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A Growth and Jobs Agenda

This week — nearly three years into his presidency — President Obama will propose his long awaited “jobs agenda.” Unfortunately, it will likely consist of yet another re-hash of the same big-government “stimulus” programs that have consistently failed to generate jobs.

The private sector — entrepreneurs risking capital to meet a demonstrated need — creates jobs. Government doesn’t create jobs. But government can kill jobs. And the Obama administration has waged an unrelenting war on jobs, perhaps not deliberately, but out of an ideological zealotry and dedication to big government and central control of the economy.

As a result, our economy languishes and millions are unemployed. Historically, growth in the U.S. has averaged roughly 3 percent per year. In 2011, we are at 0.7 percent — one quarter the historical average. And unemployment is 9.1 percent, the highest in 28 years. If you count discouraged workers, unemployment is at 16.1 percent — which means 25.1 million Americans are tragically out of work today.

The federal government is addicted to regulation and spending. No domestic policy matters more than stopping the Obama administration’s war on jobs, and unleashing the private sector to create growth and new jobs.

As a candidate for the U.S. Senate, I propose twelve specific steps. The first six are defensive, stopping the Obama war on jobs, and the next six are pro-active, unleashing the private sector:

1. Repeal Obamacare. This administration, over the vocal opposition of a large majority of the American people, jammed through a 2,000-page bill that puts us on the path to government control of one sixth of the economy. If Obamacare stays in place, it will wreak havoc in the healthcare industry, reduce care levels, increase scarcity, and put government bureaucrats between patients and their doctors. And, the massive cost and uncertainty it has imposed on small business is crippling job creation. My first bill in the Senate will be to repeal every word of Obamacare.

2. Kill Cap and Trade. The Obama administration has relentlessly pushed, in cap and trade, the largest energy tax in history, which would take thousands of dollars from every family in America. Unable to pass it through Congress, the EPA is attempting to bypass Congress and force cap and trade on Americans by adopting back-door regulations. We must stop both efforts now.

3. Stop the National Labor Relations Board from Attacking Jobs in Right-to-Work States. Currently, the NLRB is trying to force Boeing to fire thousands of workers from its factory in Charleston because South Carolina is a right-to-work state. Incredibly, the NLRB’s position is that, if Boeing closed the plant and moved all the jobs overseas, that would be fine, but it cannot employ U.S. workers in manufacturing jobs unless they are subject to union bosses and pay mandatory union dues. This makes no sense, and must stop.

4. Revoke the Offshore Drilling Moratorium. The Obama Administration unilaterally imposed a blanket moratorium on drilling, which a federal court subsequently found was contrary to federal law. Nonetheless, a de facto administrative moratorium remains, killing thousands of high-paying jobs and hindering economic growth in Texas and the entire Gulf Coast. It’s time to end the moratorium.

5. Restrain Abusive Environmental Enforcement.  Currently, the Obama Administration is using the alleged presence of a lizard to try to stop oil and gas exploration in West Texas. Even more ominously, the EPA has launched “investigations” into hydraulic fracturing, a long-used drilling process that has recently unlocked vast new reserves in both natural gas and oil. These new American energy reserves are poised to create countless new jobs and drastically reduce our dependence on foreign energy supplies. But if the Obama administration succeeds in banning hydraulic fracturing, tens of thousands of jobs will be lost and America will be left even more dependent on foreign dictators for our energy needs. We can and should vigilantly protect clean air and water while aggressively developing these new resources and new jobs.

6. Repeal Dodd-Frank. A law of massive complexity, Dodd-Frank does nothing to prevent future financial bailouts, but instead subjects the financial sector to costly new regulatory burdens — the cost of which invariably will be passed on to consumers. And its impact hits small community banks hardest. Reasonable government regulations are needed to protect the soundness and integrity of the marketplace, but they should not empower bureaucrats to micro-manage private sector institutions to the detriment of consumers.

7. Slash Corporate Tax Rates. Right now, U.S. corporations face the highest tax rate in the developed world, and they face double taxation if they invest their profits in America. As a result, American companies are today keeping over $2 trillion overseas. With over 25 million Americans out of a job, a tax policy that punishes new U.S. investments and factories is utterly nonsensical. We should cut corporate tax rates — to 15% immediately — to spur new investment and create new jobs in America.

8. Champion Tax Reform. The tax code is too complicated, the IRS too powerful, and lawyers and accountants too expensive. We should dramatically simplify the tax code and move as close as possible to a flat tax or to the Fair Tax.

9. Cut the Federal Budget and Reform Entitlements. Our federal budget is out of control, and broken entitlements are the largest portion of that budget. Under President Obama, federal debt has grown by over $4 trillion. At this pace, Obama will dump more debt on the American people than any other President in history. We need serious federal spending cuts — real cuts, not just decreases in the rate of growth — and fundamental entitlement reform to resolve the ever-growing debt crisis.

10. Rein in the Fed and Ensure Sound Money. Congress should pass Rep. Ron Paul’s bill to audit the Federal Reserve — so that it is subject to basic principles of accountability and transparency. We then should restrain the Fed’s “quantitative easing” — a fancy term for printing money — so that our currency isn’t further debased. Since 2008, gold has skyrocketed and the value of the dollar has plummeted creating a cruel tax on every consumer, saver, and investor. For long-term growth, we need sound money and a strong dollar.

11. Allow Small and Medium Companies To Opt out of Sarbanes-Oxley. Today, American businesses spend twice as much complying with needlessly burdensome regulations than they spend on income taxes. Complying with the audit requirements of Sarbanes-Oxley alone costs nearly $100,000 per business per year, a crushing burden for privately held startups seeking to go public. Since Sarbanes-Oxley, new listings on American stock exchanges have plummeted. We should at a minimum exempt small and medium-businesses from the unnecessary audit requirements of Sarbanes-Oxley, to restore an historic pillar of America’s prosperity: access to affordable public capital to expand businesses and create jobs.

12. Pass a Strong Balanced Budget Amendment. President Obama knows that nothing will have a greater long-term impact on limiting the size of the federal government than a Balanced Budget Amendment — so he pledged to veto any attempt to pass one. In 2013, with a new Senate and a new President in the White House, passing a strong Balanced Budget Amendment — with strict spending limitations (18 percent of GDP) — is absolutely vital.

President Obama’s speech this week will undoubtedly contain everything except what would actually create jobs, namely stopping the government’s war on the job creators. Obama’s vision of government treats entrepreneurs as the enemy in taxation, in spending, and in regulatory burden. For 25 million Americans and counting, the Obama agenda simply doesn’t work.

From now until the election, I will be talking every day about how economic freedom and limited government are the keys to liberty, prosperity, and job creation. If we remove government barriers to economic growth, and unleash private sector innovation, jobs will follow. It’s time to get America working again.

— Ted Cruz served from 2003-08 as the solicitor general of Texas. He is a Republican candidate for U.S. Senate in Texas.

New on The Corner. . .


COMMENTS   35

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Timbuktu
   09/07/11 11:50

How about enforcing immigration laws?

With 25 million un- or under-employed Americans and 11+ million illegal immigrants working here, many of them collecting welfare and other taxpayer benefits, I am absolutely flabbergasted that "respecting the law" hasn't occurred as a good idea to the GOP -- not only on its own merits (which one would think are good enough) but also because that is about the only thing the government can do to create real, lasting jobs for Americans.

We can't afford to have tens of millions of Americans sitting on unemployment checks and tens of millions of illegal foreign nationals working our jobs.

Sure, the Left will talk about "jobs Americans won't do," and maybe a small number of those jobs won't be filled by human laborers. Other jobs will be mechanized, automated, or done by a smaller number of legal workers. But at the very least, the overwhelming majority of restaurant, landscaping, hotel and other service jobs are things Americans can -- and do -- do.

Take young black Americans, with an unemployment rate of nearly 50%. Or high school or college kids whose families would be happy for some additional cash flow. Or the semi-retired in need of some income now that their 401-Ks are down. Or the long-term unemployed whose skills are withering. Or just any old unemployed person wanting to get out there and do some work, earn his keep, and get off the daytime-TV dole.

Come on, Republicans! Ted, starting with you -- this is the absolute very FIRST thing that should be done to fix our unemployment disaster. We're supposed to be a society of laws to begin with; when the result of allowing that rule of law to atrophy is that millions of Americans are out of work and illegal foreign nationals with access to our welfare state are working those jobs (and sending much of those wages back home!), this is inexcusable. Is there any other job-creation "program" that will SAVE us money?

I'd expect the Dems to have all sorts of nonsense Keynesian proposals for job creation that won't work. But for the GOP this is disappointing and cruel.

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   09/07/11 12:36

There are many farmers who would love to hire Americans to pick strawberries or any other crop. But the only applicants they get are Hispanics. I know of this first hand, and I know V.D. Hanson does to.

So all this talk about immigrants taking jobs from Americans is fine in abstract, but it isn't based on the real world.

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Dave H
   09/07/11 12:01

The first six points here should be committed to memory by every Republican candidate and supporter. Every time some Obama supporter hauls out the tired old "it's Bush's fault" meme, smack him with these: Obamacare, Dodd-Frank, NLRB (pro-union regs and Boeing suits), EPA (Gibson raids, Cross-State rules etc.) and the DOE Permitorium. These are the things that OBAMA, not Bush, has done to kill the economic recovery that began in the second quarter of 2009. Don't worry, your liberal friend won't know what you're talking about and will say, "Oh, I guess we should just let the corporations ruin the environment." But if they know how to think (a big "if" if that person went to a top tier university with a non-science major), they'll go home and consider that just maybe you have a point and maybe when they go into that voting booth in Nov. '12, they just might not vote for anybody for President. And that's what will make Obama a one-term president.

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   09/07/11 12:09

"perhaps not deliberately"

Perhaps. But I can guarantee you won't find one (serious) proposal from the Empty Suit connected to any part of your 12 point program. Take that as a clue toward resolving the question.

Also - I'm with you on 11 of 12 points. I still harbor a nagging feeling the Left would exploit a Balanced Budget Amendment to relentlessly raise taxes to "balance" out of control spending.

d(^_^)b
External Link 
“Because the Only Good Progressive is a Failed Progressive”

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   09/07/11 12:31

Not if the BBA came with a spending cap.

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   09/07/11 21:32

The devil would ofcourse be in the details (and the loopholes). And Leftists are proven experts (devils) at exploiting loopholes.

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   09/07/11 12:39

I agree, Liberty. I've commented several times that the BBA is the most idiotic idea the GOP has ever come up with. Okay, maybe not the worst, but close to it.

If they (Congress) aren't responsible enough to control spending, then they just all need to retire and go home. Why the H*** do they need to amend the constitution so they'll do their job?

Other than that, Ted Cruz is a nice upgrade over KBH.

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AlexS
   09/07/11 12:16

It doesn't say what is more important: What Federal agencies and Departments will be closed.
Because that is when you cut the Statism.

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   09/07/11 12:19

Mr. Cruz,

How are you going to rein in an independent government agency that already isn't beholden to Congressional actions?

An audit won't do that. So how?

Why did Bernanke enact QE1 & QE2? I notice that you are against both, but you don't explain why. You also don't explain what these two acts were for, and their effect on price normalcy and inflation.

Explain.

I ask, because for you to be anywhere effective, some things are going to have to occur: first, the GOP will have to have a substantial majority; second, you are still going to have to get Democrats to go along; and third, you and the GOP, are going to have to be able to explain what it is that you oppose, why, and what you plan to do to reverse the negative effects of previous efforts.

The last point is crucial, for it explains why conservatives fail at governing. It isn't enough to simply oppose. You have to have a new direction. Otherwise, you are about as useful as a wad of used chewing gum. We have enough politicians like that in Washington already.

I'll await your answers in the coming months. If you can't find these answers, or simply don't know, then for God's sake, don't run.

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   09/07/11 12:25

Previous posters seems inclined to criticize, and I agree the list isn't perfect. But compare it to any other politician or any current candidate for president and I can see why Jay Nordlinger has been raving about this guy.

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   09/07/11 12:38

The problem is, that there need be no comparison. Mr. Cruz is giving rhetoric.

Some of the points, even should he win office, the Senate has no power to influence. Lifting the moratorium on drilling, and the Fed nonsense, are two examples.

I don't want to elect any more candidates who just want to throw out lists, and what they want to do, and have no idea of what it is they actually can do.

When Americans in general feel that way, then maybe we will get the governance that we deserve; rather than the ineffectively that we currently also deserve.

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   09/07/11 14:53

Rhetoric can change the dynamic by informing the voters, who can then bring pressure upon elected officials.

Cruz alone doesn't have to have the direct power to effect the change he wants, but if his message is solid, he can win support via his rhetoric.

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   09/07/11 15:27

Cruz, nor any other Senator has the power to enact what are some of the items on his list. An independent agency like the Fed, is independent, for a reason. Can you imagine what would happen if the Fed were to subject itself to 100 different voices of opinion, on matters that the Senate clearly have no understanding of, and even if they did, would utilize obfuscation and political expedience to enact their ends?

A solid message is not a guaranatee of good governance. I've been listening to conservative's messages for over 30 years. Since 1994 they've been given the opportunity to enact their beliefs. They've failed. Miserably. What changed during that time? The message? I don't think so.

Until the American people are serious about understanding the problems that face this country; understand why the Fed, and other agencies enact their policies and the effects of those policies; and, understand the limits of government and the politicians running for such, we can expect more of the same.

I'm willing to give Mr. Cruz the benefit of time to come up with some things he hasn't done yet: a chance to show that he understands completely what he doesn't like about the current government; an opportunity to explain to voters what he thinks the Senate can do to enable what he plans to propose; and finally, the plan he believes the Senate should employ to get the body to move as he believes it should, or at least, what his plans are to bring before the leadership in the Senate.

So far, nothing. Time is ticking.

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Aarradin
   09/07/11 12:31

This really is a great list.

on the Fed: don't just audit, revise its mandate. Eliminate its mandate to 'promote maximum employment'. This has led to the massive amounts of newly printed money. The fed should focus on sound money and inflation. Period.

@Timbuktu I agree entirely. Enforcement of Immigration Laws simply has to be on the list.

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Wiredman
   09/07/11 12:47

13. Open the vast western lands held by the federal government for sale to private US citizens. This not only bring direct revenues to the federal government, but it will provide a tax base, but more importantly it will be highly stimulative to the economy.

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Aarradin
   09/07/11 13:09

Yes! Thank you!

Why does the federal government own ANY land in the states (other than military bases)?

Support legislation that gives ALL federal land back to the states, excepting only the bare minimum of land actively used for military bases.

This, along with the elimination of the Department of Energy, would be a tremendous boon to the economy. It would go a long way towards solving our energy problems.

Let the states manage their own resources. Remove the jackboot of federal tyranny from the throats of our energy producers.

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   09/07/11 12:47

Two points:

1) There was a global economic melt down in 2008 followed by bipartisan, massive, bailouts. This caused the unemployment we see today (as it has in all other developed countries). Sure the policies mentioned above dont help, to say the least, but they are not the cause of current situation.

2)" big government and central control of the economy"
Seems to work for China whose economy will overtake the US's in 20-30 years if not sooner.

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Aarradin
   09/07/11 13:04

Two points:

1) This is the National Review, not Firedoglake. Do you imagine Conservatives care at all about a Liberal's opinion when it comes to choosing a Republican candidate for the Senate?

2) If you believe China's economy will overtake that of the US anytime this century, then you are completely misinformed about China. They'll soon be in the same trap Japan is, with huge numbers of retirees in a baby-free society. This in a country that's still mostly populated with peasants.

I'll leave it to others to debunk your raving lunacy on the causes of the economic collapse, not to mention the comprehensive failures of the policies enacted during/since.

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Kevin Moriarty
   09/07/11 13:11

Aaarradin: Another open-minded, non-dogmatic conservative wants to banish any expression of opinion in the name of ideological purity.

The balanced budget amendment is one of the worst ideas, for reasons many other intelligent observers have noted. I find it disturbing that the proponents of the balanced budget amendment want an exception to pay for wars but not for any assistance to the American people in the aftermath of a natural disaster.

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   09/07/11 13:09

Is China running trillion dollar deficits?
Is China spending high and rising percentage of GDP on entitlements like Medicare and Social Security?
Is China providing two years of unemployment insurance?
Is China trying to shut down coal power plants?
I'm not in favor of big government, but big government implementing bad policies compounds the problem.

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