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Friday, March 16, 2007
Ed Feulner :: Townhall.com Columnist
Our leaders need to adopt conservative programs voters want
by Ed Feulner
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Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


Politicians always insist they're paying attention to us. Hillary Clinton, for example, launched her Senate bid a few years ago with a "listening tour" of New York state. And every Friday while Congress is in session, the city of Washington clears out, with lawmakers flying home to host town-hall meetings with voters.

But if our leaders really were listening, we'd see lawmakers stampeding to enact the conservative policies the American people repeatedly say they want.

Consider a recent poll conducted by Democracy Corps, a Democratic outfit.

Registered voters were asked to select one of the following two statements: "I want Congress to first invest in areas like health care, education and energy, even if it means spending additional money," and "I want Congress to first focus on cutting wasteful spending and making government more accountable." A large majority (58 percent) opted for cutting wasteful spending. Little more than a third (36 percent) wanted lawmakers to spend -- or as the firm euphemistically put it, "invest" -- more.

The same survey asked voters to choose between these statements: "Government mostly stimulates the economy and job growth," and "government mostly gets in the way of the economy and job growth." Only 34 percent said government stimulates the economy, while 54 percent said it mostly gets in the way.

Liberal lawmakers can't be pleased by these results, which show a solid preference for conservative policies.

Clearly, if lawmakers want to heed the voice of "the people," they ought to make government more efficient (by cutting wasteful spending) and less intrusive (by making sure it's less involved in the economy).

At least one person is working from within to make the federal government more efficient. Lurita Doan is an entrepreneur President Bush brought in last June to run the U.S. General Services Administration. That's the federal agency that manages thousands of government-owned and leased buildings.

Doan says she wants to prove she can run a federal agency like a business (something voters would no doubt approve of). When she took over GSA, it had a deficit of more than $100 million, which she immediately slashed by ordering the agency to make a 9 percent across-the-board spending cut. It may be the first time in decades an administrator actually cut government spending. Continued...

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About The Author
Dr. Edwin Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Townhall.com Gold Partner, and co-author of Getting America Right: The True Conservative Values Our Nation Needs Today .
 
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Conservative programs
The phrase "conservative programs" seems like an oxymoron. America's next President must be a shephard of America's unique social and cultural interests. Whoever is elected must put an end to multiculturalism. Lawmakers make up legislation purely to get their own names in the history books, and these laws seldom address the original targeted problem. The next President should not fear the Veto pen, and above all should motivate Congress to repeal some of the more non-sensical legislation its passed. Any future legislation passed into law must address a critical need, a need that cannot be addressed by more prosaic means, and above all, be in the interests of all Americans, and not just some subset that "wants what they want, and they want it now!". Laws should be approached and implemented with the same concern and deliberation as amendments to the constitution, primarily because that's what most federal law is, carving out exemptions to our constitution.

As an answer to most of the commenst about who represents true conservativism let me suggest,
Ron Paul of Texas!

Marc of CA
You said, "His/our course is moderated by both Houses of Congress."

That is the problem, Marc. Bush apparently believes he is above the law and he is NOT.
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