Showing posts with label morgan philpot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label morgan philpot. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Presidential Repudiation

Senator Mike Lee (R-UT)
The results of today's election continue to trickle in at this writing.  My favorite candidate, Mike Lee (R-UT), easily won election as Utah's next Senator.  At 38, he becomes the youngest member of the United States Senate.  Congratulations to Mike.  I backed him from the moment I was first introduced to his candidacy back in January.

I was also delighted to see Gary Herbert retain the Utah governorship in this special election.  The Philpot race was a narrow loss to incumbent Jim Matheson.  Would have liked to see Morgan Philpot, but it was not to be.

Nationally, the big news tonight is the nationwide repudiation of President Barack Obama's liberal agenda.  This swing in House seats into the Republican column will prove to be HISTORIC!  Since World War II, in 1946, when the Republicans picked up 56 seats, and then in 1994, when they won 52 seats, tonight looks like the biggest gain ever.  They will pick up an estimated 65 seats. 

That's a tsunami.  Independents once again swung the election -- this time they swung to the Republicans.  This is a center-right country.  Obama would have had to hit it out of the ballpark with his socialistic agenda in order to avoid this punishment, and he couldn't pull it off.  He got whacked.  The turnout was stunning for a midterm election. 

It appears they will also pick up six or seven Senate seats, maybe as many as nine governorships, putting the number of governorships somewhere in the range of 32 nationwide.  That's a stunning victory by any measurement. 

One would have to say that the angst among voters has most to do with the sour economy.  Voters are impatient these days.  It would be foolish to claim victory if you're a Republican, because from my vantage point it seems this was mostly anger directed at Democrats for the direction the country has been taken.  I don't believe for one moment the electorate is as much impressed with Republicans as they are opposed to Democrats.

There is a little reported reality emerging.  The Democratic caucus will be more, much more, liberal than it was because the so-called "blue dog Democrats" were demolished nationwide.  Conversely, the Republicans are going to be more conservative than ever before.  Don't hold your breath waiting for bipartisanship to emerge suddenly in the aftermath.

Mid-term Election Map, 2010
This was a lot of anger and anxiety, resulting in a repudiation of incumbents across the board, and this is only the beginning.  Republicans are more conservative, more vocal, and the electorate will not wait long before they demand results.  Angry that no one is listening, today they are making Washington listen.  They were ignored over Obamacare, TARP and stimulus spending.  Today they were screaming.  The Republicans had better listen up or they will be gone.  The greatest rejection was of the president's policy failure.  The same fate awaits the Republicans in 2012 if they don't get something done quickly. 

There is one race that stands out among all the rest demonstrating just how deeply the anger has run against this president.  Obama made twelve trips to Ohio to campaign for Ted Stickland, and Vice-President Joe Biden was there eight times.  It was John Kasich (R-OH), however,  who pulled it out by a comfortable margin.

We're not thrilled to vote for Republican candidates, but the alternative was unacceptable.  The message is loud and clear:  Get the deficit down, reduce spending, reduce national debt, get the economy going, and reject Obamacare.

The question is whether President Obama will continue to govern as a liberal idealogue, or will he move to the middle where the moderate voters reside and determine elections. 

Obama said last week, "The people are acting out of fear without knowledge about what I've done for them."  That's an amazingly dense analysis for someone who is known to be an effective speech giver.  Is it that he can't communicate effectively, or are the American voters so smart that they know EXACTLY what they don't want?

I say it's complete, absolute and unequivocal presidential repudiation.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Four Reasons Philpot Will Beat Matheson


Morgan Philpot's Family
I am a state delegate from Precinct 11 in Wasatch County.  Historically, 2nd District Congressman Jim Matheson (D-UT) has received significant support from our county in his five previous terms.  The reason is because registered Republicans like me have routinely crossed over and supported him. 

That is not true this year!

In an e-mail blast from Wasatch County Philpot for Congress coordinator, Aaron Gabrielson, I received an update on the progress of the campaign.  Morgan Philpot and Jim Matheson squared off this week in St. George at their only public debate.  I wished I could have been there, but seeing it for yourselves should seal the deal for Philpot:

http://vstream.dixie.edu/DSC/Viewer/?peid=cac4131afa2d4fd397fc9e08b7d0b12d

It's unfortunate when incumbents with overwhelming leads in the polls refuse to give the electorate a clear picture of their positions by withholding themselves from public events like this one.  Matheson has a financial advantage by 10-1 over Philpot in campaign funding.  He's sitting on it, like he is his lead.  It happens every time there's an election.  Rather than willingly submit to public scrutiny they cower in the corners to protect their leads in the polls, relying upon name recognition alone to carry them through election day.  As the video stream of their debate clearly illustrates, there are substantive differences between these two candidates.  The choice could not be more differentiated. 

Four reasons Philpot will win

A)  Jim Matheson is a Democrat in a year when Democrats are as popular as a hurricane in kite flying weather;
B)  Matheson's a much more liberal Congressman than any of his constituents previously believed;
C)  Morgan Philpot is much more representative of his constituents than Matheson will ever be; and finally,
D)  There is an uprising nationwide and here in Wasatch County against incumbents of any stripe. 

It's just not a good year to be Jim Matheson anywhere within his district, and particularly in Wasatch County.

Aaron's e-mail blast explains:

Poll Predicts Philpot Win over Matheson

A recently completed poll conducted by the Wasatch County Philpot For Congress campaign predicts that Republican Morgan Philpot will win in the county over five-term incumbent Democrat Jim Matheson.

The poll received 738 responses from registered voters in the county and shows 51% support for Philpot among registered Republicans and 47% with unaffiliated voters. Matheson scored 31% and 37%, respectively. 16% of respondents were undecided and registered Democrats were not included in the poll.

Based on those results and awarding Matheson 100% of the registered Democrats, indicates a 4% margin of victory for Philpot in Wasatch County.

County Philpot coordinator, Aaron Gabrielson, said, "Matheson has won Wasatch County by large margins in previous elections. A poll showing him behind at this point shows that voters are dissatisfied with Congress in general and with Matheson specifically. Wasatch County has always been Matheson territory. If he can't win here, I don't see how Matheson will win the election."

The poll results follow an anti-incumbent trend across the nation that is likely to result in Republicans regaining control of the House of Representatives.

"This poll actually looks worse for Matheson than it first appears, because Democratic turnout is expected to be lower this year and Republican turnout should be higher. If that happens, Philpot could win by a margin of 8% or more. However, Matheson has a big money advantage in this race, so the Philpot campaign still has a lot of work to do."

When asked about a recent Dan Jones poll showing a large lead for Matheson, Gabrielson responded, "I have taken a look at that poll. It was from a small sample with a big margin of error and included a large percentage of Democrats. I think even the Matheson campaign is not putting much trust in it. Back in 2008 during the 3rd District primary, polls showed Cannon up by 4% and Chaffetz ended up winning by 20%."

* * *

Don't be too surprised if the same dynamic plays out this year in the Utah 2nd Congressional District race across all the counties in the district, not just Wasatch.  If the Republicans just show up to vote, and they follow my lead and the other "reformed" Republican voters in Wasatch County who will finally abandon Matheson after being "irrational" in our former support of his liberal voting record, then our next Congressman will be Morgan Philpot.

This is the year to make a difference by taking down one Democrat seat in Congress on the march toward taking down 41 and wresting control from the disastrous majority we have witnessed in the last two years.

Last week, I read an analysis by some pollsters stating there may be as many as 100 Congressional seats in play that could move into the Republican side of the aisle.  If that is true and those predictions play out on election day, this 2010 tsunami I spoke about earlier in the year will have historic ramifications. 

President Obama and Senator Reid
Make no mistake about it -- this mid-term election is a referendum on Barack Obama, plain and simple.  Harry Reid is experiencing a lot of push back in his race for re-election in Nevada.  President Obama is stumping for him every chance he gets.  How can anyone conclude anything other than a loss by Harry Reid, the number one Democrat in the Senate, is a complete refutation of Obama's policies and the agenda he has put forward? 

If Bob Bennett can lose in Utah, then Harry Reid can lose in Nevada.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
Don't hold your breath over this one, but House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) is in the most competitive race she's faced for re-election in years.  It seems even in her "true blue" liberal home district her popularity is waning.  Here again, when one sees serious challenges to the leaders of the party, Reid and Pelosi, in trouble and threatened at home in their own states, one must conclude this mid-term as perhaps never before is all about the country's revulsion at the way they've been treated these last two years.

I wondered aloud on this page months ago who was doing the political calculations within the Democrat Party, when the evidence suggested they were arrogantly going about mustering their votes for the most liberal lurch to the left I have ever witnessed during my lifetime. I called it "the mother of all political cramdowns," when they passed Obamacare. 

And now we are seeing nothing but an aroused and angry electorate pushing back, as the chickens come home to roost.  I have believed for some time the Republicans set a poor example under the Bush administration.  We lived through a reprehensible period with their profligate spending habits and rampant desires for "deficits-don't-matter" wars and nation building attitudes.  Rather than learn from the rejection at the polls that handed control of the presidency and both houses of Congress to the Democrats in 2008, we have seen an acceleration of the same wrong-headed direction they have taken the country. 

Obama completely misread his "mandate" from the election.  Surprise of all surprises -- the people wanted him to take the country in a different direction than out-of-control spending.  They didn't want social re-engineering after all.  They rejected Obamacare resoundingly.  They wanted economic recovery, not stifling regulation and taxation for as far as the eye can see.  They wanted business-friendly stimulants, not anti-business legislation and trillions of dollars of foreign debt for "shovel-ready" projects that still don't seem to be "ready."  Turns out the only shoveling that got done was the knee-deep manure in the political barnyard.

Maybe on November 2nd, 2010, the only way to change course is to fire the incumbents and begin anew.  Maybe this time someone in Washington D.C. will finally be listening to the will of the people.

Make no miscalculations this time, they will be speaking. . . make that shouting out loud.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Philpot or Matheson? You Decide


Morgan Philpot (R Cand. UT)
Facts About Morgan Philpot

I suspect most people in the Utah 2nd Congressional District are quickly learning more about Morgan Philpot.  For those who haven't had a chance yet to learn about him and his positions, I encourage you to visit his website.
  • Morgan is a Utah native.  He and his wife Natalie graduated from the University of Utah and lived in Salt Lake County for several years. While there, Morgan represented his neighbors in Utah House district 45.  He now lives in the Utah County portion of Utah's 2nd Congressional District.
  • As a young boy, Morgan was raised primarily by his mother who spent several years parenting seven children on her own.  Starting with his first "real” job picking strawberries at age 9, he quickly learned independence and self reliance. He knows the value of balancing a budget and of making decisions based on how much money you actually have, not how much you wish you had.
  • At the University of Utah, he earned degrees in Anthropology and Environmental Studies. During that time, he and his wife served internships in Washington D.C., for the White House Council on Environmental Quality and the Supreme Court respectively.
  • After graduating from college, Morgan took a job as the new account sales manager for a Salt Lake fabrication company. Two years later, Morgan ran in a hotly contested race for State Representative of Utah House District 45 (Sandy, Salt Lake County, Midvale) with the motto "Freedom, Family, Future."  He put together a strong, effective grassroots campaign and in 2000, at the age of 28, he became one of the youngest state legislators in the Utah House.
  • As a State Representative, Morgan didn't hesitate to take strong stands on tough issues. He consistently led the fight against wasteful government spending, championed life, second amendment rights and free market principles. He sought creative and innovative ways to improve public education and was the lead sponsor of the Carson Smith Special Needs Scholarship, a bill that created an educational voucher program. This law has opened new avenues to a better education for Utah's families with special-needs children and now serves over 500 individuals. 
  • While in the legislature, Morgan was granted the "Friend of the Taxpayer” award by the Utah Taxpayer's Association and the "Guardian of Small Business" award by the National Federation of Independent Businesses. Morgan was also one of the founding members of the House Conservative Caucus.
  • In 2004, Morgan chose to leave the legislature and attend the Ave Maria School of Law, a school dedicated to life, the rule of law, and the U.S. Constitution. While there, he was privileged to learn from such influential minds as Judge Robert Bork and Charles Rice.
  • Upon completion of law school Morgan clerked for Utah's Attorney General Mark Shurtleff. Morgan served as the in-house legal counsel for a Utah business for two years and is now a consultant with a private company in Sandy.
  • In addition to his legislative service Morgan has also volunteered his time to Scouting, Church, and Utah politics. He has served as a State delegate, County delegate, State Central Committee member, Executive Committee member and most recently as the Vice-chair of the Utah Republican Party.
Morgan has enjoyed sharing his love of ancient history with his children through rock-hounding, camping and hiking in many areas of rural Utah. His family also enjoys gardening and reading together. Morgan currently lives in American Fork with his wife and five children.

Morgan believes his real life struggles and experiences uniquely qualify him to serve the families of Utah as the next Congressman from the Second District.

I encourage voters in the 2nd Congressional District this year to re-think their assumptions about Jim Matheson. I know I have, and I've concluded this race is a no-brainer. Join me in voting for Morgan Philpot, because here are the. . .



Facts About Jim Matheson
Congressman Jim Matheson (D-UT)
 When Democrat Jim Matheson is campaigning in Utah, he talks about being a moderate and fiscal conservative.

Once he is in Washington his voting record looks a little different.

Decide for yourself if Jim Matheson is a fiscal conservative based on his actual voting record.

Is Matheson part of the solution to an out-of-control Federal government or is he part of the problem?

Jim Matheson’s Voting Record:

• Jim Matheson has voted 93% of the time with Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic majority. He votes with Republicans 5% of the time and abstains 2% of the time. He has voted for Nancy Pelosi as Speaker of the House every time she has come up for a vote. (1)

• Citizens Against Government Waste rated Jim Matheson as "Hostile To The Taxpayer" giving him their worst rating. (2)

• He has voted for every stimulus bill since Obama took office ($1.2 trillion worth), including the most recent public employee bailout stimulus. (3)

• He recently voted to raise the debt ceiling by $2 Trillion. (4)

• When Jim Matheson took office, the national debt was $5.6 Trillion (in today's dollars). Ten years later it is now $13.4 trillion. That is $43,600 for every man, woman and child in the country. A family of four now owes $174,400 in Federal debt. (5)

• He cast the deciding vote to adjourn Congress until after the election, preventing a vote on the huge tax increase scheduled for January 1, 2011. This could result in the largest tax hike in American history, raising taxes on a family of four by over $2,000 next year. (6)

• He voted "No" on final passage of the Obama health care bill, once he knew it was going to pass without his vote. He voted "Yes" on key procedural votes, including "Deem and Pass" and the "closed rule" that made it impossible to amend the bill. These procedural votes were critical to getting the Obama health care bill passed. He now opposes any effort to defund or repeal Obamacare. (7)

Jim Matheson’s Funding:

• Matheson takes more than 84% of his campaign funds from special interest groups and political action committees (PACs). That percentage is double the Congressional average and ranks him 3rd out of 435 Congressmen. The Salt Lake Tribune recently dubbed Matheson "The PAC Man". (8)

• Nancy Pelosi has given $46,000 to his campaign and Charlie Rangel has given $45,000. (9)

Sources:
1. http://www.opencongress.org/people/show/400255_Jim_Matheson
2. http://ccagwratings.org/?page_id=737
3. http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/2009-01-27-obama-economy_N.htm
4. http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2010/roll046.xml
5. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_public_debt http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/Historicals
6. http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700070001/Election-2010-Philpot-criticizes-Matheson-for-adjourning.html
7. http://www.govtrack.us/congress/vote.xpd?vote=h2010-130
8. http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/politics/50209672-90/matheson-money-pacpacs.html.csp
9. http://www.opensecrets.org/pacs/pacgot.php?cmte=C00344234&cycle=2006
http://www.opensecrets.org/pacs/pacgot.php?cmte=C00302588&cycle=2008


* * *

The truly wonderful thing about America is freedom to choose, to vote, and to enjoy the blessings of liberty.  Matheson's voting record highlights what is wrong with the current members of Congress from both parties -- they just can't help themselves from voting for the status quo.

Let's begin anew in the 2nd District this year -- it's a good year for change and renewal because of the quality of the candidates.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

10 Questions about the Utah mid-term election

Herewith, a mid-term test.  How much do you know about the issues in the upcoming November 2nd mid-term election?  Consider these questions:

1.  Why is it called the "mid-term" election?

2.  Who's running for Governor of the State of Utah?

3.  Who's running for Senate in the State of Utah?

4.  Who's running in the Utah 2nd Congressional District, and why does it matter?

5.  Who controls the education budget in the State of Utah?

6.  Why does my vote this year matter?

7.  Is it too late to register to vote?

8.  When does early voting begin?

9.  Why should I vote, when there's so much voter apathy?

10.  What's the best way to become informed on the issues?

Now scroll down and view my answers:

President Barack Obama
1.  The reason it's called the "mid-term election" is we are halfway through the first term of the President of the United States.  Barack Obama was elected in 2008 with "hope and change" as his mantra and campaign slogan.  He was swept into office with the help of the "independent" voters in this country who often determine elections.  Midway through his first term he has managed to offend and disenfranchise nearly everyone -- I know that sounds a little too overstated, but in this case it's probably true.  The extreme left wing of the Democrat Party doesn't seem to think he's liberal enough, along with some other members of Congress who have been running for the hills instead of proudly boasting of their legislative victories.  I find it almost impossible to believe, but there are some who thought Bob Bennett (R-UT) wasn't conservative enough either, so go figure.  Those folks on both ends are extremists.  I noted with interest today even Rocky Anderson, former mayor of Salt Lake City, is signaling he's thinking of voting Republican this year to try to unseat Jim Matheson in the 2nd Congressional District, since Rocky thinks Jim is too much of a fence sitter and isn't a reliable Democratic vote in Congress.  He might be shocked to learn that in the last two years, Jim Matheson has voted exactly the same way Nancy Pelosi did 93% of the time!  That's pretty reliable liberal thinking where I come from.  But I digress.  The independent voter, once wooed by candidate Obama has been largely turned off by the policies and the profligate spending in Washington.  They're worried that we've amassed too much debt.  Ditto the Republicans, who have criticized Obama from day one, and now it's become a tidal wave of discontent.  They're licking their chops as they count noses, expecting a huge sweep of historic proportions.

Governor Gary Herbert
2.  Gary Herbert is the sitting governor in Utah, assuming his seat when Governor Jon Huntsman, Jr. was tapped as Ambassador to China by President Obama.  This election cycle is the end of the four-year term Huntsman was serving when Gary Herbert as Lieutenant Governor stepped up to the Governor's office.  He named Greg Bell as his Lieutenant Governor.  They are facing opposition from Salt Lake County Mayor Peter Corroon, who named Republican Sheryl Allen as his running mate, hoping to attract some Republican voters.  However, Peter Corroon has run a negative mud-slinging campaign, while Herbert has chosen to withhold the negative ads his ad agency produced.  Herbert has been criticized in virtually every way possible, as Corroon has made it appear as though Herbert is corrupt and is taking illegal campaign donations from contractors with whom the state has awarded contracts and settled lawsuits that might have cost the state even more time and delays.  Little of it, of course, has stuck.  Even though pollsters will tell you negative campaigning can move the approval rating short-term, Utahns have mostly rejected negative ads.  Herbert has run on the issues, and his biggest issue is education funding.  Sixty-five percent of the state budget is devoted to education in Utah.  Herbert took a $400 million shortfall in education and trimmed it to $10 million in his 2010 budget, pulling off a minor miracle in the process.  Other departments suffered deep cuts to preserve education funding.  And what does he get from Corroon?  A misleading ad that says Herbert doesn't care about education because he slashed education spending by $10 million.  It's true, but what about the other $390 million that could have been lost?  Herbert will continue to grow the Utah economy as his solution to provide funding by attracting out of state businesses looking to find refuge from high taxation and a diminishing workforce of qualified employees (read California).

Utah's Next Senator, Mike Lee
3.  Mike Lee came from nowhere in January to defeat the aging three-term incumbent, Senator Bob Bennett (R-UT), in a state nominating convention race, then Tim Bridgewater in a narrowly-won primary election victory.  His mettle has been tested and his resolve has not waned.  I endorsed Mike Lee early and often as the race leading up to the state convention heated up.  I believed then, and I still believe he's the right man in the right place at the right time for Utah.  He's opposed on the Democrat side by Sam Granato, a businessman who, some say, brings more maturity and a business background to the race.  Jim Bennett, son of Bob Bennett, who managed the Senator's campaign unsuccessfully and couldn't even get elected himself as a state delegate from his own precinct, jumped ship after the primary and now serves as Granato's communications director.  But none dares to call that sour grapes and being a sore and sour loser -- certainly not I.  It's a statewide election for Senator.  One-third of all U.S. Senate seats are up for election each two years.  In 2012, it will be Senator Orrin Hatch's turn to face the music, and he's already running (if you hadn't noticed), no doubt fearing the same fate suffered by Senator Bennett.  In both cases, the unspoken reality was their age.  Senator Bennett is 77 years old.  On election day, 2012, Orrin Hatch will be 78 years old.  The era of career politicians, I believe, is coming to a swift and abrupt halt in 2010.  Happily, there are many qualified replacements nationwide and here in Utah.

Utah's Next Congressman, Morgan Philpot
 4.  In the 2nd Congressional District in Utah, the candidates could not be more different this year.  Congressman Jim Matheson (D-UT) is opposed by Morgan Philpot.  The perception among voters in Utah is that Matheson is a moderate Democrat.  I used to believe it until I checked his voting record.  He's as liberal as anyone in Washington.  I eschew party labels, and I hate to even use the terms because they are such generalizations, but the only vote of magnitude where Matheson didn't back House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was Obamacare, knowing in Utah it would have assured the end of his political career.  I've voted for Matheson five times, and I'm like a lot of Utahns in the 2nd District who have kept sending him there because of token opposition along the way.  However, this year, Morgan Philpot is my candidate.  He's got the reliable conservative credentials to represent Utah, I believe, and I urge everyone to check him out.  I was walking a precinct last Saturday over in Heber City, persuading everyone with whom I spoke to consider seriously what his election will mean to Utah and to America.  If 41 seats in Congress can be switched from the Democrat majority, there will be an immediate halt to out-of-control spending, bailouts, entitlements and foreign debt accumulation our children and grandchildren are already compelled to pay back.  Each two years, all 435 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives are up for re-election.  It's the "People's House," and this year the people will have a chance to take back their destiny.  That's why this race matters -- it's one of 41 seats needed to reverse course and assure a cessation of what we have seen these past two years.  America now knows firsthand the damage one party in power in two of the three branches of government can conjure up.  Truth be told, it happens historically in every mid-term election.  Voters are given the privilege of "buyer's remorse" when they feel abandoned and abused.  That's the genius of the United States Constitution.  It's self-correcting if the electorate is aroused.  It's exactly what the founders designed for self-governing free people, and it's a gift of inestimable worth we can never discount.

5.  I spoke with a woman who had four registered children living at home on Saturday.  All five voters in that home were registered as Democrats.  She's a single mom and a school teacher.  When I introduced her to Morgan Philpot as a possible replacement for Jim Matheson, the first question she asked me was, "Where does Philpot stand on education funding?"  I had to educate the educator that education funding has nothing to do with the candidates in the 2nd Congressional District.  Education funding is part of the Governor's budget each year that he proposes to the State House of Representatives for approval, and then eventually to the State Senate.  Property taxes assessed and collected by the 29 Utah counties each year is what primarily pays for school expenses, in addition to taxes from the general fund.  She obviously was unaware of how things work in the government (she wasn't a Social Studies teacher), and I suspect she might be only one of many who likewise do not understand how it all works.  She thanked me for my brief doorstep tutorial, overheard by all her adult children, and then uttered these golden words, "If someone like you (meaning an old guy like you) cares enough to get out and knock on doors on a Saturday morning, then you must really believe in what you're doing."  She was right!  I'm hoping she cares enough to cross over this year and vote for Morgan Philpot and Gary Herbert.

Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi
6.  I am one of those reformed members of the "silent majority" that coasted along for many years.  I voted routinely year after year, but I have concluded (incorrectly for too many years) that living in Utah where there is a vast Republican majority -- the "reddest state" in the Union -- that my vote didn't really matter much.  I've changed course this year.  I don't know when I've been so involved as I am this year.  At the end of this Congress, a vote to adjourn was proposed without bringing up the expiring Bush-era tax cuts for debate and vote before the election.  It was a tie vote in the House of Representatives over the adjournment motion.  Pelosi cast the deciding vote to adjorn.  Had Jim Matheson voted to stay in session and oppose Nancy Pelosi, they would still be there doing what they were elected to do -- the people's business.  Instead, ONE VOTE sent the House members scattering back to their districts to raise money for their re-election campaigns.  Does one vote matter?  You bet it does!  Make your vote count on November 2nd this year!

7.  It's too late to register online or by mail or to get an absentee ballot, but you can still go to your county clerk's office in person and register to vote.  Don't let this election slip past without getting registered.  If you don't register, you can't vote.

8.  Early voting begins on October 19th.  Polling places will be open 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. each day until election day.  You can call your county clerk's office to get the details on polling locations.

Women voters in Iraq
9.  You can disagree with the Bush-era decision to go to war in Iraq, and the subsequent fallout and contention spilling over into Afghanistan -- war is never popular forever -- but this much cannot be denied: The people liberated from the sadistic rule of Saddam Hussein have demonstrated just how much they value their right to vote and have a voice in democracy.  They have showed up at the polling booths in impressive percentages -- exceeding 80 percent in almost every election since they were freed from the dictator's despotic iron fist.  They vote under threat of death sometimes, as the competing factions continue to contend with one another internally for control of the country.  The marginalization of women is slowly giving way to full participation and their right and freedom to vote is prized.  Sadly, a majority of Americans now believe it wasn't worth the price we paid to liberate Iraq from Saddam Hussein's regime.  Try to tell that to the people of Iraq, who remain grateful and value their new-found freedoms perhaps more than we who have inherited ours.  Why should we vote in this upcoming election?  Because the blood of our forefathers assured us that privilege.  Can we do less?

10.  I determined I would get off the sidelines this year, and I did.  I made it a point to become acquainted with the candidates, made my picks, then ran for election as a state delegate from my precinct to the nominating convention.  I believe there has never been a time in my life when the choices were more distinct and straightforward.  I have diligently ignored the screaming rhetoric from the polar opposite ends of the political spectrum this year.  I advise all to do the same.  Learn your truth from within the mainstream moderate voices of reason.  Seek out the candidates' websites and learn their positions for yourselves.  Don't rely on what others say about them.  Make up your own mind.  While it is obvious I am conservative and think of myself as moderate (there are those meaningless labels again), I try to keep an open mind.  I'm looking for leaders who are independent thinkers regardless of their political party affiliation.  There is a reason.  If the Republicans don't get it right this time (and they have two years to do it, assuming the electorate gives them the reins in Congress again), then Americans will become even more enraged with what comes out of Washington, and we will surely see the beginning of the end of the two-party system.  "Something else" will come in its place, and rightly so.  I have no idea what that might look like, but I hope the trend continues into 2012.  Americans will have every right to change it up again in two years if they can't get what they seek.  That's because, "It's always morning in America."  I am not discouraged, disheartened and disgusted enough to think it can't be turned around with true leadership that can be rekindled based upon the Constitution.  I believe we will see a renewal beginning November 2nd.

Beware the doomsdayers.  It may well prove the case that the best is yet to come in America.  She still has a glorious destiny to inherit as the shining city on the hill.  We're not there yet.  You have to vote for it.  It won't just happen because you hope it will.

And remember, it's all preparation for the righteous reign of the King of kings and the Lord of Lords yet to come.  That's real hope and change everyone will come to believe in someday.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Morgan Philpot debunks "Blue Dog Dem" myth

Is Jim Matheson really a "blue dog Democrat?"  Is there really any such thing?  Morgan Philpot doesn't think so, neither do I. 

Matheson's track record couldn't be more clear.  Click on the link and learn about his liberal leanings, while posturing in Utah as a "blue dog" conservative Democrat. 

The gap cannot be closed between his actual voting record and what he says he is to woo moderate Republican voters.  He can't have it both ways any longer.  I urge voters in the 2nd District to study the facts, then vote for the only conservative choice running in the race this year -- MORGAN PHILPOT.



Media Alert   Philpot to be on Fox Business Network today October 6th


Philpot to Debunk Blue Dog Myth on Fox Business Network

Salt Lake City, UT October 6, 2010 - Morgan Philpot announced yesterday that he will be a featured guest on “America’s Nightly Scoreboard” with David Asman, on Fox Business Network. The live interview is scheduled to air tonight at 5:00 p.m. Mountain Standard Time. Morgan Philpot will discuss unseating Blue Dogs.

Time: 5:00 p.m. (Mountain Standard Time)

Place: Fox Business Network, “America’s Nightly Scoreboard” with David Asman”

Date: Wednesday, October 6, 2010.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

ONE BIG REASON to vote for Morgan Philpot

In case you missed it, in the news you read this item probably avoided your radar:

Yesterday, 39 House Democrats joined Republicans in voting against adjournment - but not Jim Matheson. Nancy Pelosi did not want to discuss tax cuts before the election. She moved to adjourn and avoid a vote to extend the Bush tax cuts to American families and businesses.

Last week Congressman Matheson told his Utah constituents that he wanted to vote on the tax cuts before the election. Apparently, he says one thing in Utah, and then caved to the demands of Pelosi and voted with her to adjourn.

Here's the disastrous news for America -- the vote to adjourn passed by ONE vote: 210-209.  If Matheson had joined the other 39 Democrats and defied Pelosi, the House could have debated and passed the tax cuts.

So who does Matheson have in mind?  He's not interested in what's best for his constituents, apparently.  And, oh by the way, his worst vote in history was voting with his caucus to seat Nancy Pelosi as Speaker of the House in the first place.  His allegiance to Nancy Pelosi is apparently a higher priority than his constituents in the 2nd District.  I am one who has made the mistake of voting for him five times in the past.  Never again.  

On the other hand, two Republican members of the House from Utah -- Rob Bishop and Jason Chaffetz -- did vote against Pelosi's motion to adjourn so that the tax cuts could be discussed. Unfortunately, for Utah families, they needed one more vote. Jim Matheson failed to provide that vote.

When people tell you their vote doesn't count, remember this example of what one vote actually amounts to.  It's time for Congressman Matheson to be held accountable for his actions. It's time for the citizens of the 2nd District to elect a Congressman who values the opinions of the voters here in Utah more than the demands of Nancy Pelosi. 

It's time for Morgan Philpot.

If you are upset by Matheson's vote, please forward this message to all your friends in the 2nd Congressional District.  Join Morgan's team by visiting his website.

Statement by Congressman Rob Bishop:

"Democrat leadership should be embarrassed that they brought the entire Congress from around the country back into session for just one day and then left with so many issues that impact our economy just hanging out there. Congress should have at least stayed in long enough to extend the tax cuts to stop massive tax increases and provide some stability and certainty. More time would also have allowed for better policy decision on a whole host of issues, including the NASA bill."

Statement by Congressman Jason Chaffetz:

"Yesterday the House decided by a single vote to adjourn until after the election this fall. It is totally irresponsible for Congress to leave town when critical issues such as extending the Bush tax cuts need to be debated. In order for the marketplace to thrive, businesses need some regulatory certainty. Congress has failed to deliver. At a time when our economy is weak and people need jobs, it's very frustrating to see Congress act in such a negligent manner. It is up to voters to hold those Members accountable who place politics above the American people."

Statement by Congressman Jim Matheson:

"I have led the effort in the U.S. House of Representatives to extend tax cuts for all at this time of fragile economic recovery.  Efforts to suggest otherwise are playing politics and that is a shame."

* * *

Memo to Congressman Matheson: 

It is you, Congressman, who is playing politics now.  If that's your best defense to the people of the 2nd District whom you represent, it is a lame definition of "leadership" and we will dismiss you without further argument on November 2nd.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

The President Who Cried "Wolf!"

As a boy, I first heard the tale of the little boy who cried "Wolf!" one too many times.  It's a familiar story, but it bears repeating in the current political climate in which we find ourselves.

The Boy Who Cried Wolf, illustrated by Milo Winter in a 1919 Aesop anthology

"The Boy Who Cried Wolf," is also known as "The Shepherd Boy and the Wolf."  It's a fable, of course, and it is usually attributed to Aesop.  It's a little story about a bored shepherd boy who entertained himself by tricking nearby villagers into thinking a wolf was attacking his flock of sheep. 

When they came running instantly to his rescue, they found the alarms were false and they had wasted their time.  Finally, the day came when the little boy was actually confronted by a wolf, and the villagers did not believe his cries for help.  The wolf ate the flock (and in some versions the boy too). 

The moral is stated at the end of the fable as:  Even when liars tell the truth, they are never believed.  The liar will lie once, twice, and then perish when he tells the truth.

To "cry wolf" has long been a common idiom in English.  The phrase "boy who cried wolf" has also become somewhat of a figure of speech, meaning that one is calling for help when he or she does not really need it. Also in common English there goes the saying: "Never cry wolf" to say that one never should lie, as in the above phrases.

So how alike is this old fable to today's headlines over the last nineteen months?  No analogy is perfect, but this one seems to me to strike close to the mark.

The White House Talker in Chief
Again and again we have heard the desperate cry from this President, "If we don't (fill in the blank with yet another big spending bill), the world as we know it will come to an end."  So with all the votes tucked neatly in his tailored suit pocket, this President has passed a prodigious package of legislative verbage the experts are still trying to unravel.  Nobody yet knows what it all means.  The uncertainty is palpable.  The economy is frozen in its tracks.

We have all observed what a good talker our President is.  The man is a gifted talker, maybe in the top tier of all-time talkers.  He once told Harry Reid, "Harry, I have a gift." 

Let's review the "Wolf!" cries we've heard, and see if you don't agree.

1.  We got a near-trillion dollar "stimulus" bill that was passed over the objections of a majority of the American public.  When polled, they said, "We don't believe it will help, and we don't want it."  But the President talked and talked and convinced his Democrat majority it was the only way to hold unemployment at 8 percent.  Now his economic team, one by one, is leaving, their credibility in shambles.  And it isn't just the economic team -- even his chief advisor and his chief of staff are heading for the exit doors.  Everyone knows the economy is still suffering despite all the passionate talking, and funny thing -- President Obama, in perma-campaign mode keeps talking and talking and talking about his failed policies to convince us we're on the right path.  He's all alone in a bad echo chamber right now.

2.  We got a health care bill with another trillion dollar price tag, and President Obama talked and talked and talked about how it would revolutionize health care, cut medical costs, bend the cost curve into the future without damaging Medicare by saving waste in the program and wouldn't add "one dime" to the federal deficit.  Remember that line from his State of the Union address?  Since the Congressional Budget Office has now had a chance to actually analyze it, not one of those statements has proven correct.  The American public, once again, when polled rebelled against getting something they didn't want, and the Tea Party (however you define it) was born.  By the way, here's a story from today's Wall Street Journal that defines the Tea Party very well.  But what does the President do?  He ignores those stupid common folk who don't really know what's best for them.  He talks and talks and talks about how marvelous it's going to be for all of us -- no pre-existing conditions will be denied, children will be insured on their parents' plan until age 26, and the talk, talk, talk continues.  None of it's true, but he loves to hear the sound of his own voice saying it, apparently.

3.  Under this President the Congress, when faced with extending the Bush-era tax cuts, has failed to act.  We're in a staggering economy that's stalled and stagnant.  Raising taxes in this environment is wrong-headed and idiodic, but what does this President and Congress do?  They adjourn to fan out across the country in over 400 campaign fund raisers to get re-elected without taking action on behalf of the American people, and the President continues to talk, talk, talk about the class warfare issues that are so passe they defy reason.  "We're going to tax the wealthy, rebuild the middle class and eradicate racial discrimination."  Blah, blah, blah.  It's all part of what Obama really believes -- that hiring decisions should and must be in the hands of the government, not private businesses and the high-income people who own them and actually create jobs.  Ask any American, "Do you want higher taxes right now?"  I'm no political genius -- I only play one on this page -- but even I can hear them screaming in my ears.  Their answer is a resounding "NO," but what does this President do?  He continues to talk, talk, talk about how wonderful his economic policies are.  He should have checked in with his crack economic team, who are dropping out of his administration one by one, apparently embarrassed by the havoc that has been wrought on the American free enterprise system.

And what does President Obama do?  He keeps talking and talking and talking, as though anyone is left who is listening to what he's saying.  He's lost all credibility in my view.  His policies are NOT working.  The American electorate is aroused as I've never seen it in my lifetime, and the Chief Talker in the White House has managed to turn an overwhelming approval rating nineteen months ago into dust. 

The Democrats are now disavowing any and all knowledge of how all those bills got passed, almost as if some phantoms did the deeds of which they are accused.  They, too, have lost all credibility in the eyes of their constitutents.  The political pendulum has swung wildly back to the right.  Generic Republicans are leading in virtually every poll in every Congressional contest.

Whenever Obama opens his mouth now, it seems, the American public is hearing, "I believe in deficit spending, I want bigger government, I want to spend money we borrow from the Chinese to stimulate our small businesses in America, and I want the government to make all the decisions."  It doesn't really matter anymore what he actually says when he talks and talks and talks, because that's all the American people are hearing at this point.

He's cried "Wolf!" one too many times.  Our ears are stopped up with political "weary wax."  Words, simple words like "Wolf!" have lost all meaning.  Up is down, down is up, white is black, black is white, right is wrong, wrong is right.


Believe me, when Russ Feingold (D-WI) skips out on the chance to appear with President Obama for fear of losing votes, you know Feingold is in full retreat and battling against all odds to retain his Senate seat.

In the latest Rasmussen Reports poll, 41% of respondents strongly disapprove of the job Obama is doing. Only 29% strongly approve.

Races all over America are tightening -- governorships, Senate races, and Congressional seats.  Despite the polling data, I hear people openly asking if Americans will care enough to even show up to the polls.  Historically, mid-term elections are ho-hum yawners.  This year, however, I predict a record turnout on November 2nd for a mid-term election. 

People are demanding "CHANGE" -- and not what they asked for and hoped for in 2008.  This time around they've got plenty of fire in the belly to get what they want -- repeal Obamacare for openers.

I actually heard a news report in which he said in Wisconsin, seeking to re-energize the demoralized Democrat faithful, "We can't let this country fall backwards because the rest of us didn't care enough to fight."

Uh, excuse me?  Fall backwards?  That's exactly what we've done for the last nineteen months, Mr. President.  The political atmosphere in which we now live is toxic beyond imagination.  He's adopted policies in direct opposition to the will of the majority of Americans, as I pointed out above.  His policies have not worked, we are not on the right course, and we have fallen backwards from where we were before he took office, hard as that is to admit.  The financial pit is deeper, wider and now more unfathomable than ever before. 

When we once recoiled at the mention of Billions in deficit spending we have now become numbed to Trillions. 

Okay, enough's enough, rant over.  Now I feel better for having unloaded.  Time to go to work and elect Mike Lee, Morgan Philpot and Gary Herbert, my top three 2010 picks for great first-time candidates in the great state of Utah!

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

America's Debt and Deficit Addiction


Sign POSTED on Hwy 61, Hutchinson, Kansas.


Today, the online edition of The Wall Street Journal published a small news item with HUGE implications.

For all of fiscal 2009, the U.S. ran a record $1.42 trillion deficit. Fiscal 2010 might run a little higher — the Obama administration sees $1.47 trillion.

I'm not sure anybody can appreciate the number when it's written that way.  Here's what it looks like:

$-1,470,000,000,000.00 

That's just the deficit, meaning it's the amount of money over and above what the country takes in.

In recent weeks, Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) announced he is once again sponsoring a balanced budget amendment (it's the third time he's tried).  Maybe this time somebody will take note and dare to be bold enough to vote it into the Constitution.  Don't hold your breath, but it's a wonderful notion.

Hatch is already starting his run for another Senate term in 2012.  He's running for his political life to avoid the same fate as his counterpart Bob Bennett (R-UT), who crashed and burned at the state Republican convention earlier this year.  While Bennett was perceived as a big spender, Hatch is attempting to distance himself from a similar fate, ignoring for the moment that the 36 years while Hatch has been in Washington the trend to spend ourselves into oblivion has all happened on his watch when his party was in and out of power.

"Our national debt is now $13 trillion," Hatch said in a news release. . . "My resolution can't turn back the clock to stop the outrageous spending of the past few years, but it can stop congressional liberals from adding even more to the deficit through more spending." 

Memo to Orrin:  the "congressional conservatives" from your own party were just as guilty in the past.  You've been in league with the liberals.  You're all going to be fired if the electorate is as awake as I believe they are, and there's no place to run and hide this time in your press releases and proposed amendments.  The emperor has no clothes, and it's not just one little boy in the crowd who sees it.

When Bennett was running for the Senate earlier this year, we were warned that his powerful senior voice in Washington was indispensible to Utah's interests, because Bob Bennett knew how to bring home the earmarks for his home state.  Bennett never once renounced earmarks during his campaign, in fact he defended the practice!

Think about it.  If that's what we're losing in losing Bennett, then every other state in the nation deserves and should be so fortunate.  We must collectively unite as a nation and say to Washington,

"NO MATTER WHAT THE PRICE TAG LOOKS LIKE IN SACRIFICE INDIVIDUALLY AND COLLECTIVELY, WE MUST STOP SPENDING MONEY WE DON'T HAVE!!!!"

And here's what our debt looks like:

$13,000,000,000,000.00

Just the interest payments alone so far in fiscal 2010 amount to $185.25 billion.  Here's what that number looks like:

$185,250,000,000.00

If you were a member of Congress with a record like that to run on in 2010 or in 2012, would any right-thinking American actually believe you deserved another term?  It's insanity or worse.  That's why this year, as never before, the popularity of Congress is at an all-time record low of 11%.  I'm wondering who the 11% are that have a favorable view.  REALLY?  It should be -11% at best. 

If that's a record you can be "proud of," Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, and Barack Obama, then it's time to lock you all up and throw away the key. 


We can't solve it all in one year, but we can make a great start by hiring Mike Lee for the Senate and Morgan Philpot for the 2nd Congressional District.  Let's resolve here and now that we will hire new management as an electorate nationwide, and look for people who don't want to perpetuate their longevity in office based upon those numbers.

It's time to look for CHANGE WE CAN BELIEVE IN this time around.

George W. Bush once famously warned, "We are addicted to oil," and coming from a member of a prominent Texas oil family that was quite an admission.  Seems like a million years ago at least, but it was only 2006 in his State of the Union address.  Bush had it partially correct.  We are addicted. . .

. . . but our addiction is to debt and deficit spending.

The withdrawal is going to be painful and protracted, but it must begin in the 2010 November mid-term elections.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Obama: Six in Ten say "No confidence"


This just in -- according to this story in the Washington Post today, six in ten Americans say they have no confidence in President Obama's ability to lead the country. . .  even better, 62 percent are looking for new representation in Congress.  Those most likely to vote in the midterms prefer the GOP over continued Democratic rule by a sizable margin of 56 percent to 41 percent. 

Word of caution:  Don't accept a party label as the outer limit of your scrutiny of candidates.  The last time Republicans had control they blew it. 

What it takes is candidates from either party who pledge limited government and reduced spending

The Great Awakening of 2010 marches on to November. . .

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Morgan Philpot -- Utah 2nd District's Next Congressman

Now that Mike Lee is the Utah Republican Senate nominee, we turn our attention to Morgan Philpot in the 2nd Congressional District in his race against incumbent (there's that dirty word again) Jim Matheson.

It will come as no surprise -- I am endorsing Morgan Philpot for anyone who cares (I don't think endorsements mean much, by the way).  Back in May, I went on the record that I felt Philpot could beat Matheson in a straight up contest without encouraging cross-over votes in the Democratic primary for Claudia Wright. 

I was pleased he came out of convention and escaped a primary runoff (he won by only one vote).  His convention victory is a cautionary tale for every politician and every concerned citizen -- EVERY vote counts, even yours, this year.

At the convention my friend Jim North and I were so impressed with the quality of candidates who are willing to put themselves on the ballot for consideration.  Those who blandly sit on the sidelines and complain there is no one acceptable to vote for would have been similarly disposed as we were at the convention.  Morgan Philpot is just such a quality candidate.  He deserves our support.

There can be little doubt America is watching this race between Philpot and Matheson.

Flip 41

Forty-one votes. That is the magic number of swing votes that has enabled the Democrats in Washington DC to push through Obamacare, multiple stimulus bills and a reckless financial reform bill (to name a few). This November, a change in just 41 seats in Congress will help reverse the tide of wasteful spending and one-size-fits-all federal “solutions” and help put America’s budget and economy back on solid ground.

One of those critical swing seats is Utah’s 2nd Congressional District race, a seat currently held by one of those enabling gang of 41 Democrats.

Utah’s ability to affect the political landscape in Washington DC rests with one race in Utah: Utah’s 2nd Congressional District seat. A GOP victory in Utah will help ensure that Republicans retake the House in January 2011, thus ending the monopoly of power held by Pelosi, Reid and Obama.

A vote for Morgan Philpot on November 2 is a vote for a change from the status quo and a vote for putting America back on a fiscally and economically sound track.

What You Can Do

We are asking each of you for just three things: 1) Cast your vote for Morgan Philpot on November 2nd, 2) Become a Philpot Phan and join the ranks of a growing number of committed volunteers, and 3) Make a donation to Morgan’s campaign.

Together we can take back the House.

Morgan is pleased to call Utah home. He and his wife Natalie, a native of Sandy, Utah, graduated from the University of Utah and lived in the heart of Salt Lake county for several years. While there, Morgan was able to represent his neighbors in Utah House District 45. He now lives in the Utah County portion of Congressional District 2.

Growing up, Morgan was active in Scouting and rose to the rank of Eagle. He was involved in high school sports and school government. As a young boy, Morgan was raised primarily by his mother who spent several years parenting seven children on her own. Starting with his first “real” job picking strawberries at age 9, he quickly learned independence and self reliance. He knows the value of balancing a budget and of making decisions based on how much money you actually have, not how much you wish you had.

While attending the University of Utah, he earned degrees in Anthropology and Environmental Studies. During that time, he and his wife were able to serve internships in Washington D.C. for the White House Council on Environmental Quality and the Supreme Court respectively.

After graduating from college, Morgan took a job as the new account sales manager for a Salt Lake fabrication company. Two years later, Morgan ran in a hotly contested race for State Representative of Utah House District 45 (Sandy, Salt Lake County, Midvale) with the motto “Freedom, Family, Future”. He put together a strong, effective grassroots campaign and in 2000, at the age of 28, he became one of the youngest state legislators in the Utah House.

As a State Representative, Morgan didn’t hesitate to take strong stands on tough issues. He consistently led the fight against wasteful government spending, championed life, second amendment rights and free market principles. He sought creative and innovative ways to improve public education and was the lead sponsor of the Carson Smith Special Needs Scholarship, a bill that created an educational voucher program. This law has opened new avenues to a better education for Utah’s families with special-needs children and now serves over 500 individuals. While in the legislature, Morgan was granted the “Friend of the Taxpayer” award by the Utah Taxpayer’s Association and the “Guardian of Small Business” award by the National Federation of Independent Businesses. Morgan was also one of the founding members of the House Conservative Caucus.

In 2004, Morgan chose to leave the legislature and attend the Ave Maria School of Law, a school dedicated to life, the rule of law, and the U.S. Constitution. While there, he was privileged to learn from such influential minds as Judge Robert Bork and Charles Rice.

Upon completion of law school Morgan clerked for Utah’s Attorney General Mark Shurtleff. Morgan served as the in-house legal counsel for a Utah business for two years and is now a consultant with a private company in Sandy.

In addition to his legislative service Morgan has also volunteered his time to Scouting, Church, and Utah politics. He has served as a State delegate, County delegate, State Central Committee member, Executive Committee member and most recently as the Vice-Chair of the Utah Republican Party.

Morgan has enjoyed sharing his love of ancient history with his children through rock-hounding, camping and hiking in many areas of rural Utah. His family also enjoys gardening and reading together. Morgan currently lives in American Fork with his wife and five children.

Morgan believes that his real life struggles and experiences uniquely qualify him to serve the families of Utah as the next Congressman from the Second District.


Analysis of Dodd-Frank Financial Overhaul Bill

This is a repost of an excellent analysis of Dodd-Frank from Liberty Central.  There was a sheepish admission that did not instill much confidence in me or anybody else, coming as it did from one of the principal architects at 5:00 a.m. after an all-night session to hammer out final details. "It's a great moment. I'm proud to have been here," said a teary-eyed Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.), who as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee led the effort in the Senate. "No one will know until this is actually in place how it works."

I was stunned when I read those words.  No, I was shocked that this kind of stuff could actually be happening right under our noses.

This is an all-too-familiar pattern that has been repeated again and again over the course of the last year and a half.  There is only one way to characterize the work product of this Congress:  Middle-of-the-night-behind-closed-doors legislation passed by the Democrat majority with little or no collaboration solicited nor support garnered from any opposing voices while America sleeps. 

The question is often asked these days why the Constitution -- that dusty old piece of parchment -- should still be relevant in today's modern world.  Like Obamacare, this monstrosity of repressive tyrannical oversight (I do not overstate it) does nothing but put unrestrained powers into the hands of unelected bureaucrats through the creation of yet another federal agency governed by presidential appointees.  It's even hard to remember the criticisms of "King George" W. Bush for what were seen as outrageous presidential grabs for power.  There are few or none who seemed alarmed at what is going on in this administration, especially from the MSM.  Rarely do we hear a peep from them anymore.  We must increasingly turn to other sources for insight. 

I'm not certain anybody really cares about this over-reaching bank regulation, but I have to admit I am amazed at what I see happening in the sudden and swift erosion of our liberties and freedoms.  And the reaction of the bank lobbyists and investors when they saw this bill is that they were "relieved?"  I find no relief at all in what follows. 

I can't help wondering what Thomas Jefferson would say today, when this is what he said in 1791:  "I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty, than those attending too small a degree of it."  (Letter to Archibald Stuart, Philadelphia, 23 December 1791).

***

ASK QUESTIONS: Dodd-Frank Financial Overhaul Bill

By: Sarah Field, 1 Jul 2010

Yesterday, the House passed the 2315-page Dodd-Frank Financial Reform overhaul 237-192 with three Republicans voting for it: Cao (LA), Castle (DE) and Jones (N.C.). Fourteen Democrats voted against it: Boren (OK), Chandler (KY), Childers (MS), Critz (PA), Giffords (AZ), Hill (IN), Kaptur (OH), Kirkpatrick (AZ), Kratovil (MD), Minnick (ID), Mitchell (AZ), Nye (VA), Ross (AR), and Shuler (N.C.).

[Utahns in the 2nd Congressional District, please note that Jim Matheson voted FOR this bill, reason enough for you to reconsider your vote in November -- I support Morgan Philpot in this race, and encourage others to join me].

It will head to the Senate after the 4th of July recess and, even though Senators like Collins (ME), Snowe (ME), Nelson (NE), and Brown (MA) were worried about the $19B “bank tax,” there are many more, even costlier parts of this bill. In fact, on page 357 of the bill, there is an unlimited bank tax. This guide will give you the tools you need to call your Members of Congress or ask them tough questions during town hall meetings when they are home on July 4th recess.

The three most important things to know about this bill is that it (1) Creates a permanent bailout authority, ending TARP, but instead of using that savings for debt reduction as the law required, forces taxpayers to bear the costs of the new legislation, (2) Sets up the federal government to micromanage the markets and overload them with regulations, and (3) Continues to protect Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. This bill vests more power in administrative agencies and will raise the costs of living for every American with higher fees on our markets.

Liberty Central read the entire Dodd-Frank Overhaul bill and picked out key questions that delve into other major problems with the bill:

GROWTH OF POWER FOR THE ADMINISTRATIVE STATE

Did you know…?

…that the bill sets up the Financial Services Oversight Council, appointed by the President, to identify risks to financial stability and can vote on which companies fall under its jurisdiction? (TITLE I)

… that there is an elastic clause where the Council, Board of Governors, and Supervising Agencies can make whatever rules or issue whatever orders are necessary to carry out their duties? (Title VIII) That’s unelected bureaucrats interpreting the law how they see fit.

…that while taxpayer funds can be used to liquidate a company, no taxpayer funds can be used to stop liquidation of a company? (Title II, P. 380.)

…that the FDIC has permission to decide which creditors receive more money than their similarly situated creditors? (Title II)

…that, during the liquidation process, the FDIC can make additional payments to the individuals it chooses to minimize losses to the “orderly liquidation.” This also gives power to the FDIC to pay some creditors more than they deserve.

…that the Federal Reserve can still make emergency loans if they decide it is necessary for the stability of the economy? (TITLE XI)

…that Title III ‘plays mix and match with the letters of alphabet soup agencies’ by replacing one former bureaucratic regulatory agency (the Office of Thrift Supervision) with another, more powerful bureaucratic regulatory agency (the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency) that is not even accountable to the Secretary of the Treasury?

… that the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is not given a budget, but instead the bill gives the office the authority to raise its own funding from assessments, fees, and charges from any entity described in section 3(q)(1) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, Title III, Sub. A?

…that this bill contains a power-grabbing new Office for Federal Insurance at Treasury, regulating an area traditionally left to the States? (Title V)

… that the bill prohibits states from collecting a licensing fee (for surplus lines broker) unless the state is participating in a national database? (Title V)

… that this bill establishes what is, in effect, an Investor Czar by creating the office of the Investor Advocate? (Title IX)

…that there will be a government database kept of all persons with custody or use of securities or money? (Title IX, Sec. 1333)

…that the bill establishes another government bureaucracy in the Office of Municipal Securities? (Title XI)

…that the bill sets up a new bureaucracy in the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection, which regulates the offering of consumer financial products as an executive agency, with its director appointed by the President? It does not have a specified size, but lists the need for branches in D.C. and elsewhere. (Title X, Sub. A)

…that the federal government now requires mortgage loan originators to register with the government, and grants regulatory authority to a bureaucracy? (TITLE XIV-Sub A.)

…that the Financial Services Oversight Council determines the definition of “financial activities”, is to establish “prudent standards” for banks and has taxing power and can limit the size of financial institutions? (TITLE I)

…that a government bureaucrat can exempt companies from regulations if they decide it’s in the “public interest”? (Title VI)

… that the government will now dictate the terms of credit ratings, and sets up a federal Office of Credit Ratings? (TITLE IX)

…that the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is given sweeping regulatory powers and little accountability; the Secretary of the Treasury is barred from intervening in any matter before the Comptroller unless provided for specifically by law. (Title III Sub A Sec. 324 (b) (1))

…that funding for the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System is done by the Board, who is free to collect as much as it wants from any bank or non-bank financial institution with holdings over $50 billion? (Title III Sub A)

…that the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection has the authority to declare an act unfair, may collect information about business conduct and activities of covered persons and service providers, has investigators with subpoena power and make rules on abusive practices? (Title X, Sub. B, Sub. E)

… that the Secretary of Treasury or the Board of Governors can decide if a company needs to be liquidated or liquidate assets? (Title II, Title XI)

…that the bill has emergency authority to liquidate positions in security, and the decision to do so is arbitrary with little room for review? (TITLE VII)

… that the Board requires annual stress tests to determine if a company has adequate capital and can require reports on the financial condition of nonbank financial companies, and to give up any information requested “promptly”? (TITLE I, Sec. C)

…that a company with $50 billion in holdings cannot purchase shares of certain other companies without permission of the government? (TITLE I, Sec. C)

…that the bill allows the government to liquidate companies deemed “failing,” with creditors and shareholders taking the loss, including foreign banks? (Title II)

… that the government can discharge any contract that the company entered into if it considers it to be “burdensome?” (Title II, pg. 266)

…that the bill allows the Board of Governors to regulate what it decides are risky transactions, and who will supervise? (Title VII)

… that it is left up to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to define “commercial risk” and that the commission shall review every swap? (TITLE VII)

… that that FDIC would be able to reorganize any liquidated company as a “bridge financial institution” with a board of directors that is appointed by the FDIC? (Title II, p. 320 – 358)

… that this legislation would newly micromanage private fund advisors who are responsible for a relatively small amount of money? (Title IV)

…that every registered agent in swap markets is required to have a designated compliance officer, who is required to file an annual report with the government? Did you also know that the government now requires information about security based swaps be made available to the public, and that there is to be a depository of swap information, and that depository may share information with other Federal agencies and some foreign entities? (Title VII)

…that there is now a requirement that shareholder votes be held on executive compensation every 6 years, and that the government controls the makeup of the Board of Director Compensation Committees? (Title IX)

…that the federal government now requires written appraisals of all property, and requires that appraisers be registered and conform to regulations? (TITLE XIV, Sub. F)

…“Swap data repositories” are like stock exchanges for certain financial transactions that are not offered to the public for investment.

… that swap data repositories may be required to provide information — including transaction data identifying individual investors — to US regulators, the DOJ, and foreign financial supervisors, central banks, or ministries? (Title VII, p. 876)

…the Commodity Futures Trading Commission is authorized to develop new duties for swap data repositories based on “any evolving standard of the United States or the international community”? (Title VII, p. 881)

… that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission can set limits on how much any one person or group of related persons can invest in swaps or options? (Title VII, pp. 941-948)

… that publicly traded Boards of Trade will be required to have their board of directors and the other decision-making bodies reflect “a broad and culturally diverse pool of qualified candidates”? (Title VII, p. 940)

… that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission may forbid foreign boards of trade from taking orders from US persons unless they are registered with the Commission and comply with similar regulations as US boards of trade? (Title VII, pp. 951-957)

… that the financial reform bill tries to, in essence, rewrite certain provisions in private contracts? (Title VII, p. 960)

… that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission previously could not make its interpretations the exclusive way to comply with regulations, but now it can make these interpretations mandatory? (Title VII, p. 977)

… that the financial reform bill creates an interagency working group to study the oversight of carbon markets, including carbon spot markets and derivative markets? (Title VII, pp. 1012-1014)

… that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and Securities Exchange Commission are required to consult and coordinate with foreign regulatory authorities on the establishment of consistent international standards regulating swaps, futures, and options? (Title VII, pp. 1016-1017)

… that, if the Commodity Futures Trading Commission accuses a person of providing false information or manipulating the price of any swap or commodity, the hearing to determine penalties take place in three days or less, and any penalized person has only 15 days to file an appeal? (Title VII, pp. 1019-1026)

PROMOTES SPECIAL INTERESTS

Did you know…?

…that this bill is full of over 16 studies, including whether to end the Conservatorship of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, reverse mortgages, insurance premiums of banks, private education loans and credit scores?

…that the bureau of Consumer Financial Protection will also collect data about small business loans, including whether the loan is to a minority or woman owned business, and maintain a database which includes the revenue and racial, ethnic and gender characteristics of the business? (Title X, Sub. G)

…that the bill is full of measures that continue to divide Americans by race by creating specific programs for racial minorities and women, including an Office of Fair Lending and Equal Opportunity (Title X, Sub. A), Office of Housing Counseling (TITLE XIV, Sub. D), the Office of Minority and Women Inclusion (Title III, Sub. D), and requires recruitment at historically black colleges and other minority serving institutions (TITLE III, Sub. D)?

… that this national insurance office’s charge will be to help ensure that the under-served community, consumers and minorities have access to insurance and that this sounds much like the policies that set up the subprime loan distortions in the mortgage business under CRA? (Title V)

… that this bill imposes a debt limit on nonbank financial institutions, but excludes Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and exempts Fannie and Freddie from securities laws, while proscribing new standards for loans (Title IX, TITLE I, Sec. C)

…that all of the government employees from the abolished Office of Thrift Supervision will simply be transferred to other departments? (Title III, Sub. B)

…that the TARP Program is still in place, and allowed to purchase troubled assets if there is deemed a threat to financial stability? (TITLE XIII)

…that the bill contains a pet project that seeks to make sure that materials coming from the Congo and other “conflict” areas are not being used? (TITLE XV)

…that the bill has greater regulation on extraction of oil, natural gas and minerals, and regulates the foreign trade of those materials? (TITLE XV)

…the Bill sets up a Financial Crisis Assessment and Fund, which applies to any company engaged in activities that are financial, or incidental to the financial sector. This fund will be paid for by companies, and will determine the impact on low income and minority communities if the company fails? (TITLE XVI)

SUMMARY

This bill is incompatible with the Founding Fathers’ vision of limited government, because it promotes the growth of government, expands the powers of the administrative bureaucracy, limits economic freedom, and promotes personal interests. Limited Government requires that the powers be shared among three, co-equal branches: the Executive, Legislative and Judicial. With the system of “checks and balances” combined with the vote of the people, there exists a system of oversight over the actions of the federal government. However, today’s federal government also involves administrative agencies, the so-called “fourth branch.” These parts of government are unelected and usually filled with career employees at all but the highest level, yet they have both lawmaking and enforcement powers. Unfortunately, this bill vests even more power in administrative agencies and will raise the costs of living for every American with higher fees on our markets.