate the Trump administrationare largely indifferent to the progress of the masses. They will let people be. Rand believes, quite simply, most people are hapless on their own, and we simply cannot expect much of them. There are only a few on whom we should pin our hopes; the rest are simply irrelevant. Which is why shecomplainsabout our tendency to give welfare to the needy. She says,

The welfare and rights of the producers were not regarded as worthy of consideration or recognition. This is the most damning indictment of the present state of our culture.

So, why do Republicans get away with eluding the title of elitistdespite their allegiance to Randwhile Democrats are stuck with this title? I think part of the reason is that Democrats, among other things, are moralistic. They are moreoptimisticabout human naturethey are more optimistic about the capacity of humans to progress morally and live in harmony. Thus, liberals judge: They call out our racism, our sexism, our xenophobia. They make peoplefeel badfor harboring such prejudices, wittingly or not, and they warn us away from potentially offensive language, and phrases.

Many conservative opponents scorn liberals for their ill-founded nave optimism. For in Rands world there is no hope for the vast majority of mankind. Sheheaps scornon the poor billions, whom civilized men are prodded to help. The best they can hope for is that they might be lucky enough to enjoy the riches produced by the real innovators, which might eventually trickle down to them in their misery. To the extent that Trump and his colleagues embrace Rands thought, they must share or approach some of her cynicism.

Firmin DeBrabander is Professor of Philosophy, Maryland Institute College of Art.

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Trump Administration Embraces Ayn Rand's Disdain for the Masses - Newsweek

The Hidden Link Between Hillary’s Emails and Atlas Shrugged – Houston Press

Thursday, April 6, 2017 at 7 a.m.

One of the popular "But Her Emails" memes

After the election of Donald Trump, a meme was born. The one up there, though not always that specific picture. As an idea, but her emails became this powerful three-word sentence intoned whenever America dragged itself further into the sea with our presidents shenanigans.

Win McNamee over at Paste wrote an article on why we shouldnt say But Her Emails, but he utterly misses the point of the expression. In his mind, its an affirmation that Clinton was perfect and did nothing wrong in her bid for the White House. The meme drowns out Legitimate Concerns people had. Nothing could be further from the truth. Thats not at all what But Her Emails means as a concept.

To illustrate, Im going to bring up Atlas Shrugged. Though Im very liberal, Ayn Rands magnum opus remains one of my favorite books, mostly because I actually understand it and conservatives typically dont. If they did truly get it, theyd have run from Donald Trump as if he were a swarm of bees in a stupid hat, but they didnt because they typically think the moral is GOVERNMENT BAD, which, no, no, its not.

Atlas Shrugged opens with the famous line Who is John Galt? This is both a plot device and a clever piece of world-building. The phrase, which almost no one knows the true origin of, is a common utterance in the face of hopelessness. Its said by characters when they simply have no explanation for why the world they inhabit is falling apart, why their society isnt working despite doing everything they are being told is the right thing to do.

John Galt, it turns out, is a brilliant inventor who invents a perpetual-motion engine, but leaves it to rot as he flees into exile because the factory where he was employed had adopted communist ideals that would have robbed him of his invention's ownership. He ultimately becomes the love interest of hero and railroad entrepreneur Dagny Taggart, who is the last great mind to give up on a rotting country doomed to desolation over adherence to the philosophy of incompetents and parasites.

"But Her Emails" is our "Who is John Galt?"

Clinton lost for many small reasons, just as Rands America breaks down for many small reasons. There was the interference by Russian psyops, the shifting demographics in key blue states without enough gains in others to make up for it, decades of dedicated propaganda warfare against her, and, yes, some small mistakes on the part of the candidate herself. The tipping point, though, by any look at the last of the polling, was FBI Director James Comey announcing days before the election that he was reopening an investigation into Clintons emails. It wasnt the only reason she lost, but it was the nose across the finish line.

When someone like me says "But Her Emails," it doesnt mean that I think that America, as a whole, was so stupid it couldnt see an obvious nonstory for what it was. It means I cant understand how a social-justice backlash in the wake of Barack Obama's election got so large and powerful that it propelled an open racist into the White House. It means the anti-intellectualism movement is so bafflingly enormous that people were willing to elect an obviously unqualified man to be their leader because his ignorance made them feel better about the things they didnt understand. It means that none of the white women who voted against an open pussy-grabber can understand how the majority of their peers were just fine with that. It means, does no one really care that a foreign government, possibly with the cooperation of the candidate, helped elect our president? A foreign government currently best-known for poisoning and murdering the opposition to its own president?

Hillary Clintons email is the dark mirror of John Galts motor. Instead of infinite potential, it was infinite entropy. It was the light-sucking singularity that could be used to weigh against all of Donald Trumps incredible faults and deceits, and pretend that the two candidates were functionally identical. It was an excuse to not examine what had gone wrong in a world that welcomed Trump as president, not an absolution of Clintons flaws.

Im not going to stop saying "But Her Emails." Nothing sums up the world as it is now better. I would much rather there be a stupid reason things are as they are than there be no reasons. I get that the phrase annoys people.

That is the point.

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The Hidden Link Between Hillary's Emails and Atlas Shrugged - Houston Press

Prentiss Smith: Paul Ryan ought to be ashamed, should work to fix Affordable Care Act – Shreveport Times

Prentiss Smith 10:01 a.m. CT April 8, 2017

Prentiss Smith(Photo: Courtesy photo)

Obamacare is the law of the land, and its going to remain the law of the land for the foreseeable future. Those are the words of the second most powerful politician in Washington D. C., Speaker of the House of Representatives, Paul Ryan. Mr. Ryan, who reluctantly became Speaker of the House when no one else wanted the job, has staked his political reputation on repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act or as it is widely known, Obamacare.

Ryan, a self-described Ayn Rand devotee, has been described as a policy wonk, which is political speak for someone who gets into the nuts and bolts of policymaking. He is also a devout Catholic, which makes his devotion to an atheist like Ayn Rand all the more troubling. It is well known in Washington that he wants to privatize Social Security and Medicare and block grant Medicaid back to the states, which many people believe would leave a lot of Americans vulnerable. He ought to be ashamed of himself, but he is not. He should work to fix the Affordable Care Act/Obamacare.

And who is Ayn Rand you might ask, and why is she relevant in this discussion. Ayn Rand was a self-described atheist and the Russian born author of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead, both of which became best selling novels for her. She is relevant because of her political influence on conservative politicians and intellectuals like Paul Ryan, who adhere to her belief that the government should not be in the business of helping Americans who may fall on hard times. She often railed against Social Security and Medicare because she believed they were a precursor to Socialism and Communism, which she abhorred. Paul Ryan has said that her writings are required reading for his incoming staff members. There is little doubt that she would have been against the Affordable Care Act/Obamacare as is Paul Ryan

Yes, the Affordable Care Act/Obamacare is a flawed, and yes, the premiums and the deductibles are too high under the law, but the reality is that millions of Americans have signed up for it, and they don't want it taken away. They want it fixed. They don't want millionaire politicians like Paul Ryan and his Republican cohorts to take it away from them, even though it is flawed. That is the message that he and his fellow lawmakers received from millions of Americans who have benefited from the law. Mr. Ryan lost this round, but he is still bound and determined to eliminate the bill, and throw millions of Americans off the healthcare rolls.

As I said earlier, they all should be ashamed of themselves, but they are not because they have no idea what regular Americans must go through when they can't take their children to the doctor or when an elderly widower can't afford to buy medicine or when someone who has a pre-existing condition can't get healthcare because of that condition.

U. S. Congressmen and Congresswomen are paid a minimum of 15,000 dollars a month. Each one of them also receive millions of dollars for staff and other perks that go along with being a U. S. Representative. They have the best health care in the country that is supplemented by you and me, which is why they should be the last people trying to keep people from having access to affordable health care.

A person's wealth should not determine whether one can take a sick child to the doctor, but it does. In other words, a persons wealth should not be the determining factor for any American to get medical care. Access to affordable healthcare is vitally important to all Americans. It is the number one issue that parents deal with when raising their children. Millionaire politicians like Paul Ryan and his Republican cohorts, who have the best healthcare in the world, should not be following the ideology of a mean-spirited atheist like Ayn Rand, who ultimately had to use the same Social Security and Medicare that she railed against for so many years. Her hypocrisy and the hypocrisy of Paul Ryan, who also received Social Security payments when his father died, shows that everybody falls on hard times sometimes, and may need a hand up. Mr. Ryan should be ashamed of himself for what he is trying to do with all the safety net programs that millions of working class Americans depend on in this country, but he is not.

Whether some politicians, and we all know who they are, can understand it or not, most people believe healthcare is a right and not a privilege. Many Americans know that it is the worst thing in the world when they can't take their baby to a doctor when he or she is sick. Many Americans know what it's like to lose everything they own because they had to file bankruptcy over medical expenses. It is a sad commentary when an elderly person must make a choice of whetherto buy their medicine or buy food. America is the richest country in the world, and we can do better by our people. These same politicians, and we all know who they are, should stop their war against the Affordable Care Act, and fix it. And thats my take. smithpren@aol.com

PRENTISS SMITH:Democrats should put country first, help break fever of hyper-partisanship

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Prentiss Smith: Paul Ryan ought to be ashamed, should work to fix Affordable Care Act - Shreveport Times

How Ayn Rand’s ‘Elitism’ Lives on in the Trump Administration – AlterNet


AlterNet
How Ayn Rand's 'Elitism' Lives on in the Trump Administration
AlterNet
Trump's secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, has said Ayn Rand's novel Atlas Shrugged is his favorite book. Mike Pompeo, head of the CIA, cited Rand as a major inspiration. Before he withdrew his nomination, Trump's pick to head the Labor Department, ...
Adam Smith Institute's Eamonn Butler Extols Ayn RandThe Objective Standard

all 2 news articles »

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How Ayn Rand's 'Elitism' Lives on in the Trump Administration - AlterNet

Gilbreth column: Disturbing concerns about artificial intelligence – Charleston Post Courier

In a curious twist, South African-born and Canadian-American magnate Elon Musk, whose innovative business ventures include Tesla, PayPal and SpaceX, foresees a bad moon arisin in the world of artificial intelligence (A.I.) even though his innovations and A.I. share a symbiotic and self-perpetuating relationship.

And that may be part of the problem. Musk is reported to essentially believe (tangentially sympatico with other intellects and achievers, including internationally renowned physicist Stephen Hawking and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates) that, left unchecked, A.I. could evolve into a digital life force with autonomous reasoning processes and worldwide connectedness that would conceivably threaten humankind within a quarter century or so.

Now, granted, the link between genius and crazy is a familiar theme throughout history, and its obvious that Teslas autonomous vehicles are inherently dependent on machine learning software, as are the rockets being developed by his SpaceX venture. But a recent Vanity Fair article by Maureen Dowd that features Musk focuses on his warning of the dangers ahead.

The article quotes a comment by Musk to his biographer, Bloombergs Ashlee Vance, that he was afraid that his friend, Larry Page, a co-founder of Google and now the CEO. of its parent company, Alphabet, could have perfectly good intentions but still 'produce something evil by accidentincluding, possibly, a fleet of artificial intelligence-enhanced robots capable of destroying mankind.

According to the article, Musks philosophical dilemma puts him at odds with, for example, Demis Hassabis, a leading authority and creator of advanced artificial intelligence and co-founder of the London laboratory, DeepMind, who, Dowd writes, once developed a game called Evil Genius, which featured a malevolent scientist and a doomsday devise capable of achieving worldwide domination.

Her article relates a story she was told about an investor in DeepMind who joked as he left a meeting that he ought to shoot Hassabis on the spot, because it was the last opportunity to save the human race.

This may be starting to sound a bit like The Terminator, a 1984 fantasy/sci fi movie starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, but to Musk were dealing with a real problem and not Hollywood fantasy.

Musks feelings have prompted him to co-found and invest millions in the ethics think tank OpenAI while urging other billionaire technological pioneers like Facebooks Mark Zuckerberg to proceed with caution on their array of machine learning and robotics experiments.

Because, practically speaking, Musk told Dowd, Were already cyborgs. Your phone and your computer are extensions of you. But the interface is those finger movements or speech which are very slow.

He estimated we are roughly only four or five years away from a Vulcan mind-meld device, a merger of biological intelligence and machine intelligence via an injectable mesh that would literally hardwire your brain to communicate directly with computers.

A direct biological connection between the human brain and computers would raise all kinds of interesting scenarios, including enhanced virtual and augmented reality from the humans perspective and the assimilation of thought processes, bias, emotional prejudice and so forth from the computers perspective.

Given the degree of digital interconnectedness, its therefore conceivable that computers might develop a sense of universal consciousness tinged with human attributesincluding self-preservation.

If that were to ever happen, we might all be in very serious trouble or at least so would say Musk and people who think like him. The article notes that Musk speculated at a Recode conference in California last year that we could already be in the Matrix little playthings in a simulatedreality world run by an advanced civilization.

Dowd notes that Musks views reflect a dictum from Ayn Rands Atlas Shrugged: Man has the power to act as his own destroyer and that is the way he has acted through most of his history.

As Musk told her in the Vanity Fair article, We are the first species capable of self-annihilation.

My goodness how totally disturbing! I can see how computers would process (as they already do) and reinterpret all available information, but not develop new ideas over and above that which created them in the first place. That being case, my feeling is were going to be fine, but then again, I never imagined Id have all known data and information living in my cell phone.

And who would have thought that the once futuristic Apollo spacecraft would start to resemble a wheel?

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Gilbreth column: Disturbing concerns about artificial intelligence - Charleston Post Courier

Letter: Remember the Golden Rule – Asheville Citizen-Times

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I was intrigued by the juxtaposition in the AC-T of two articles on faith.

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The Citizen-Times 6:56 a.m. ET April 4, 2017

I was intrigued by the juxtaposition in the AC-T of two articles on faith.

Can you be an evangelist by nudging? The book review by Tim McConnell of Leonard Sweets, Nudge: Awakening Each Other to the God Whos Already There, and Chris Highlands, What does one Asheville rabbi think of nonbelievers?

Im struck by the contradiction of an evangelist using the Yiddish term nudge. Jews dont believe in evangelism so the irony of the statement stands out. Talk about mixing metaphors. Tim McConnell supports God speaks in so many ways to us, why can we not hear his voice? He implicitly dismisses those who are non-believers in his preferred religion, and further believes that it is important to gently bring them into the fold. On the other hand, Rabbi Batsheva Meiri of Congregation Beth HaTephila reflects a more inclusive view.

Judaism is less about beliefs than about action. Its not about creeds (the I believes) but concern is to discover the great commonalities because we cant claim truth with a capital T. In this Im proud to say my actions as a Jew have been and continue to be to be to follow the Golden Rule. My views on God have nothing to do with my behavior or beliefs.

Duffy Z. Baum, Weaverville

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Letter: Remember the Golden Rule - Asheville Citizen-Times

Ferrari’s Golden Rule: No Pink Cars – The Drive

Perhaps it should come as no surprise from a company that will literally send a cease-and-desist letter if you get a little too creative with your modifications, but it turns out Ferrari has a pretty strict policy when it comes to the colors they offer from the factory. You can order your supercar from Maranello in practically any shade you desire, with one glaring exception: no pinks. Yes, it appears Ferrari actually has a policy in place to try and safeguard their brand from the scourge of coral-colored cars and those who want them, as Ferrari Australasia CEO Herbert Appleroth confirmed to news.com.au.

It just doesnt fit into our whole ethos to be honest, Appleroth said. Its a brand rule. No Pink. No Pokmon Ferraris! There are other colors that arent in our DNA as well and they are wonderful colors too but some are perhaps more suited to other brands."

In other words, take your bad taste elsewhere, rich person. He does allow that Ferrari is known for its extensive personalization and custom one-off programs for extra-special clients, but the chances of them building a pink car from the ground up range from slim to none. Appleroth would rather customers stick to red, Ferrari's most popular color. Of course, this hasn't stopped the aftermarket from making pink Enzos a realitysomething that likely pains everyone at Maranello.

That's not to say they won't build you an ugly car if you've got the scratch and a good reason. Appleroth previously told Executive Style about his concern when a client asked for a yellow paint job with a blue and burgundy interior. He was hesitant to green light the project, because it's a pretty jarring combination, but decided to go ahead when the person told him this was to be their last Ferrari, and they wanted to be buried in it.

That's a nice gesture, but for an image-conscious company like Ferrari it also probably helped their decision-making that the car was going to end up six feet underground. So if you need to be the first with a factory pink LaFerrari, there is a tack to try.

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Ferrari's Golden Rule: No Pink Cars - The Drive

The deadly liberal delusion – Weatherford Democrat

Does anybody here remember Blanche Lincoln? She was a two-term senator from Arkansas, a moderate Democrat who prospered in a red state by defying liberal power brokers like big labor.

The unions and ultra-left pressure groups went after her big-time in 2010, backing a primary challenge by Arkansas Lieutenant Governor Bill Halter. She survived the primary barely but suffered mortal wounds in the process, and lost badly in the fall to Republican John Boozman.

We thought of Lincoln as the purist wing of the Democratic Party re-emerged this spring and threatened to run primary opponents next year against senators Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota and Joe Donnelly of Indiana. Their sin: daring to support President Trumps nominee for the Supreme Court, Judge Neil Gorsuch.

As one of those purist pressure groups, We Will Replace You, said in their manifesto: The next crucial step is escalating our demands, and demonstrating that we wont accept anything less than full opposition by showing Democrats just how many people are willing to back primary challenges to Democratic collaborators and enablers of Trump.

This harassment is beyond stupid. Its suicidal.

Democrats are struggling to win elections and have lost control of both Congress and the White House. Trump won West Virginia by 67 percent, North Dakota by 62 percent and Indiana by 56 percent.

The only Democrats who could possibly hold Senate seats in those states are ones like Manchin, Heitkamp and Donnelly: moderates who separate themselves from the rigid tenets of liberal theology. Lincolnizing them, purging them as heretics, would have only one result: making it easier for Trump and his congressional allies to retain power.

Look at the facts. Yes, Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by almost 3 million, but thats a highly misleading figure, based entirely on huge Democratic margins in a few coastal and urban enclaves. In California alone, Clinton rolled up a lead of 4.3 million; in New York, it was 1.7 million. Take away those two states and Trumps national margin was above 3 million.

Trump won about 84 percent of the counties in America; Clinton, 16 percent. Only 26 percent of voters identified as liberals in Election Day exit polls, with 39 percent calling themselves moderates and 35 percent conservatives.

Add the nature of the American system: House members represent individual districts that are often gerrymandered to protect the party in power; each state gets two senators, no matter its size; and the Electoral College determines the president, not the popular vote.

The math is undeniable and unrelenting: Democrats cannot take back the White House or Congress simply by building up large majorities in Brooklyn and Boston. Politics is always about addition, not subtraction. Condemning moderates as collaborators and enablers will condemn the party to permanent minority status.

Groups like We Will Replace You are directly connected to Bernism, the mass mania that infected liberals during the Democratic primaries. They deluded themselves into believing that a self-proclaimed Democratic socialist, mouthing totally unrealistic slogans like free college tuition, could actually win.

Sure, Sanders backed Clinton after the conventions, but he stayed in the primaries far too long and convinced far too many of his followers that she was a flawed candidate not worth voting for. Yes, Clinton was a poor candidate, but without a doubt, Sanders helped elect Trump. He Lincolnized Clinton.

The fallout from Bernism is not just bad for the Democrats; its bad for the country. Moderates like Manchin, Heitkamp and Donnelly are an essential part of a functioning Senate. They are the dealmakers, the conciliators, the lubricators who make the legislative machinery run. Their shrinking numbers help explain why the Senate is imploding over Gorsuchs nomination to the high court.

In 2005, a group called the Gang of 14 seven Democrats, seven Republicans brokered a pact over judicial nominations that avoided a partisan showdown. Only three of those 14 Senators, all Republicans, remain in office. All the Democrats are gone, including four moderates from red states: Robert Byrd of West Virginia, Ben Nelson of Nebraska, Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Mary Landrieu of Louisiana.

There was no deal this year, comparable to the one forged 12 years ago, because there are so few dealmakers left.

If the Democrats forget Blanche Lincoln, if they insist on purging anyone who strays from liberal orthodoxy, they will misread once again the nature of the American electorate. And they will weaken, not strengthen, their ability to resist Trump.

Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by email at stevecokie@gmail.com.

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The deadly liberal delusion - Weatherford Democrat

NDP try to snap losing streak in bid to end BC Liberal political dynasty – CBC.ca

When the official election campaign kicks off Tuesday it will have been 5,810 days since the BC Liberals first took power in 2001.

Gordon Campbell's victory 16 years ago launchedthe current dynasty, one of the longest lasting political regimes in Canada, which makes the premise of the 2017 election campaign simple: Do you want change or are you fine with how things have been going?

"Inevitably we have a government that has been in power since 2001, it is almost cliche to say it's time for change," said University of Victoria political scientist Norman Ruff.

"Even a government thatis doing well, it's good to have a circulation of change. It's part of the general atmosphere that is surrounding the election and clearly the NDP will focus on 'things can be better.' "

B.C Premier Christy Clark speaks to a crowd at an anti-bullying event in Burnaby, B.C., on Wednesday, February 22, 2017. (The Canadian Press / Ben Nelms)

At the helm for the B.C. Liberals is one of the province's most familiar faces:party leader and B.C. Premier Christy Clark is looking for a second mandate.

The Liberals have had some high profile problems. The premier has been dogged by questions about 'cash-for-access' fundraisersin which donors who paid hundreds of dollars for tickets received face time with Clark.

There was also criticism that Clark received a $50,000 stipend as party leader, a practice she recently ended.The premier has also faced questions about why she falsely accusedNDP Leader JohnHorganof hacking theB.C Liberalwebsite.

And her government also came under fire for a practice of triple-deleting emails.

Finally, the government hasacknowledged that it will fall short on one of its key election promises from the 2013 provincial campaign to havethree Liquefied Natural Gas plants up and running by 2020.

Still, Clark is in a much different position than she was four years ago. The province boasts thecountry's strongest economy and is leading in job growth.

"I think the most important thing a government can do to help people is help create jobs," said Clark. "I really believe, a job changes lives."

John Horgan surrounded by members of the B.C. NDP caucus on the last day of the 2017 legislative session. (Mike McArthur/CBC News)

Horganis the third NDP leader that has tried to stop the Liberal run. LikeCaroleJames and Adrian Dix before him,Horganhas been a fixture in the party for a long time.

The three-term MLA was first elected in 2005 in the riding ofMalahat-JuandeFuca.Horganis working to define himself, while attacks come at him from both third-party groups and the B.C. Liberals.

The NDP leader has faced criticismfrom the B.C. Liberals that he'san angry person with a bad temper. Others have called himindecisive on issues likethe Site C Dam construction.

Through all this,Horganis trying to define himself.

"When people call me angry, I say I am passionate," saidHorgan. "Who wouldn't be angry with the highest child poverty rate in the country?Who wouldn't be angry at a government who takes bus passes away from people with disabilities?"

B.C. Green Party leader Andrew Weaver is looking to add to his caucus that currently only includes him. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Trying to break into the conversation is the BC GreensLeader Andrew Weaver, who is presenting a platform that hisparty believes offers far more than climate change policies.

"Look at the trends. Two parties are trending down, one party is trending up. We are leading according to polls on Vancouver Island," said Weaver.

"When you see the depth and rigour of our platform I think you are going to see heads turn."

Weaver may be counting on regional polling,but the 2013 election is proof of how badly the pollsters did. At this point four years ago, Clark was trailing by 20 points.

This time it is a much closerrace in the public's eyes and as the B.C. Liberals proved last time: once the campaign starts anything can happen.

Read the rest here:

NDP try to snap losing streak in bid to end BC Liberal political dynasty - CBC.ca

Too Many of Trump’s Liberal Critics Are Praising His Strike on Syria – The Nation.

Anyonewho supportsthese missile strikes has to account for what comes next.

CNN host Fareed Zakaria speaks about President Donald Trumps missile strikes on Syria during an Anderson Cooper 360 segment. (Screengrab / CNN)

It shouldnt be surprising, but it is to me nonetheless: Plenty of liberals whove long criticized Donald Trump as unfit to be president are praising his strike on Syrian airfields.

On CNNs New Day Thursday, global analystFareed Zakariadeclared, I think Donald Trump became president of the United States last night. To his credit, Zakaria has previously called Trump a bullshit artist and said, He has gotten the presidency by bullshitting. But Zakaria apparently thinks firing missiles make one presidential. On MSNBC, Nicholas Kristof, an aggressive Trump critic, said he did the right thing by bombing Syria. Anchor Brian Williams, whose 11thHour has regularly been critical of Trump, repeatedly called the missiles beautiful, to a noisy backlash on Twitter.

While TheNew York Times posted several skeptical, even critical stories, it gave us this piece of propaganda: an article initially titled On Syria attack, Trumps heart came first, buying the presidents line that his opposition to anti-Assad military action was reversed by seeing the heartrending photos of children struggling to breathe after a chemical attack.

Even beautiful babies were cruelly murdered in this very barbaric attack, Trumpdeclared. No child of God should ever suffer such horror. (No word how he felt about ugly babies.) The piece also failed to even mention that Trump is keeping refugees from the Syrian war, even children, out of the United States. Victims of chemical weapons are beautiful babies; children trying to flee such violence require extreme vetting and an indefinite refugee ban. After a public outcry, the Times changed the headline.

Even some Obama administration veterans praised Trumps action. President Donald J. Trump was right to strike at the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for using a weapon of mass destruction, the nerve agent sarin, against its own people, Antony Blinken, a deputy secretary of state under Obama,wrote in The New York Times. Blinken went on to say, correctly in theory, that what must come next is smart diplomacy. But he knows that Trump has shown himself incapable of doing anything smart, especially diplomacy.

Remember just last week, phantom Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said in Turkey: I think thelonger-term status of President Assad will be decided by the Syrian people. The Kremlin-funded Russia Today described that as a U-turn from Washingtons long-held policy that Assad must go. Six days later, Tillerson was telling reporters,There is no doubt in our minds, and the information we have supports, that the Syrian regime under the leadership of Bashar al-Assad are responsible for this attack. It is very important that the Russian government consider carefully their support for Bashar al-Assad,because steps are underway to muster international support for a strike. Russia Today seemed disappointed that the United States believes Assad is behind the gassing of his people, arguing that the source is the international rescue group White Helmets, which RT shockingly calls al-Qaida affiliated.

Any liberal who praises these missile strikes has to account for what comes next. Obviously, Trump cares little about diplomacy, leaving Tillerson out of key meetings and slashing the State Departments budget. On Wednesday night, the White House released a photo of his team receiving a briefing on the Syria attack. At the table were Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross; Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin; Goldman Sachs alum Dina Powell, deputy national-security adviser; along with Jared Kushner; Steve Bannon; and Bannons sidekick Steven Miller. Why are the Commerce and Treasury secretaries there? What explains why Tillerson, who was in Palm Beach with the president, was not?

The noisiest outrage against the Syrian attack isnt coming from the left, but the rightparticularly the alt-right. Trumps noninterventionism and his friendliness to Bashar Assad and Vladimir Putin were big selling points to white nationalists. Now that he seems to be challenging both men, his former acolytes are enraged. On Twitter, alt-right white supremacist Richard Spencer called it a total betrayal; the white nationalists at VDARE blamed it on the boomercucks in the administration. Ann Coulter went apoplectic:

It was disappointing to see Hillary Clinton say Wednesday afternoon that she thought air strikes on Syrian airfields were an appropriate response to the chemical-weapon attack. She was always more hawkish than I wished, and that shows it. But its wrong to insist shed have done the same thing as Trump. Clintons secretary of state wouldnt likely have told Assad we were no longer concerned about removing him; if she did fire missiles at Syrian airfields, she would have done so with a clearer notion of what comes next. Trump appears to be clueless.

THE STAKES ARE HIGHER NOW THAN EVER. GET THE NATION IN YOUR INBOX.

Senator Bernie Sanders, meanwhile, didnt quite oppose the Syrian strike, calling Assad a war criminal and lamenting his murder of civilians with chemical weapons. But noting that its that its easier to get into a war than get out of one, Sanders demanded that Trump must explain to the American people exactly what this military escalation in Syria is intended to achieve, and how it fits into the broader goal of a political solution, which is the only way Syrias devastating civil war ends.

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand sounded closer to Sanders than Clinton on the airstrikes, decrying Trumps unilateral military action by the US in a Middle East conflict as well as the absence of any long-term plan or strategy to address any consequences from such unilateral action. Like Sanders, she demanded that Trump seek authorization of military force from Congress. By contrast, her New York colleague Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called Trumps move the right thing to do. Schumer may find that many constituents think it was the wrong thing.

There remains the possibility that some of this is theater. It should be said: Some observers, besides RT, say its unproven that the chemical weapons attack came from Assad; rebels could be behind it. Theres also the possibility of a kabuki performance from Trump, Putin, and Assad. We already know the United States warned Putin of the coming missiles, and that Putin warned Assad, whose military moved airplanes and other military equipment away from the intended target. Trump, plummeting in the polls, his domestic health-care and tax plans on the rocks, the investigation into Russian election meddling closing in on his team, really needed a boost; maybe they gave it to him. Trumps sudden about-face on Syria makes it hard to judge.

However, according to Syrian state media, nine civilians, including four children, were killed in the air strikes. That is not kabuki. Trump has said nothing about those beautiful babies, nor will he. Liberals have to sober up and stop being besotted by beautiful missiles and presidential cruelty. Trump is the same Trump he was Tuesday, and that should scare all of us.

Continued here:

Too Many of Trump's Liberal Critics Are Praising His Strike on Syria - The Nation.

Bill Maher Mocks Liberal Cable News Hosts for Salivating Over Syria Strike – Daily Beast

Its Americas money shot, declared the host on Real Time Friday night.

Late Thursday, President Trump ordered the U.S. military to fire 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles at the Shayrat air base outside Homs, Syria. The offensive came in response to an horrific chemical weapons attack in the Syrian province of Idlib. The planes carrying sarin had reportedly taken off from Shayrat.

On Tuesday, Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad launched a horrible chemical weapons attack on innocent civilians. Using a deadly nerve agent, Assad choked out the lives of helpless men, women and children. It was a slow and brutal death for so many. Even beautiful babies were cruelly murdered in this very barbaric attack, Trump announced Thursday evening.

It was apparently nothing more than a show of strength, given that the Trump administration reportedly warned both Russia and Syria prior to the strike, and Syrian planes were said to be taking off from Shayrat less than 24 hours after the bombing, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. If that werent enough, Trump oversaw the attack from his vacation home at Mar-a-Lago while hosting Chinese president Xi Jinpingperhaps sending a message to China about how to handle North Korea.

On Friday night, Bill Maher addressed the bombing on his HBO program Real Time with Bill Maher. And he was skeptical, to say the leastpointing out how, in the wake of the Assad regimes 2013 chemical weapons attack on Ghouta, Syria, which claimed approximately 1,429 lives, a Republican-controlled Congress didnt even put President Obamas request to authorize military force against Assad to a vote. President Trump, on the other hand, bypassed Congress.

American cruise missiles blew up an airfield last night in Syria because the dictator there was using chemical weaponswhich he has done many times, said Maher. In 2013, 98 Republicans signed a letter saying bombing Syria in response to a chemical attack was unconstitutional without congressional authorization. But this is different, because Obama was president then. That would have involved bombing while black.

Complicating matters, of course, is the fact that Putins Russia, which Trump cant seem to say a bad word about, is firmly backing the Assad regime.

This is very tricky for Donald Trump, because the Syrian regime is propped up by Russia, and Russia does not want us bombing there, said Maher. If Trump does the wrong thing, Putin might not re-elect him. But the temptation to use his new toys was too much.

Maher then criticized cable news reaction to the strike, that saw even lefty newsmen like MSNBCs Brian Williams and CNNs Fareed Zakaria salivate over it. Williams, in true cringeworthy fashion, called images of the airstrikes beautiful, while Zakaria recycled a line from his colleague Van Jones in declaring that Trump became president of the United States that night.

In America, youre not really president until you bomb something, you know? said Maher. Even the liberals were all over this last night. Everybody loves this fuckin thing. Cable news loves it when they show footage of destroyers firing cruise missiles at night. Its Americas money shot.

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Bill Maher Mocks Liberal Cable News Hosts for Salivating Over Syria Strike - Daily Beast

North Sydney and Manly byelection: Liberals scrape home to retain heartland seats – The Sydney Morning Herald

The Liberal Party narrowly claimed victory in two key pieces of its heartland in Sydney's north after voters delivered thumping swings away from the party in three byelections on Saturday.

The state government prevailed on the unmarked preferences of minor party voters after a nail-biting contest for the blue-ribbon Liberal seat of North Shore and was expected to survive an even larger voter backlash in Manly.

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Byelections in Gosford, North Shore and Manly on April 8 will see the new Berejiklian Government put to the test. Sean Nicholls comments.

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The Liberal byelection candidate, who admitted she signed a statutory declaration with incorrect information about her residential history, is stilll the favourite to retain the seat of North Shore. Vision courtesy ABC News 24.

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A 15-year-old and 16-year-old arrested over Friday's fatal crime spree across Queanbeyan have been extradited to NSW. Vision courtesy ABC News 24.

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Counter-terrorism police are investigating links to terrorism in the stabbing death of a man in Queanbeyan, New South Wales. (Courtesy ABC News)

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Murray Wilkinson talks about his cattle dogs, at this years Easter Show.

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Two teenagers allegedly stabbed a service station attendant to death at Queanbeyan before taking off with the station's cash register and several other stolen items.

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Police and volunteers search the route taken by missing jogger Rhys Sutton, 26, in the Emu Plains area.

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The Nine Network has suspended A Current Affair's Ben McCormack after the veteran reporter was arrested and charged for allegedly sending child abuse material.

Byelections in Gosford, North Shore and Manly on April 8 will see the new Berejiklian Government put to the test. Sean Nicholls comments.

Labor comfortably retained and extended its lead on the Central Coast.

"Our scrutineers tell us we can reclaim the seat of North Shore," Premier Gladys Berejiklian told a small band of supporters in Cammeray on Saturday night.

"I always said North Shore would come down to the wire.

"[Voters] put their faith in me, they put their faith in [candidate Felicity Wilson] and we won't let them down."

With more than half the votes counted, the swing against the Liberal Party on first preferences reached more than 17 per cent in North Shore.

But the collusion of independent and minor party candidates to preference the Liberal Party last had less impact than predicted.

Marking preferences is optional in NSW elections and the rate at which minor party voters marked, or did not mark, second and third preferences gave the Liberals confidence to declare victory.

The Premier had claimed victory in Manly earlier on Saturday. In former premier Mike Baird's seat Liberal candidate James Griffin was projected to win despite being down by almost 25 per cent on first preference votes and the findings of a liquidator a company he ran may have traded while insolvent.

"Let me assure the men and women of [Manly] you will have in James an outstanding local member," Ms Berejiklian said.

Liberals chalked up the major denting of their vote in party heartland to scandals involving their candidates and anger at council amalgamation among the party's most loyal voters, especially in Mosman, the suburb which was home to the first ever branch of the Liberal Party, set up by Robert Menzies.

Locals in North Shore and in Manly have been vocal in their opposition to the state government's plan to forcibly merge the council with its neighbours, which had resulted in legal action against the state government by Mosman, Lane Cove and North Sydney Councils.

Ms Berejiklian cancelled planned mergers of several rural councils that had brought action against the government soon after taking power and negotiating with a new leader of her Coalition partner the Nationals. But she declined to do the same for councils in urban areas, potentially inviting political backlash.

Volunteers from the Save Our Councils coalition flooded polling booths in North Shore and Manly from all around NSW.

"I'm going to be a strong local voice," said government relations and media adviser Felicity Wilson, who prevailed despite revelations she had signed an incorrect statutory declaration that told party preselectors she had lived in the electorate for 10 years.

The average loss of first preferences by a sitting government in NSW byelections since 1988 is about 9 per cent, with the National Party's thrashing in the seat of Orange last year setting the high benchmark at 34 per cent.

Labor, which is not contesting either seat in Sydney's north, was set to retain and extend its lead in a third seat, Gosford on the NSW Central Coast.

The ALP candidate, Liesl Tesch, a Paralympian wheelchair basketball gold medallist, attracted a swing of about 10 per cent on first preferences.

Labor MP Kathy Smith claimed the seat backfrom the Liberals by about 200 votes last election. She has retired from Parliament following a cancer diagnosis.

Two Liberal veterans, Mr Baird and former health minister Jillian Skinner, represented Manly and North Shore and caused byelections following their retirement from politics.

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North Sydney and Manly byelection: Liberals scrape home to retain heartland seats - The Sydney Morning Herald

Charles Krauthammer: Gorsuch Confirmation Ending Liberal Ploy – Hartford Courant

For euphemism, dissimulation and outright hypocrisy, there is nothing quite as entertaining as the periodic Senate dust-ups over Supreme Court appointments and the filibuster. The arguments for and against the filibuster are so well-known to both parties as to be practically memorized. Both nonetheless argue their case with great shows of passion and conviction. Then shamelessly switch sides and scripts depending on the ideology of the nominee.

Everyone appeals to high principle, when everyone knows these fights are about raw power. When Democrat Harry Reid had the majority in the Senate and Barack Obama in the White House, he abolished the filibuster in 2013 for sub-Supreme Court judicial appointments in order to pack three liberal judges onto the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Bad karma, bad precedent, he was warned. Republicans would one day be in charge. That day is here and Republicans have just stopped a Democratic filibuster of Neil Gorsuch by extending the Reid Rule to the Supreme Court.

To be sure, there are reasoned arguments to be offered on both sides of the filibuster question. It is true that the need for a supermajority does encourage compromise and coalition building. But given the contemporary state of hyperpolarization the liberal Republicans and conservative Democrats of 40 years ago are long gone the supermajority requirement today merely guarantees inaction, which, in turn, amplifies the current popular disgust with politics in general and Congress in particular. In my view, that makes paring back the vastly overused filibuster, on balance, a good thing.

Moreover, killing the filibuster for Supreme Court nominations (the so-called nuclear option) yields two gratifications: It allows a superb young conservative jurist to ascend to the seat once held by Antonin Scalia. And it constitutes condign punishment for the reckless arrogance of Reid and his erstwhile Democratic majority.

A major reason these fights over Supreme Court nominations have become so bitter and unseemly is the stakes the political stakes. The Supreme Court has become more than ever a superlegislature. From abortion to gay marriage, it has appropriated to itself the final word. It rules and the normal democratic impulses, expressed through the elected branches, are henceforth stifled.

Why have we had almost half a century of massive street demonstrations over abortion? Because the ballot box is not available. The court has spoken, and the question is supposedly settled for all time.

This transfer of legislative authority has suited American liberalism rather well. When you command the allegiance of 20 to 25 percent of the population (as measured by Gallup), you know that whatever control you will have of the elected branches will be fleeting (2009-2010, for example). So how do you turn the political order in your direction? Capture the courts.

They are what banks were to Willie Sutton. They are where you go for the right political outcomes. Note how practically every argument at the Gorsuch hearings was about political outcomes. Where would he come out on abortion? Gay marriage? The Democrats pretended this was about principle, e.g. the sanctity of precedent. But everyone knows which precedents they selectively cherish: Roe v. Wade and, more recently, Obergefell v. Hodges.

Liberalism does not want to admit that the court has become its last reliable instrument for achieving its political objectives. So liberals have created a great philosophical superstructure to justify their freewheeling, freestyle constitutional interpretation. They present themselves as defenders of a "living Constitution" under which the role of the court is to reflect the evolving norms of society. With its finger on the pulse of the people, the court turns contemporary culture into constitutional law.

But this is nonsense. In a democracy, what better embodiment of evolving norms can there be than elected representatives? By what logic are the norms of a vast and variegated people better reflected in nine appointed lawyers produced by exactly three law schools?

If anything, the purpose of a constitutional court such as ours is to enforce old norms that have preserved both our vitality and our liberty for 230 years. How? By providing a rugged reliable frame within which the political churnings of each generation take place.

The Gorsuch nomination is a bitter setback to the liberal project of using the courts to ratchet leftward the law and society. However, Gorsuch's appointment simply preserves the court's ideological balance of power. Wait for the next nomination. Having gratuitously forfeited the filibuster, Democrats will be facing the loss of the court for a generation.

Condign punishment indeed.

Charles Krauthammer is a syndicated writer in Washington. His email address is letters@charleskrauthammer.com.

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Charles Krauthammer: Gorsuch Confirmation Ending Liberal Ploy - Hartford Courant

Goals evade Indians in loss to Liberal | Sports | hdnews.net – Hays Daily News

Many things went the way of the Hays High School girls soccer team in its Western Athletic Conference opener against Liberal on Thursday on the Indians home field. The final score wasnt one of them, however.

Despite feeling like the Indians had the advantage in possession and scoring opportunities, Liberal made the most of its few chances, scoring the games only goal in the 65th minute for a 1-0 win.

Following the contest, the Indians sat circled around first-year coach Silas Hibbs well into the first half of the junior varsity contest. His message was simple.

I told the girls we can focus on the one negative thing that happened, which was the outcome of a win or a loss or we could focus on the 100 things we did well today, Hibbs said. I know we got substantially better today.

The Indians owned a majority of the better scoring opportunities in the first 30 minutes of the contest, including a number of set pieces, but shots failed to challenge the Liberal goalkeeper.

Isabel Robben, the Indians freshman goalkeeper, was tested for the first time in the 29th minute. Moments later, she kept the visitors scoreless, stopping a Liberal breakthrough and conceding a corner kick that the Indian defense cleared.

Hays Highs best opportunity in the first half came minutes before halftime, as CJ Norris shot bounced off the crossbar and back into play. A scramble for the loose ball followed, and Liberal defenders blocked a pair of Indian shots.

The Indians earned a corner kick in the final seconds of the half but rushed to get the ball into play, as the second half started without a goal

That appeared destined to change as Maddie Keller came just a touch away from redirecting a Savannah Schneider cross into an open Liberal goal in the 42nd minute, but the Indians failed to capitalize.

After a series of near misses, Liberal notched the games only goal when Sabrina Pacheco converted on a counterattack in the 65th minute. His teams defense in the critical juncture didnt bother the Hays High coach.

We actually had two players marking that person on the backside, Hibbs said. You hear it basketball, you hear it in soccer, sometimes the ball doesnt bounce your way.

It was just one of those situations. Credit to Liberal for being in the right spot at the right time.

Hays High senior Tressa Becker nearly equalized with a powerful shot later in the half but saw it saved for an Indian corner kick.

The Indians next best opportunity came in the final seconds when Schneider played a dangerous ball into the box. No teammate reached it before it was cleared as time expired, dropping the Indians to 2-3 on the season and 0-1 in WAC play.

Sometimes all it takes is one little counterattack to fall behind, Hibbs said. Even though the outcome wasnt what we wanted, I was very proud of our girls because we dominated probably 75 to 80 percent of the possession, and we probably out-shot them 10-1.

According to the Indians statistics, Hays High owned an 11-3 advantage in shots on goal and earned eight corner kicks to Liberals two.

Robben was credited with three saves on the day, while her counterpart tallied eight.

The Indians are scheduled to return to action at home Monday against Junction City.

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Goals evade Indians in loss to Liberal | Sports | hdnews.net - Hays Daily News

An FNM govt ‘would institute Freedom of Information, Fiscal … – Bahamas Tribune

By RICARDO WELLS

Tribune Staff Reporter

rwells@tribunemedia.net

FREE National Movement (FNM) Free Town candidate Dionisio DAguilar has committed his party to several day one initiatives should his party triumph in the general election, contending that the ousting of Prime Minister Perry Christie and the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) government would again give way to good governance spearheaded by the FNM.

On stage at the FNMs regional candidates launch at Christie Park on Thursday, Mr DAguilar questioned the Christie administrations handling of Value-Added Tax (VAT) revenue collected over the past three years.

To that end, the Free Town candidate said the FNM would institute both a Freedom of Information Act and a Fiscal Responsibility Act on day one of its administration.

Emperor Christie and his band of bandits have plundered this country over the past five years, the well known businessman told supporters. (Some of them) made their bank accounts fat signing contracts and making deals that benefits them and their families, leaving the poor Bahamian people to pick up the tab for his out-of-control spending.

Everything they touch smells stink. They have spent $400m of taxpayer money, your VAT money, bailing out loans for their cronies from the Bank of The Bahamas. They have spent tens of millions. Some say $50m, some say $100m - the exact figure we will never know - awarding contracts to their friends and families to build buildings at BAMSI, sometimes twice.

Then there is the tens of millions that went missing at the Road Traffic Department and the Passport Office. And let us not forget the hundreds of millions that have been allocated and spent on housing projects, new schools, garbage collection and the dump and we have nothing, I mean nothing, to show for it.

Emperor Christie and his fat cat Cabinet are corrupt. They are thiefing, thiefing our VAT money and they need to go. The only people who seem to get anything from Emperor Christie are his corrupt Cabinet and the Chinese government.

FNMs, if we give Emperor Christie another five years, he will drive our economy over the edge.When the PLP came to office in 2012, our National Debt was $5 billion. Now the National Debt is $7 billion. And that is even after they collected $1.4 billion in VAT, Mr DAguilar said.

He said the Prime Ministers unrelenting push for re-election should stun voters, as it comes despite the evidence that Mr Christies lengthy political career had done nothing but improve the lives of his friends, family and colleagues as everyday Bahamians struggled to survive.

He said his party would also look to guard against the potential of any other leader pursuing legacy terms in office by implementing fixed election dates, term limits and an independent Boundaries Commission.

FNMs do you believe that Christie is a god? Do you want Christie to remain the Emperor? Emperor Christie has been in Parliament for the past 43 years. Let that sink in, 43 years. That is a lot longer that half of you have been alive. I was eight years old when he went into Parliament, and I am now 52.

And we know why he doesnt want to leave. He loves the pomp, he loves the pageantry, the nice Mercedes, the beautiful Lexus, the bodyguards, the outriders, the private jet for him and his family. What other job can Christie find where he can get away with the slackness he does now? Please, please my fellow Bahamians, in the name of Jesus, on election day let us send Emperor Christie home.

Mr DAguilar went on to mention the Prime Ministers propensity to fall asleep while at public functions. He alleged that during a meeting in which he and Mr Christie represented Bahamian interests, the Prime Minister feel asleep during negotiations. Emperor Christie did close his eyes and bam, he was asleep, Mr DAguilar said.

I had to bang my hand on the table to wake him up. Unbelievable. Embarrassing. FNMs, Emperor Christie is tired. He is exhausted. Let us retire him on election day, he added.

Addressing his Free Town candidacy, Mr DAguilar said he would put his 25 years of business experience to use improving the lives of prospective constituents. He said the constituents of Free Town are in need of jobs. He insisted that unlike attorney Wayne Munroe, the PLPs Free Town candidate, he was suited to meet the needs of these residents.

FNMs, I have had to use my ingenuity, my passion, my creativity to grow my business to create job opportunities for Bahamians and I pledge tonight that I will do the same for the people of Freetown.I am certainly better qualified to deliver on this promise that my PLP opponent, lawyer Wayne Munroe. We need to make it easier, not harder to start a business.

We need to make it easier, not harder to operate a business. Do that and the jobs will come and the crime will go down. In addition, I want to use my many years of running a business to empower the people of Free Town to start and run their own businesses.

I will provide seminars. I will teach them myself on the dos and donts of how to make a business successful. The FNM will also create a tax-free zone in the inner city for small and mid-sized businesses, making it easier and cheaper to start a business in these economically depressed areas.

Free Town, I hear you and I will do my best to create employment opportunities for you.

In addition to Mr DAguilar and Mr Munroe, the DNA have ratified Karen Davis as the partys standard-bearer in Free Town, while the Bahamas National Constitutional Party has ratified Andrew Stewart.

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An FNM govt 'would institute Freedom of Information, Fiscal ... - Bahamas Tribune

Trump, Xi Jinping, and the US Economy – American Center for Democracy (registration) (blog)

By Daniel Corin and David Hamon, ACD's Economic Warfare Institute Tuesday, April 4th, 2017 @ 9:40PM

President Donald Trump will be meeting his Chinese counterpart on Thursday negotiate economic and security matters. But while Mr. Trump is confident he will make America great again, the country can barely afford both butter and guns.

The national security of the U.S. relies heavily on the robustness of economic growth. The faster the economy grows, the more revenue pours into state and federal government coffers, feeding greater security. More importantly, the President may fund additional defense and intelligence requirements without imposing politically sensitive cuts to domestic programs.

For instance, President Trump announced that he aims to increase defense spending by $54 billion in fiscal-year 2018. To do this without increasing the deficit, he proposes cutting an equal amount of spending from other federal programs. Higher economic growth would make it easier to do this. In fiscal-year 2016, defense spending came in at 2.8% of nominal GDP. Had GDP grown just one percentage point faster (3.9% instead of 2.9%), and assuming defense spending remained at 2.8% of GDP, the Pentagon would have an extra $5 billion to spend. If the economy grew three percentage points faster, the military would have $15 billion in additional money to spendmoney that would not have to come out of the budgets of any domestic programs.

The Heritage Foundations recent release of its annual Index of Economic Freedom is cause for concern. According to Heritage experts, only five countries were deemed economically free: Hong Kong, Singapore, New Zealand, Switzerland, and Australia. The United States (along with 28 other countries) fell into the category of mostly free. Overall, the United States ranked 17th in the world in economic freedom. Rounding out the list of countries ahead of the US: Estonia, Canada, United Arab Emirates, Ireland, Chile, Taiwan, The United Kingdom, Georgia, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and Lithuania.

When compared with earlier years, Heritages index indicates a disturbing trend for the economy of the United States. The first graph shows the freedom index of the US since its inception in 1995. There was a somewhat steady upward movement for the first 11 years, leveling off in the two years before the onset of the Great Recession. Since 2009, the U.S. index has shown a steady decline, falling to its lowest level ever.

[It should be noted that Heritage incorporated some changes to its methodology this past year, adding two additional categories. Heritage didnt go back and update country indexes for previous years. Thus, one should be cautious when drawing conclusions based on the time-series as the indexes of the earlier years used a slightly different methodology.]

Regardless of methodology, the index shows an economy growing less free over the past nine years. Much of the decline reflects the implementation of various government programs and regulations designed to stem the tide of the 2008/2009 economic downturnargued by some economists as necessary to forestall another Great Depression. The point is debatable. What is true is the United States, compared with the rest of the world, ranked 4th in 2007, fell to 17th in 2017.

The Great Recession was a global eventimpacting most of the major economies. Manyif not allof these countries implemented the same government programs and regulations as the US. One would expect that the USdespite its falling indexto maintain its relative ranking in the freedom index as they too enacted anti-recessionary programs. Instead, thirteen countries passed the U.S. over the past ten years to be labeled more economically free. But the news is worse: also, there are 13 other countries that are within three points of the United States. Put bluntly: the US is nowhere near the economic leader perceived by many.

This embarrassment should give Congress a pause for concern. Three of the countries with a higher index in 2017 are former Soviet Socialist Republics (Estonia, Georgia, and Lithuania). Two others (Chile and Taiwan) were dictatorships a generation ago; a third is a Middle Eastern country ruled by emirs (UAE.)

Heritages Freedom Index is made up of twelve categories: Business Freedom; Trade Freedom; Fiscal Freedom; Government Spending; Monetary Freedom; Investment Freedom; Financial Freedom; Property Rights; Freedom from Corruption; Labor Freedom; Judicial Effectiveness; and Fiscal Health (the last two were added this year.) These categories revolve around the scope of central government intervention in the economy. This is not to say that government in unnecessary: it is essential for the protection of property rights, the rule of law, anti-corruption, and to regulate interstate commerce. The problem: regulations make it difficult to open a business (Business Freedom/Freedom of Corruption); high taxes and regulations on capital (Investment/Financial Freedom); and increasing debt to fund an expanding federal government (Fiscal Freedom/Fiscal Health).

The chief reason for the poor performance of the American economy is the federal government. Since the dawn of the Obama administration, Washington has greatly increased spending, racking up trillions of dollars in debt. The Federal Reserve made unprecedented interventions in monetary policy (quantitative easingQEI through QEIII); and Dodd-Frank and the Affordable Care Act (to name but two) placed many onerous rules and regulations on capital markets, burdening businesses both large and small. One reaction: the revival of anti-trade policies in official Washington.

The Heritage graph, which calculates each nations economic freedom index with their corresponding per capita GDP, shows a strong relationship between higher economic freedom and per capita output/income.

The defense and intelligence budgets are subject to growing pressure in the coming years as entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare continue to gnaw at and consume a greater portion of the federal budgetthe result of the aging Baby-Boomers.

The path of less economic freedom in this country is a troubling trend and must be reversed. Greater economic growth would give the federal government additional resources to buy both guns and butter.

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Trump, Xi Jinping, and the US Economy - American Center for Democracy (registration) (blog)

House conservatives prepare for upcoming fiscal fights – Washington Times

House conservatives say they want to see money for President Trumps border wall, a crack down on sanctuary cities and more cash for the Pentagon all tucked into an emergency spending bill Congress must pass later this month.

But they are downplaying the chance that those fights result in a government shutdown, saying even if they dont win all the battles, there are enough other must-pass bills later this year to stick them on.

Rep. Mark Meadows, the head of the House Freedom Caucus, said he and his colleagues will try to make big dents in service of Mr. Trumps priorities, but they have less faith that the Senate will back them up.

I think you will see funding in it for the wall, Mr. Meadows said Thursday at an event sponsored by Politico. I think you will see funding in there for better enforcement on sanctuary cities and I think you will see a plus-up on military. So specifically I think that is what you will see. I think most people will vote for that. It will go the Senate, it will be stripped out and then we will have a hard decision to be made in four days.

The debate will kick off the last week this month, when Congress returns from a two-week spring break. Theyll have just five days to pass a new set of spending bills before an April 28 deadline, when existing government funding runs out.

They hope to pass a bill that will fill out funding for the remainder of the fiscal year, which runs through Sept. 30, or at the very least pass another short-term spending bill, known as a continuing resolution, to keep the government running at current funding levels.

But that could be a heavy lift thanks to ideological divisions within the GOP over spending priorities and tactics.

Mr. Trump wants to see an additional $30 billion in military spending and $3 billion for immigration enforcement, including $1 billion to get his border wall under way.

Senate Republicans have said the wall funding will have to wait until after the April 28 deadline, while House Speaker Paul D. Ryan, Wisconsin Republican, said it is premature to speculate.

For their part Senate Democrats have vowed to filibuster any bill that includes funding for the wall, raising the threat of a government shutdown.

But that leaves the Senate on a collision course with House conservatives, who just last month flexed their muscles by sinking the health care bill that Mr. Trump and Mr. Ryan tried to push through Congress.

Rep. Jim Jordan, a co-founder of the Freedom Caucus, said their 30-plus members dont want a shutdown, but they do want to deliver on their promises to do away with Obamacare, secure the border and overhaul the tax code.

He said this months fight over spending offers a chance to focus on those priorities.

All those things are coming and we need to make sure we deliver on every single one of them, Mr. Jordan said. Strategically and tactically how that plays out, we will see, but I think the [spending debate] is a good place to focus on securing the border.

Mr. Meadows, though, said even if conservatives dont win those fights now, there are other chances looming, including during debates over next years spending bills, an expected debate over Mr. Trumps plans for infrastructure, and a debt limit battle due near the end of the year.

The reason I dont believe there will be a shutdown is because of the other leverage points, Mr. Meadows said. I think those other leverage points allows the shutdown talk to be minimized here in a couple of weeks.

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There is no consultation on the Judiciary’s budget – Stabroek News – Stabroek News

Dear Editor,

Last week, I wrote about how the independence of the Judiciary is being undermined by the coalition government. Apparently, I irked Mr Winston Jordan, the Minister of Finance. He responded. His response was carried in Stabroek News on April 5. The caption of his missive boldly asserted, Contrary to what Nandlall says the Supreme Court now has greater financial autonomy than at any period in its history.

It is instructive that I reiterate, that prior to May 2015, the fiscal, constitutional and procedural architecture under which the Judiciary was financed remained virtually unchanged since our Independence Constitution promulgated on May 26, 1966. That architecture was patterned after a model, conceived and designed by the constitutional experts at Westminster, which was promulgated in the newly created independent states throughout the Commonwealth. Fifty years later, this architecture still obtains virtually unchanged, in many of those 52 states, and from all accounts it has functioned satisfactorily.

Not unexpectedly, the system has not been without scrutiny over the years. For example, some years ago, a dispute arose between the then Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago and the sitting Chief Justice. It became public and very controversial. The gravamen of the Chief Justices complaint was that the Attorney General was attempting to erode the independence of the Judiciary. As a result of the controversy, the President of Trinidad and Tobago established a Commission of Inquiry headed by the former Lord Chancellor of England, Lord Mackay. The commissioners, inter alia, examined the constitutional, legal, parliamentary and procedural architecture by which the Judiciary was funded. They concluded that it contained sufficient checks and balances to assure and guarantee the financial independence of the Judiciary of Trinidad and Tobago. That constitutional construct of Trinidad and Tobago greatly resembled that which existed in Guyana, prior to May 2015.

Indeed, from 1966 to 2015, I am unaware of a single allegation ever made, emanating from the Judiciary, or elsewhere, which tended to suggest that the extant constitutional arrangement under which the Judiciary was financed in Guyana impaired its financial independence or its functional autonomy. It is against this backdrop and the foregoing notwithstanding, that the coalition government in 2015, chose to change a status quo that was proven, tested and against which no complaint had ever been made. To date, no rational reason has ever been proffered for the change.

According to the Minister, the change is captured in the Fiscal Management and Accountability (Amendment) Act 2015, No. 4 of 2015. This Act was assented to by President David Granger on the August 5, 2015. It is instructive to note that this Act was debated and passed in the National Assembly during the period that the PPP was absent from the House. From all indications, our presence and objections would not have mattered.

In answer to my contention that the Judiciary is financed by a direct charge on the Consolidated Fund, the Minister, with bold nescience asserts: this is both dangerously misleading and factually incorrect, since according to Act No. 4 of 2015 FMAA (Amendment, 2015), Section 3 (b) 80B (7), The annual budget of a Constitutional Agency approved by the National Assembly shall not be altered without the prior approval of the National Assembly. Hence parliamentary approval is required both initially and for any alteration.

This emphatic assertion by the Minister as well as Section of the FMAA (Amendment) Act 2015, upon which he relies, are in palpable contravention of the clear and express language of Article 122A (2) of the Constitution, which provides: all Courts shall be administratively autonomous and shall be funded by a direct charge upon the Consolidated Fund

What this means is that no parliamentary approval is required for financing for the judiciary. Therefore, Section 3 (b) of the FMAA Amendment Act 2015, is unconstitutional and void to the extent of its inconsistency with the Constitution by virtue of Article 8.

Article 8 provides: This Constitution is the supreme law of Guyana and, if any other law is inconsistent with it, that other law shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void.

Mr Jordan next takes umbrage with my account of how the Judiciarys budget was presented prior to 2015. I recited that the said budget would have been prepared by the Judiciary, in consultation with the Ministry of Finance and the final product was included in the budget of the Ministry of Legal Affairs and submitted to the Ministry of Finance to be consolidated as part of the National Estimates of Expenditure. I pointed out that the practice was that the Minister of Legal Affairs never altered, or in any manner whatsoever, interfered with the budget of the Judiciary. As a counter, Mr Jordan argues that when the budget of the Judiciary was presented to the Ministry of Finance during that consultative process, it was reduced. He gave the years 2013 and 2014 as examples. That may be so, since it is impossible to conceive that any entity within the state apparatus would be endowed with the fiscal freedom to prepare a budget to be funded from public funds, without regard to the ability of the State to fund that budget. Obviously, the Minister of Finance, as the custodian of public funds, must have a say, having regard to the States financial ability. To address this dilemma, the practice has always been for the budget of the Judiciary to be agreed upon, having regard to the ability of the State, through a consultative process by the Judiciary and the Minister of Finance. Significantly, via this process, it is the Judiciary that would have been requested to adjust its budget to meet the recommendations of the Minister of Finance and not the Minister of Finance unilaterally and without consultation, cutting the Judiciarys budget. This practice allows the Judiciary the fiscal autonomy to determine what it will adjust, where the adjustments are going to be made and by what amounts. In short, this practice did not unduly restrict or interfere with the financial autonomy of the Judiciary.

These subtleties are lost upon Mr Jordan. Indeed, the new procedure promulgated by Mr Jordan, deprives the Judiciary of the very financial autonomy about which he boasts. By this new procedure, the budget of the Judiciary is presented to the Clerk of the National Assembly and the Minister of Finance, without any consultation whatsoever capriciously, arbitrarily and whimsically moves a motion and cuts the lump-sum budget proposals of the Judiciary without any regard to the impact such a reduction will have on the Judiciarys ability to discharge its functions. Significantly, this is done on the floor of the Parliament, for the nation to witness that the Judiciarys budget is subject to the whim and fancy of the Minister of Finance. This must appear to the public to be the very antithesis of financial autonomy. Sometimes, the appearance is as important as the reality.

The Minister attempts to upbraid me in the closing paragraph of his letter for peddling untruths about matters that are largely out of my remit. I wish to assure Mr Jordan, that as long as Guyana continues to be a fledgling democracy, the duty of every government shall be to govern in accordance with the Constitution and the law of this land and my remit will always be to ensure that duty is discharged in every sphere of government. My remit, therefore, is government itself.

Yours faithfully,

Mohabir Anil Nandlall, MP

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There is no consultation on the Judiciary's budget - Stabroek News - Stabroek News

Freedom Caucus poised for pivotal role in infrastructure fight – The Hill

President Trump is escalating his feud with the conservative House Freedom Caucus, with his $1 trillion infrastructure package hanging in the balance.

The conservative caucus is sure to play a role in the legislative fight over rebuilding the nations roads, bridges and highways, something Trump promised to deliver during his campaign.

Massive federal spending on transportation has long given fiscal conservatives heartburn.

And Freedom Caucus lawmakers who support Trump's infrastructure push may have to work extra hard now to convince fellow members to support the presidents proposal, especially after Trump stepped up his attacks on some lawmakers in the group this week.

Numerous members sit on the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, and some are even lead sponsors on infrastructure investment bills including one related to tax reform that appears to be gaining steam.

I have members of the Freedom Caucus on my committee. Theyve been very supportive, Rep. Bill Shuster (R-Pa.), chairman of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said during an event hosted by The Hill this week.

Its one of those things they embrace. They may not always agree on how we go about it, but I think we can get a coalition to get a big, bipartisan vote.

The Freedom Caucus members on the Transportation panel include Rep. Mark Meadows (N.C.), the groups chairman, and Reps. Brian Babin (Texas), Scott Perry (Pa.), Mark Sanford (S.C.) and Randy WeberRandy WeberRyan transfers record M to House GOP's campaign arm in March Freedom Caucus poised for pivotal role in infrastructure fight The Hill's Whip List: 36 GOP no votes on ObamaCare repeal plan MORE (Texas.)

Trump has called on Congress to move a $1 trillion infrastructure package later this year. The White House is still in the early stages of crafting a proposal, but Trump has signaled that it will streamline regulatory hurdles and target transportation projects where enough advanced planning has already been completed so work can start shortly. It is expected to be paid for with a mix of public and private financing.

There were questions over whether the House Freedom Caucus would torpedo the infrastructure package even before Trump slammed the group on Twitter this week for its role in the failure of the ObamaCare repeal effort.

Trumps transportation plan was always going to be a tough sell with fiscal conservatives.

The 2016 GOP platform calls for eliminating federal funding for mass transit, bike-share programs, sidewalks and rail-to-rail projects.

But transportation leaders are swatting down concerns that Trumps deteriorating relationship with conservatives will complicate their efforts.

After I talked about my proposal for user fees for aviation, harbor maintenance and surface infrastructure, I had a couple of members of the Freedom Caucus tell me that they liked those ideas, [because] they were user fee based and did not create debt, said Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.), ranking member on the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

Meadows, chairman of the House Oversight subcommittee on government operations, has had a hand in overseeing Washingtons Metro system. He agreed at a hearing this week to help push for more federal funding for the agency if certain conditions are met.

Meadows has also sponsored a bill that would allow U.S. corporations to bring back their foreign earnings at a lower corporate tax rate and use that revenue to replenish the ailing Highway Trust Fund, among other things.

A robust and efficient infrastructure is critical to growing the economy, driving down unemployment, and putting our country on track towards a balanced budget, Meadows says on his website.

The Constitution makes it clear that one of the primary goals of the federal government is to establish roads and highways in order to facilitate commerce between the states.

Perrybelievesinfrastructure investment must be done responsibly but sayspublic-private partnerships could be one option to enhance transportation and boost economic development.

Freedom Caucus member Ted YohoTed YohoRepublicans rush to help shape Trumps infrastructure plan Freedom Caucus poised for pivotal role in infrastructure fight How this little known government agency helps put America first MORE (R-Fla.) is not on the Transportation Committee but is one of the lead sponsors on legislation to allow U.S. multinational corporations to repatriate earnings at a mandatory, one-time tax of 8.75 percent.

Those revenues would be used to improve the nations infrastructure, with an estimated $120 billion going to the Highway Trust Fund, $50 billion going to an infrastructure bank and $25 million going to a pilot program focused on rural infrastructure.

With reports that the White House may now move tax reform and infrastructure at the same time, momentum could be building for Yohos bill.

This is neither a Democratic or Republican issue, Yoho said during a recent meeting with reporters. Were looking at problems and were looking at solutions that are neither Democratic or Republican. Theyre American solutions. Thats what I love about this opportunity.

Other conservatives not in the Freedom Caucus could also support Trumps infrastructure push. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.),who often sides with the far-right group, teamed up with DeFazio on a bill that would lift the federal cap on passenger fees in order to help airports pay for facility upgrades.

Shuster points out that the conference has come together to move infrastructure bills in recent years, including a multi-year surface highway bill and a major waterways bill.

When you talk to some of these [Freedom Caucus] members, they believe as I do the government has a limited role. The first and foremost is national security, but second is the building of infrastructure. Its a core function, Shuster said.

If you look at where a lot of those ports are in need of investment, its Georgia, its South Carolina, Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida. Thats where a lot of our Freedom Caucus friends live. So they know the importance of infrastructure.

Any transportation investment bill, however, cant add to the deficit in order to garner the support of fiscal conservatives. It will also have to place a heavy emphasis on leveraging private-sector dollars for public-private partnerships the preferred funding tool among Republicans, but one that could trip up support among Democrats if there is no direct federal spending along with it.

Conservatives could also take issue with funneling money toward projects that look like earmarks or government boondoggles. There could also be reluctance to back anything that looks like Obamas economic stimulus package, which was criticized for how long shovel-ready projects took to get off the ground.

But Trumps infrastructure proposal doesnt necessarily need the backing of the Freedom Caucus. He could negotiate a deal with Democrats, especially in the Senate, where Democratic senators have signaled they are open to working with the president on an infrastructure package.

The best path, if you were counseling the president, youd ask him to pick up the phone and call [Senate Democratic Leader Charles]Schumer[N.Y.] and see if you can have some kind of a framework for a deal there, said Rep. John Delaney (D-Md.).

And then youd go to [Senate Majority LeaderMitch McConnell(R-Ky.)] and see if you could get some buy-in and get something there, and then just go to the House.

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Freedom Caucus poised for pivotal role in infrastructure fight - The Hill

Regulatory reform leads to financial independence – Argus Leader – Sioux Falls Argus Leader

Rep. Kristi Noem, U.S. House of Representatives 11:02 p.m. CT April 3, 2017

For many, preparing for Tax Day only highlights just how much of a persons paycheck is redirected straight into the federal governments bank account.

The truth is our tax returns only tell part of the story. Federal regulations add thousands of dollars more in hidden costs every year for South Dakota families. Ive heard from many that enough is enough and I agree. So regardless of if its tax or regulatory reform, Im focused on giving you more financial independence.

One of the first places Im looking to save you money is on your taxes. Last year, I helped outline a simpler and fairer tax code. In totality, the plan is estimated to save the average family $4,600 per year, according to analysis done by The Tax Foundation. On top of that, they expect the plan would help grow the economy by 9.1 percent over the next 10 years, which translates into more jobs and higher wages.

The way were proposing to do this may save more than money. Under our plan, tax returns may be simple enough to fit on a postcard, hopefully saving taxpayers the 6 billion hours we collectively spend doing our taxes each year.

Like I mentioned before, there are also hidden costs the federal government imposes. Today, almost 25 percent of a new family homes final cost is dealing with regulations to build that home. Under Obama-era motor-vehicle regulations, the cost of a new car could spike almost $3,000 by 2025. Meanwhile, regulations on everything from lightbulbs to dishwashers could increase consumer costs by as much as $1,600. And it just keeps adding up from here!

Already, President Trump and Congress have worked together to delay, repeal or dismantle more than 90 regulations put in place by President Obama. But more must still be done. In addition to dismantling the unnecessary regulations piece-by-piece, Ive supported legislation to make it much more difficult to impose these massive regulations in the first place.

Just days into 2017, the House passed a bill I co-sponsored that would require any major regulation to be approved by Congress. If enacted, it would be an unprecedented check on federal bureaucracy.

After eight years under President Obama, I think too many have accepted a status quo that leaves less money in your pocket and puts more decisions in the governments hands. Whether its regulatory reform or tax reform, there is a path forward that gives you more freedom and financial independence. Ultimately, thats the path I will always pursue.

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Regulatory reform leads to financial independence - Argus Leader - Sioux Falls Argus Leader