Sen. Rand Paul
Washington
Times
Oct 5, 2013
It has been said that politics is the art of compromise. Try as they may,
Washington leaders hardly ever get absolutely everything they want.
Polls show Americans are worried about the implementation of Obamacare —
worried about keeping their current health insurance plans, the new law itself,
the exchanges, potential fines, personal privacy, keeping their jobs, their work
hours and a host of other issues too numerous to list here. Both the country and
the Congress have much to discuss.
Right now, though, President Obama refuses to engage in any debate or
discussion. The president is demanding that he get 100 percent of what he wants,
and if he doesn’t, he and his Democratic allies in the Senate will keep the
government shuttered.
Republicans have offered compromises that might stop or dull some of the
negative effects of Obamacare but that would also pass a budget and keep the
government functioning. Still, Mr. Obama refuses to budge. He will not even
consider compromise.
Republicans are told that the law has already passed and that we’re being
obstructionists for attempting to question or modify it. However, since when in
this country after a law is passed is it eternally set in stone? When has it
ever been true that Congress cannot look at and alter or improve existing
law?
The Obama administration announced in August that it sought to reform our
current mandatory-minimum sentencing laws. I’ve been speaking out on the need to
get rid of these unjust laws for some time and look forward to working with
anyone in either party who is serious about doing so.
Some of those mandatory-minimum sentencing laws have been in place since the
1980s. Does anyone think that just because they were once passed into law, that
Mr. Obama or I are somehow “extremists” for wanting to change them? Does a bad
law have to be decades old before we do anything about it? When Ronald Reagan
was elected and the top tax rate was at 70 percent and had been so for 40 years,
did he just throw up his hands and accept it? Or did he change the bad laws?
Plenty of people are saying Obamacare is bad law, and not just Republicans.
The Teamsters are saying Obamacare has serious problems. Warren Buffett says
it’s a problem. Former President Bill Clinton says there are problems.
Even the president himself acknowledges that there are some significant
flaws. He has sought to delay portions of Obamacare through executive order,
including the employer mandate.
There are still many compromise solutions that would end the government
shutdown, like a short-term spending bill while we negotiate. A conference
committee with an equal number of Republicans and Democrats is historically how
we solved an impasse.
Unfortunately, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is rejecting any compromise.
There has to be some middle ground, and Republicans are willing to work with
Democrats to get there, but the president refuses to listen.
We, as elected representatives in the House and Senate, are hearing from our
constituents that they do not want Obamacare as it currently stands. A recent
NBC-Wall Street Journal poll shows that only 12 percent of Americans think
Obamacare will have a positive impact on their lives.
We are looking for compromise with Mr. Obama. We are looking for
give-and-take solutions.
The president is intransigent. He will not give an inch, yet he expects the
entire country to take the whole Obamacare mile. It is his way or the
highway.
It was not a good idea to shut down the government. It’s also not a good idea
to give Mr. Obama 100 percent of what he wants on Obamacare. Why is the
president so opposed to trying to make this law less bad? Why is he continually
refusing to compromise?
What are we supposed to do with a president who is completely unwilling to
negotiate? Mr. Obama and the Democrats in the Senate would rather shut down our
government than work with Republicans on serious amendments and solutions.
Full
article here
Sunday, October 6, 2013
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