Saturday, 10 December 2011 10:30
Senator Rand Paul, a self-described representative of the Tea Party, worries that the small progress toward the restoration of limited government may be "set back" by the upcoming Republican presidential nomination.
In a letter to the Des Moines Register, the son of GOP White House hopeful Ron Paul set forth his two goals for striving to protect the "conservative movement" from being hampered by the nomination of a candidate with "a different set of ideas and values."
An urgent issue for the Republican Party and the United States is the election of a president who will remain faithful to his Oath of Office from the moment his hand is placed on the Bible on Inauguration Day.
While Senator Paul admits that anyone on the current roster of Republican candidates would be an improvement over Barack Obama, he calls out the two men leading in the polls — Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich — for not representing "the tea party, the conservative movement, or the type of change our country desperately needs...."
In his indictment of the former Governor of Massachusetts and the former Speaker of the House, Paul's first charge against both is their support for the $700-billion bank bailouts signed into law by President George W. Bush in 2008.
Paul quotes the Obama Treasury Department as describing the bailouts, officially called the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), as "one of the most unpopular government programs in American history."
In a debate in October,
Romney defended the bailoutsas necessary "to keep the entire currency of the country worth something. My experience tells me that we were on the precipice, and we could have had a complete meltdown of our entire financial system, wiping out all the savings of the American people. So action had to be taken."
As for current "frontrunner" Newt Gingrich, he
claims to have changed his mind on TARPafter having his ear bent by a number of "very right wing" businessmen. These unnamed advisors convinced Gingrich that the financial meltdown was a "true crisis" and that the bailouts were necessary to prevent the financial system from suffering a "heart attack."
The next charge leveled by Senator Paul at Romney and Gingrich is their "outspoken and unapologetic" support for the individual mandate of ObamaCare.
The individual mandate provision of the Obama health care requires that all residents of the United States purchase a qualifying medical insurance policy or face tax penalties and possible imprisonment. This mandate is the first time in history that the Congress of the United States has passed a law forcing citizens to purchase a commodity regardless of personal preference or financial ability.
Neither candidate can run from their record as both have for years ardently advocated the government-mandated purchase of health insurance.
As Governor of Massachusetts, Mitt
Romney signed a health care plan into lawthat contains an individual mandate provision nearly identical to that included in the ObamaCare legislation.
In the case of Newt Gingrich,
in an interview in 2005, Gingrich said that if a person earning over $50,000 a year did not have health insurance, then he was in favor of the government forcing that person to either purchase a policy or post a bond.
While serving as a Congressman in 1993,
Gingrich made similar comments advocating a national healthcare systemsupported by an individual mandate. "I've said consistently we ought to have some requirement you either have health insurance or you post a bond or in some way indicate that you are going to be held accountable."
So seriously does Paul take the support of these two men for TARP and the individual mandate that he argues that it "disqualifies" them from receiving the support of the Tea Party.
Beyond their support for two programs that must be undone if the American Republic is ever to return to within its proper, constitutional bounds, Rand Paul points out that both men cannot sincerely commit to accomplishing that critical goal in light of their irrefutable promotion of expansive government intervention in the lives of citizens and of corporate welfare.
Briefly, Paul describes Romney as a "moderate, northeastern, don't-rock-the-boat Republican" and that everyone in the party gets that.
As for Gingrich, however, Paul is concerned that the rank and file of his party are "being sold a bill of goods" that doesn't represent the truth about Newt Gingrich and his philosophy and policies... finish reading@Source TNA