
Rather than punish success, tax reform should focus on incentivizing work, savings, and investment.
On the public record
Every politician on the site, every statement on file. Search, filter, and read the public record.
8,900+·quotes on file

Rather than punish success, tax reform should focus on incentivizing work, savings, and investment.

We are grateful for the chance to share some of these experiences, and to highlight how H.R. 3283 and H.R. 3299 can help in providing greater access and transparency.

Most importantly, we must have a frank discussion about Washington's spending addiction.

This legislation would support more active management of our overgrown, fire-prone forests, and protect communities in the wildland-urban interface from the risk of catastrophic wildfire.

I expect that many NTCA members will seek to participate in the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program.

This bill requires the National Telecommunications and Information Administration to submit a report on the development of online portals for processing applications for communication use authorizations.

any great power that spends more on debt service than on defense, will not stay great for a long time, a very long time.

This is a common-sense fix that will help make the broadband permitting process less cumbersome and time-consuming.

We must stop digging ourselves into an ever deeper budget hole, and I think the budget agreement reached between McCarthy and Biden a year ago starts us down that track, maybe not as aggressively as we should, but it's still a start.

I've criticized both Presidents for not doing enough to control spending and deficit.

Taxpayers and workers, and investors are smarter than we are in the United States Senate.

I don't put much stock in a study of Biden's fiscal records that leaves out hundreds of billions of dollars of unlawful student loan giveaways.

Legislation offered by Representatives Miller-Meeks and Cammack would expand high-speed internet access by streamlining the application process for broadband development on federal lands.

Congress should regularly examine tax incentives, just as we should review spending programs to ensure that they're working as intended.

Isn't it true that many of the tax proposals that we've heard about today haven't been enacted because of the Democrats' own failure to enact when they had that opportunity?

Since the 2020 campaign, President Biden has pledged not to raise taxes on Americans earning less than $400,000.

It's just ridiculous to think you can raise marginal tax rates to 93 percent and you're going to get people stupid enough to pay 93 percent of their income in taxes, so they're working for nothing.

Okay. Won't the policies Democrats chose to enact as part of their misnamed Inflation Reduction Act overwhelmingly benefit large corporations, as well as banks and even private equity firms?