
The Democratic Senate’s Not-So-Secret Weapon
D.C. Swamp-Hood You may recall that in April, the House of Representatives passed legislation on D.C. statehood. Unfortunately for us, this has long been a
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D.C. Swamp-Hood You may recall that in April, the House of Representatives passed legislation on D.C. statehood. Unfortunately for us, this has long been a
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How One State Representative Can Make a Difference What do the Equal Rights Amendment, the Equality Act, the For the People Act, the Violence Against
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April 16, 2021 D.C. as A Means for Dems to Maintain Control In a desperate step to maintain their Democratic majority in the Senate, the
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April 15, 2021 D.C. Statehood A Play to Maintain Senate It appears the Democrat majority in Congress will stop at almost nothing to ensure their
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The Democratic-led House Majority has certainly wasted no time legislating bad policy in the month of June while the nation is distracted by civil unrest and the Coronavirus. While attempting to punish police through so-called reform, socializing healthcare, and cramming the Green New Deal into an infrastructure bill, the Democrats found time to introduce and pass an unconstitutional D.C. statehood bill, H.R. 51.
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August 2012 Political conversation on the media is full of chatter about how to cut spending and debt, but it reminds us of the comment
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District of Columbia / Puerto Rico Statehood
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Have you seen the television pictures of the tens of thousands of demonstrators at the Wisconsin State Capitol who are protesting proposed budget cuts for state employees?
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Demoting all major economic and corruption problems facing our country to the bottom of the agenda, the House devoted a long afternoon and 12 roll-call votes to passing a bill to force U.S. statehood on Puerto Rico.
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Americans are fortunate to have a written Constitution that has withstood the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune for more than two centuries, and we certainly don’t need a new constitution.
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The liberals really don’t like our constitutional process of electing Presidents by the Electoral College, and every few years they come up with a new plan to abolish, change or bypass it, sometimes by unconstitutional means.
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Even though Puerto Rico has three times voted against becoming a U.S. state, yet another effort is being made to persuade Puerto Rico to change its mind. Of course, the Democratic Party thinks making Puerto Rico our 51st state is a cool idea because that would give the Democrats two additional U.S. Senators and 6 to 8 additional Members of the House, more congressional representation than 25 of our 50 states.
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Some federal employees are griping because a new law requires them to take a 25-minute tutorial on the U.S. Constitution. Senator Robert C. Byrd (D-WV) sponsored this law, along with a similar law requiring every public school to “hold an educational program on the United States Constitution on September 17,” which is Constitution Day.
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Cut taxes across-the-board to put money in the pockets of all taxpayers. Cut rates — the proven way to keep the economy moving. Americans are overtaxed.
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Sometimes I think there are only two classes of people: those who can profit by the mistakes of others and those who insist on making their own. With the glaring example of Quebec just across our northern border, a festering wound of ethnic disunity verging on national dissolution, how could the Republican Congress even think of permitting Puerto Rico to play a similar role in the United States?
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October 1978 On August 22, 1978, the U.S. Congress passed and sent to the states a new proposed amendment to the United States Constitution to
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