Buyer's remorse gets stronger with every passing day as life in Biden's America gets tougher and tougher for the average citizen. With record high has prices and inflation, we’re quickly seeing the chickens come home to roost after two years of massive money-printing schemes. But instead recognizing the root causes, the woke, economic illiterates in the administration are flailing around in a desperate attempt to distract the public from the consequences of their destructive policies.
On Tuesday, the first hearing organized by the January 6 commission took place. For months, we’ve been told that such a commission is deeply necessary, and that no American has any serious reason to oppose it.
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- In response to President Trump’s executive order today directing agency heads to remove burdensome regulations that hamper economic recovery from COVID-19, Adam Brandon, FreedomWorks’ President, commented:
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- In response to the House Budget Committee’s hearing today on the FY 2021 White House Budget, Adam Brandon, FreedomWorks President, commented:
Over the past several months, there has a been a campaign against the FIRST STEP Act, H.R. 5682, waged by a handful of reactionaries whose mindset is better suited for the 1980s. It has been suspected, although not confirmed, that the talking points against the bill were coming from the Department of Justice (DOJ). We now know this to be an indisputable fact.
On behalf of our activist community, I urge you to contact your representative and ask him or her to vote NO on H.Res. 796 and the Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.R. 1625. H.Res. 796 is the rule governing the Consolidated Appropriations Act. The underlying bill is a consolidated appropriations bill packed with unrelated legislative items that Congress has not been able to pass. We oppose the rule governing the underlying bill because of process by which leadership wrote the bill. We oppose the omnibus both because of the process and because it appropriates at the spending levels under the Bipartisan Budget Act.
The White House unveiled its FY 2019 budget request this morning. Although it's incredibly unlikely that the budget request will become law, it does provide a window into the policy priorities of the Trump administration. Of course, the passage of the Bipartisan Budget Act, H.R. 1892, set the discretionary spending level for FY 2019 at $1.321 trillion -- $716 billion for defense discretionary and $605 billion nondefense discretionary. This level of spending is $153 billion higher than the pre-Bipartisan Budget Act spending caps.