if you expect to be audited, you begin to change your behavior. Members of Congress would be wise to maybe keep that in mind, too.
Editor's note · Context
Andrews emphasizes the importance of accountability and behavioral change in Congress regarding audits.
Share
More from Rob Andrews
Last night, on rollcall Nos. 32 and 33 for H.R. 1791 and H.R. 357, I am not recorded because I was absent. Had I been present, I would have voted ``yea'' on both. Today, on rollcall Nos. 34 and 35 for the Rule on H.R. 3590 and H. Res. 470…
I would like to thank Chairman McKeon and Ranking Member Smith for all their hard work on this bill. In the spring of 2011, a very brave band of Americans executed a mission that brought the country to its feet in ending the reign of…
I understand this is a conceptual proposal, but we don't legislate concepts; we legislate statutes and they have real impact on real people.
If the bills that are on the floor today pass unanimously--which they won't--here is what happens next. They go to the Senate, the Senate maybe takes them up, maybe doesn't take them up, passes them, maybe doesn't pass them, and this whole…





