we have to look at what can we do--and, of course, we had an excellent hearing here with former Senator Phil Gramm.
Here is finally a process within the administration with something that is subtractive.
Let us talk about why you want to grow the economy. If you go from 2 percent to 3 percent growth, that is about $14 tril...
Short of military strikes against their nuclear facilities, they are going to continue to develop their nuclear capabili...
They are not going to give up their nuclear capability. They are going to continue to improve it, develop it.
I think both of you gentlemen are saying diplomacy is really not going to work. We are going to either have to defend ou...
But again, the reality is diplomacy will not work.
We have a budget that is now approaching over the next 10 years, we were just told by CBO today with their new baseline,...
Just trying to be accurate.
On regulatory reform, Senator Heitkamp is right. We have a great opportunity here. And it has been bipartisan, typically...
I would want you to work with us on that. I wonder if you would make a commitment to me today to ensure that we find a s...
the regulatory burden is about $14,800 per year per family.
With regard to regulations, there is legislation called the 'Regulatory Accountability Act.' Senator Johnson is very int...
I think that warps the marketplace and puts our purely domestic producers at risk.
I think regulatory reform, having a competitive tax system, using energy resources is just crucial.
the overregulation has an enormous cost to our economy.
the number one component of the solution is economic growth.
I am often asked: What is the greatest threat facing this country right now? And it is not climate change.