Term limits

Posted by Howard Rich | News | Wednesday 28 April 2010 12:46 pm

From The Great Falls Tribune


I have been dismayed with the performance of the U.S. House and Senate for some time, as have the majority of American citizens. I keep hoping they will put partisanship aside, listen to the people who elected them rather than the lobbyists and do what is best for this country and its people.

The senators and representatives have voted themselves lucrative medical and retirement plans, collected huge sums from individuals and corporations for their campaign funds and, after a short time in Washington, seem more focused on partisanship and the next election rather than the peoples’ business.

Some say the periodic election process will cure this predicament, but when people are elected again and again for up to 50 years — and some have been carried in and out of the chambers or cannot speak competently from the podium — I say it’s time to change the rules.

The presidency has . State governors have , as do our state legislators. These limits are working well, no matter what the politicians say. Nobody is irreplaceable. This is the only legal solution I can think of to get back to being more responsive and responsible to the American people.

I know the elected officials will not vote themselves , so it’s up to the electorate to begin the process of change.

White House “Panic Week” Yields No Change in Direction

Posted by Howard Rich | Columns | Friday 29 January 2010 12:57 pm

Barack ’s “Panic Week” has come and gone, but did his White House learn anything from the historic repudiation of his leftist agenda? Putting the question another way, has made the necessary course corrections or is he still refusing to hear the message that America is sending him so loudly and clearly?

Given the Democratic Party’s stunning defeat in Massachusetts, its November losses in New Jersey and Virginia and its increasingly bleak 2010 electoral prospects, one would think has no choice but to follow the route Bill Clinton took to the right sixteen years ago when he stared down similar circumstances. After all, with the exception of passing his so-called “economic stimulus” bill, has been unable to get any major legislation through the U.S. – this despite the presence of a sizeable Democratic majority in the House and (until recently) a filibuster-proof Democratic “super-majority” in the Senate.

Imagine how tough he’ll find the sledding now.

Unfortunately, remains completely tone deaf to the will of the people. In fact, the only thing that has changed in his White House as a result of these repeated electoral setbacks is the way he is pursuing his socialist agenda.

“Hope and change” obviously didn’t work, so now it’s time for some good old-fashioned “smoke and mirrors.”

After picking their jaws up off the floor following Sen.-elect Scott Brown’s shocking victory in Massachusetts – a race in which ’s intervention actually moved voters away from Democrat Martha Coakley – the very first thing the White House brain trust did was to “elevate the role” of a professional political operative. In fact, ’s “elevation” of former campaign manager David Plouffe signaled right away that any attempt on the part of his administration to recalibrate its political compass would be purely cosmetic in nature.

In fact, just three days after his party’s Massachusetts defeat, was out looking for “low hanging fruit,” or a convenient enemy that all Americans – but particularly independent voters – could join him in opposing. He quickly found that enemy in Wall Street bankers, who are the same “fat cats” who then-Senator supported via the TARP bailout, ironically.

Now boasting that he was “ready for a fight,” proceeded to propose a new tax on these financial institutions – one that a recent Rasmussen Reports poll found was supported (conditionally, at least) by 56% of Americans.

Of course that poll also found that nearly 70% of Americans oppose extending the tax to banks that did not receive bailout money – while 72% believe that bailout recipients like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should be required to pay any new tax, as well.

Next up on the agenda for ’s crass populist propagandists? Spending.

Because polling has consistently shown that independent voters are leery of government’s unsustainable deficit spending, ’s next move was to unveil a so-called “freeze” on budget growth. Unfortunately, his “freeze” only applied to 17% of the budget, and whatever “deficit reduction” it purports to accomplish would be completely consumed by growth in entitlement spending – as well as hundreds of billions of dollars in interest payments that taxpayers are forced to pick up as a result of our skyrocketing national debt.

Yet while these two populist stories were being pushed by the White House press office, behind closed doors top administration officials were working harder than ever to resuscitate the very radical policies that spawned all this voter angst and distrust in the first place.

Just four days after Brown’s victory in Massachusetts, for example, ’s chief-of-staff Rahm Emanuel met with a group of Senators at the White House in an effort to revive “cap and trade,” ’s massive energy tax hike. Similarly, has been meeting regularly with Congressional leaders Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi in a no-holds-barred effort to ram his socialized medicine proposal through – despite its collapsing public support and weakened legislative position.

Clearly a string of defeats for – including a historic setback in Massachusetts – has done nothing to deter him from his leftward march.

Of course the silver lining is that the more stridently pursues these objectives in the face of mounting public and Congressional opposition, the more strident public and legislative opposition becomes toward him.

Vote incumbents out; establish term limits

Posted by Howard Rich | Issues, News, Term Limits | Wednesday 2 September 2009 4:45 pm

From The Morning Call


There are less than 600 elected people who control the direction of the federal government and thus, our country. Do you think those politicians heed their constituents when they cry ”your ways are not my ways, nor are your thoughts my thoughts?” It seems to me these public servants take care of themselves first and then allege to help us in order to get re-elected. Do you think I’m too cynical?

Politicians have now induced over half a million people to buy new cars, which many probably couldn’t afford in the first place, and commit to hundreds of dollars in monthly payments over the next five to eight years. I thought we just experienced a similar situation with their politically correct home mortgage fiasco.

I know we can’t alter self-serving behavior of the powerful. However, the citizens of the United States do have a peaceful way to change this. Resolve to vote all of the incumbents out and establish . Then, do you think this could possibly transform their exclusive two-party system into a government of the people, by the people and for the people? Otherwise, it may perish from the earth.

Quentin C. Kent Sr.


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