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Ron Paul on Government Reform
Republican Representative (TX-14); previously Libertarian for President
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The “living Constitution” is the death of democracy
A living Constitution is just the thing any government would be delighted to have, for whenever people complain that their constitution has been violated, the government can trot out its judges to inform the people that they’ve simply misunderstood: the
Constitution, you see, has merely evolved with the times.Those who would give us a ‘living’ constitution are actually giving us a dead constitution, since such a thing is completely unable to protect us against encroachments of government power.
Source: The Revolution: A Manifesto, by Ron Paul, p. 49
Apr 1, 2008
Constitution defines much smaller government
It shouldn’t be that difficult to figure out what we should be doing, because we have a lot of problems. We have fiscal problems, we have foreign policy, we have deficit problems. And where do they come from?
It’s because we don’t follow the rule of law, we don’t follow the constitution. If we knew and understood and read article 1 section 8, believe me, this government would be much smaller, we would have a lot less taxes, and we could repeal the
16th Amendment and get rid of the income tax. Somewhere along the way though, we have drifted away from the constitution, and we as conservatives, especially conservatives running the Republican party, we have drifted a long way from
the positions that we used to hold about limited government. We’re going in the wrong direction, and if we continue to do what we are doing, we’re going to have a financial crisis, because you can’t continue to spend too much.
Source: Speeches to 2008 Conservative Political Action Conference
Feb 7, 2008
Received the most campaign contributions from the military
One thing that is very conservative and very Constitutional--if we had followed this, we would have stayed out of a lot of trouble since World War II. You cannot be a conservative and believe that we can go to war under the direction of a single person,
without Congressional approval and without a declaration of war. That’s what we should always have. Because I am not anxious to go to war unless it’s necessary, and dictated by the people through the Congress.
People say, “Oh, that means you’re weak on the military; that means you’re weak on the troops.” We did some statistical studies about where the money comes into the campaign, and I know that you recognize that we can, and have, raised a lot of money.
But if you look at where it comes from and where the active military personnel send their money. We in the last quarter received more money from the military--active-duty personnel--than ALL the other Republicans and Democrat candidates put together!
Source: Speeches to 2008 Conservative Political Action Conference
Feb 7, 2008
Dismantle agencies that have no Constitutional role
Q: You said this. “Abolish the FBI and the CIA and dismantle every other agency except the Justice and Defense Departments.” And then you went on: “If elected president, Paul says he would abolish public schools, welfare, Social
Security and farm subsidies.”A: OK, you may have picked that up 20 or 30 years ago, it’s not part of my platform. As a matter of fact, I’m the only one that really has an interim program. Technically, a lot of those functions aren’t constitutional.
But the point is I’m not against the FBI investigation in doing a proper role, but I’m against the FBI spying on people like Martin Luther King. I’m against the CIA fighting secret wars and overthrowing governments.
Q: Would you abolish them?
A: I would not abolish all their functions. But let’s go with the CIA. They’re involved in torture. I would abolish that, yes. But I wouldn’t abolish their requirement to accumulate intelligence for national defense purposes. That’s quite different.
Source: Meet the Press: 2007 “Meet the Candidates” series
Dec 23, 2007
Put 65 projects into 2006 bills, worth $4B to his district
Q: You talk about opposing big government, but you seem to have a different attitude about your own congressional district. In 2006, your district received more than $4 billion: 65 earmark-targeted projects that you have put into congressional bills for
your district.A: You got it completely wrong. I’ve never voted for an earmark in my life.
Q: No, but you put them in the bill.
A: I put it in because I represent people who are asking for some of their money back.
Q: If you put it in the bill,
and then you know it’s going to pass Congress and so you don’t refuse the money.
A: Well, no, of course not. It’s like taking a tax credit. I’m against the taxes but I take all my tax credits. I want to get the money back for the people.
Q:
If you were true to your philosophy, you would say no pork spending in my district.
A: No, no, that’s not it. They steal our money, that’s like saying that people shouldn’t take Social Security money. I’m trying to save the system, make the system work
Source: Meet the Press: 2007 “Meet the Candidates” series
Dec 23, 2007
No on all earmarks, even those he proposes for his district
Q: The Wall Street Journal says you load up Bills with special projects for your district. A: How many of them ever got passed? But the whole point is, we have a right [to our money back from taxes].
Q: They pass. You vote against them, but you
take the money.
A: They take our money from us, and the Congress has the authority to appropriate, not the executive branch. And I’m saying that I represent my people. They have a request, it’s like taking a tax credit.
The whole process is corrupt so that I vote against everything. I vote against it, so I don’t endorse the system.
Q: But when it passes overwhelmingly, you take the money back home.
A: I don’t take it. That’s the system.
Q:
Well, when you stop taking earmarks or putting earmarks in the spending bills, then I think you’ll be consistent.
A: I’m trying to change that system. To turn it around and say I’m supporting this system, I find it rather ironic and entertaining.
Source: Meet the Press: 2007 “Meet the Candidates” series
Dec 23, 2007
Supports compulsory term limits, not voluntary for himself
Q: You ran on term limits. “I think we should have term limits for our elected leaders.” You’ve been in Congress 18 years. A: But I never ran on voluntary term limits. There’s a big difference. I didn’t sign a pledge for a voluntary term limit.
Matter of fact, some of the best people that I worked with, who were the most principled, came in on voluntary term limits. Some of them broke their promises, and some didn’t, and they were very good people. So some of the good people left.
I didn’t run on that. I support term limits. We had 16 votes on term limits, and I voted yes for them. But voluntary term limits is a lot different than compulsory term limits.
Q: But if you believe in the philosophy of term limits, why wouldn’t you
voluntarily [limit your own term]?
A: Philosophy is the solution. What the role of government ought to be, so if you have a turnover and the same people come in and they believe in big government, nothing good is going to come of it.
Source: Meet the Press: 2007 “Meet the Candidates” series
Dec 23, 2007
DC voting representation should be determined by Amendment
Q: Do you support giving the District of Columbia voting representation?A: It’s very clear, under the
Constitution, that we couldn’t give the vote to the residents of DC without an amendment to the Constitution. And it should be pursued in that manner.
Source: 2007 GOP Presidential Forum at Morgan State University
Sep 27, 2007
No federal voter ID card; but state ID cards ok
Q: Are you concerned that some eligible voters will be denied the right to vote simply because they don’t have a driver’s license? A: I think the states have the prerogative & obligation to identify the voters and they should. But the reason I get
worried about when we start talking about it nationally is, you know, they might want to use the Real ID. They might want to think it’s a good excuse to have a national ID card to vote, and I am positively opposed to any move toward the national ID card.
Source: 2007 GOP Presidential Forum at Morgan State University
Sep 27, 2007
Constitution was written to restrain the federal government
The most important promise a president makes is his promise to obey the Constitution. In realizing this, we know that the Constitution was written in order to restrain the federal government, but was meant to retain the rights and privileges &
obligations to the states and to the people. Today, we have drifted a long way from that, and now we have jurisdictional fights over what we ought to do.A free country is designed for individuals to deal with a subject of virtue and excellence.
Once we defer to the government to get involved in worrying about our virtue and our excellence and perfect, fair economies, it is done at the sacrifice of liberty.
If we do that and we sacrifice that liberty and the job of virtue and excellence is taken over by the government, you can only do that through tyranny.
Source: 2007 GOP Values Voter Presidential Debate
Sep 17, 2007
We are drifting rather rapidly into a totalitarian state
Right now, we are drifting rather rapidly into a totalitarian state. We have been too willing to sacrifice our liberties for this so-called sense of security. We need more faith that the right of habeas corpus should be protected, and we have to
understand the National I.D. Card is not going to work. That only registers and regulates the American people, and we don’t need secret prisons. We don’t need torture. We need American values and traditions. We need to believe in ourselves.And
I would like to reiterate the true doctrine of war written by Christianity, the doctrine of just war, is that you do it only under certain circumstances. You don’t do it for UN resolutions. You don’t do it for weapons that don’t exist.
You need to do it with a moral justification. If we would have declared a war, we wouldn’t be debating the war now. It would be over, and we’d all be a lot better off, and we would have 5,000 Americans still alive, and 30,000 uninjured!
Source: 2007 GOP Values Voter Presidential Debate
Sep 17, 2007
Disallow lawsuits that stop public officials invoking God
Q: Would you support the Constitution Restoration Act that prevents federal courts from hearing lawsuits brought to stop public officials from acknowledging God in such ways as the Pledge of Allegiance, public display of the Ten Commandments, & public
prayer?- HUCKABEE: Yes.
- TANCREDO: Yes.
- COX: Yes.
- BROWNBACK: Yes.
- PAUL: Yes.
- HUNTER: Yes.
- KEYES: Yes.
HUNTER: At the first Constitutional Convention in 1787, they began each session with a prayer with the supplication to God.
Source: [Xref Hunter] 2007 GOP Values Voter Presidential Debate
Sep 17, 2007
End government secrecy; restore openness of information
Q: What will you restore to the Oval Office?A: I would restore openness to government. I do not think in this country we should have secrecy of government. The purpose of government is to provide privacy for the people. I would never use executive
privilege to deny information to the Congress, with the full realization that you protect security information, but in the very general sense, we should be very, very open. We want a transparent government. Currently I believe we could improve on that.
Source: 2007 GOP Iowa Straw Poll debate
Aug 5, 2007
With neocon philosophy, Cheney is more powerful than Bush
Q: What authority would you delegate to the office of vice president? And should those authorities be more clearly defined through a constitutional amendment?A: I certainly wouldn’t support an amendment to change the role of the vice president.
But there’s no way to know exactly what goes on, but if you take perceptions from Washington, most people there behind the scenes think the vice president is more powerful than the president. Philosophically, I think this is the case.
It’s obvious that he represents a neoconservative viewpoint. And my objection is that that has been the rejection of the Republican Party platform and traditional conservatism. And I think this is where we have gone astray.
We have drifted from our fundamental premises and the conservative values that this party used to get.
Source: 2007 GOP Iowa Straw Poll debate
Aug 5, 2007
Signing statements erode constitutional balance
Recently, the General Accounting Office studied nineteen instances where the President issued so-called “signing statements.” In such statements, the President essentially begins the process of interpreting legislation--up to and including declaring
provisions unconstitutional--hence often refusing to enforce them. The GAO study found that in nearly 1/3 of the cases studied, the administration failed to enforce the law as enacted. This approach is especially worrisome for several reasons.-
First, these signing statements tend to move authority from the legislative branch to the executive, thus upsetting our delicate system of checks and balances.
- Next, these statements grant the President power not given by the Constitution, allowing
him to usurp powers of the judicial branch.
- Finally, the idea of agencies refusing to enforce the law as enacted sets precedent for the type of run away administrative actions our constitution was expressly enacted in order to avoid.
Source: Weekly column, “Texas Straight Talk”
Jul 9, 2007
Conservatives support big government war policies
War, and the threat of war, are big government’s best friend. Liberals support big government social programs, and conservatives support big government war policies, thus satisfying two major special interest groups. And when push comes to shove, the two
groups cooperate & support big government across the board--always at the expense of personal liberty. Both sides pay lip service to freedom, but neither stands against the welfare/warfare state and its promises of unlimited entitlements & endless war.
Source: A Foreign Policy of Freedom, by Ron Paul, p.365
Jun 15, 2007
Close departments of Energy, Education & Homeland Security
Q: [To Gov. Thompson] Tell me three federal programs you consider wasteful and would eliminate.THOMPSON: There are several programs that need to be cut in Washington, several of those in my former department. I would first make every agency come in
with a budget at 95% of last year’s budget and one at 100%. And you will be able to use that exercise in order to reduce budgets all across the line.
Q: I didn’t hear three programs. Can you tell me one?
THOMPSON: The first one I would eliminate is
a program in the Department of Health and Human Services in CDC that deals with the stockpile. The stockpile does a great job, but there are some inefficiencies there.
Q: [To Paul] Can you do better than that?
PAUL:
I’d start with the departments--the Department of Education, the Department of Energy, Department of Homeland Security. There’s a lot of things that we can cut, but we can’t cut anything until we change our philosophy about what government should do.
Source: [X-ref Thompson] 2007 Republican Debate in South Carolina
May 15, 2007
Judges have become legislators by de-emphasizing juries
The de-emphasis of the jury was crucial in the expansive powers of the omnipresent state. Judging the moral intent and the constitutionality of the law is no longer even a consideration for the jury. Today the judge instructs the jury to consider
only the facts of the case, and then the judge becomes the sole arbiter of the evidence admissible in court. The jury system today has become progressively weak over the past ninety years. Our judiciary bodies have become legislative bodies.
Source: Freedom Under Siege, by Ron Paul, p. 24-25
Dec 31, 1987
Our government routinely lies to us
When political oppression is accompanied by serious economic problems, the people will frequently, after years of suffering, overthrow the tyrants. But a wealthy nation, grown soft on the prosperity produced by a previously free generation, tends to
vote for that individual who promises the biggest piece of the pie to his constituents. Ironically the prosperity that comes from a free society is the fuel that feeds the fire which brings on the demise of that society.
Materially we are much better off today than people were in 1776, but our philosophy of freedom is in much worse shape.Our government routinely lies to us. The luxuries of the current generation are financed by the sweat and blood of the next.
Yet flowery slogans are used to describe the wonderful prosperity we enjoy, with few realizing the seriousness of the indebtness incurred in the process. In the midst of a market glut, more and more people each year get pushed into the poverty class.
Source: Freedom Under Siege, by Ron Paul, p. 4-6
Dec 31, 1987
Federal abuses today worse than King’s in 1776 revolution
The convictions of our Founding Fathers were strong enough for them to take on the British, while today the abuse of power by our own government, although far worse than that of the King, prompts little action. The patriotic citizens of colonial days
brought about a major revolution with a positive change in favor of individual freedom.Today’s oppression is entrenched and a great threat, but it is nevertheless tolerated by most Americans. The numbers of those who are resentful of government’s
abuse are growing, and this is a positive sign.
Today’s simmering economic, social and political problems will eventually boil over. Big government advocates will spare no abuse, no resources, not cost, no tricks, no force in order to maintain the
status quo of state power.
Statism itself will be at stake and those in power will feel threatened. They will easily win unless the determination of those who love freedom is superior to the desires of those in charge to cling to their power.
Source: Freedom Under Siege, by Ron Paul, p.154-155
Dec 31, 1987
Spending without taxation causes inflation
not his own. [Each Member] knows that the money for pork-barrel spending bills would either have to be taxed or printed up.Liberals we expect to be big spenders, but it’s disheartening to see conservatives who should know better voting for business
and farm subsidies. Without a far-reaching change of attitude, the budget won’t be balanced, the printing press will continue to run, the dollar will be further debased, and prices--as a consequence--will continue to rise relentlessly.
Source: Gold, Peace, and Prosperity, by Ron Paul, p. 33-34
Dec 31, 1981
Voted NO on Congressional pay raise.
Congressional Summary:Makes appropriations to the Senate for FY2010 for:- expense allowances;
- representation allowances for the Majority and Minority Leaders;
- salaries of specified officers, employees, and committees (including the Committee on Appropriations);
- agency contributions for employee benefits;
- inquiries and investigations;
- the Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control;
- the Offices of the Secretary and of the Sergeant at Arms and Doorkeeper of the Senate;
- miscellaneous items;
- the Senators' Official Personnel and Office Expense Account; and
- official mail costs.
Amends the Legislative Branch Appropriation Act of 1968 to increase by $50,000 the gross compensation paid all employees in the office of a Senator. Increases by $96,000 per year the aggregate amount authorized for the offices of the Majority and Minority Whip.Proponent's argument to vote Yes:Rep. WASSERMAN SCHULTZ (D, FL-20): We, as Members of
Congress, have responsibility not just for the institution, but for the staff that work for this institution, and to preserve the facilities that help support this institution. We have endeavored to do that responsibly, and I believe we have accomplished that goal.
Opponent's argument to vote No:Rep. SCALISE (R, LA-1): It's a sad day when someone attempts to cut spending in a bill that grows government by the size of 7%, and it's not allowed to be debated on this House floor. Some of their Members actually used the term "nonsense" and "foolishness" when describing our amendments to cut spending; they call that a delaying tactic. Well, I think Americans all across this country want more of those types of delaying tactics to slow down this runaway train of massive Federal spending. Every dollar we spend from today all the way through the end of this year is borrowed money. We don't have that money. We need to control what we're spending.
Reference: Legislative Branch Appropriations Act;
Bill HR2918&S1294
; vote number 2009-H413
on Jun 19, 2009
Voted NO on requiring lobbyist disclosure of bundled donations.
Amends the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 to require a registered lobbyist who bundles contributions totaling over $5,000 to one covered recipient in one quarter to:- file a quarterly report with Congress; and
- notify the recipient.
"Covered recipient" includes federal candidates, political party committees, or leadership PACs [but not regular PACs]. Proponents support voting YES because:
This measure will more effectively regulate, but does not ban, the practice of registered lobbyists bundling together large numbers of campaign contributions. This is a practice that has already taken root in Presidential campaigns. "Bundling" contributions which the lobbyist physically receives and forwards to the candidate, or which are credited to the lobbyist through a specific tracking system put in place by the candidate. This bill requires quarterly reporting on bundled contributions.
We ultimately need to move to assist the public financing of campaigns, as soon
as we can. But until we do, the legislation today represents an extremely important step forward.
Opponents support voting NO because:
This legislation does not require that bundled contributions to political action committees, often referred to as PACs, be disclosed. Why are PACs omitted from the disclosure requirements in this legislation?
If we are requiring the disclosure of bundled contributions to political party committees, those same disclosure rules should also apply to contributions to PACs. Party committees represent all members of that party affiliation. PACs, on the other hand, represent more narrow, special interests. Why should the former be exposed to more sunshine, but not the latter?
The fact that PACs give more money to Democrats is not the only answer. Time and again the majority party picks favorites, when what the American people want is more honesty and more accountability.
Reference: Honest Leadership and Open Government Act;
Bill H R 2316
; vote number 2007-423
on May 24, 2007
Voted NO on granting Washington DC an Electoral vote & vote in Congress.
Bill to provide for the treatment of the District of Columbia as a Congressional district for representation in the House of Representatives, and in the Electoral College. Increases membership of the House from 435 to 437 Members beginning with the 110th Congress. [Political note: D.C. currently has a non-voting delegate to the US House. Residents of D.C. overwhelmingly vote Democratic, so the result of this bill would be an additional Democratic vote in the House and for President]. Proponents support voting YES because:
This bill corrects a 200-year-old oversight by restoring to the citizens of the District of Columbia the right to elect a Member of the House of Representatives who has the same voting rights as all other Members.
Residents of D.C. serve in the military. They pay Federal taxes each year. Yet they are denied the basic right of full representation in the House of Representatives.
The District of Columbia was created to prevent any State from unduly influencing the operations of the Federal Government. However, there is simply no evidence that the Framers of the Constitution thought it was necessary to keep D.C. residents from being represented in the House by a voting Member.
Opponents support voting NO because:
The proponents of this bill in 1978 believed that the way to allow D.C. representation was to ratify a constitutional amendment. The Founders of the country had the debate at that time: Should we give D.C. a Representative? They said no. So if you want to fix it, you do it by making a constitutional amendment.
Alternatively, we simply could have solved the D.C. representation problem by retroceding, by giving back part of D.C. to Maryland. There is precedent for this. In 1846, Congress took that perfectly legal step of returning present-day Arlington to the State of Virginia.
Reference: District of Columbia House Voting Rights Act;
Bill H R 1905
; vote number 2007-231
on Apr 19, 2007
Voted YES on protecting whistleblowers from employer recrimination.
Expands the types of whistleblower disclosures protected from personnel reprisals for federal employees, particulary on national security issues. Proponents support voting YES because:
This bill would strengthen one of our most important weapons against waste, fraud and abuse, and that is Federal whistleblower protections. Federal employees are on the inside and offer accountability. They can see where there is waste going on or if there is corruption going on.
One of the most important provisions protects national security whistleblowers. There are a lot of Federal officials who knew the intelligence on Iraq was wrong. But none of these officials could come forward. If they did, they could have been stripped of their security clearances, or they could have been fired. Nobody blew the whistle on the phony intelligence that got us into the Iraq war.
Opponents support voting NO because:
It is important that personnel within the intelligence community have
appropriate opportunities to bring matters to Congress so long as the mechanisms to do so safeguard highly sensitive classified information and programs. The bill before us suffers from a number of problems:
- The bill would conflict with the provisions of the existing Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act of 1998, which protecting sensitive national security information from unauthorized disclosure to persons not entitled to receive it.
- The bill violates the rules of the House by encouraging intelligence community personnel to report highly sensitive intelligence matters to committees other than the Intelligence Committees. The real issue is one of protecting highly classified intelligence programs and ensuring that any oversight is conducted by Members with the appropriate experiences, expertise, and clearances.
- This bill would make every claim of a self-described whistleblower, whether meritorious or not, subject to extended and protracted litigation.
Reference: Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act;
Bill H R 985
; vote number 2007-153
on Mar 14, 2007
Voted YES on requiring photo ID for voting in federal elections.
Requires that to vote in federal elections, an individual present a government-issued, current, and valid photo identification. After 2010, that ID must require providing proof of US citizenship as a condition for issuance. An individual who does not present such an ID is permitted to cast a provisional ballot, and then present the required ID within 48 hours. Exempts from this requirement the absentee ballot of any eligible overseas military voter on active duty overseas.Proponents support voting YES because:
The election system is the bedrock that our Republic is built on and its security and oversight is of paramount concern. Only US citizens have the right to vote in Federal elections, but our current system does not give State election officials the tools they need to ensure that this requirement is being met.
This bill is designed to increase participation by ensuring that each legitimate vote will be counted and not be diluted by fraud. There are many elections
in this country every cycle that are decided by just a handful of votes. How can we be certain that these elections, without measures to certify the identity of voters, are not being decided by fraudulent votes?
Opponents support voting NO because:
There is something we can all agree on: only Americans get to vote, and they only get to vote once. But what we are talking about in this bill is disenfranchising many of those Americans. It is already a felony for a non-American to vote. We had hearings and what we found out was that the issue of illegal aliens voting basically does not occur.
The impact of this will disproportionately affect poor people and African Americans, because many are too poor to have a car and they do not have a license. We have no evidence there is a problem. We have ample evidence that this will disenfranchise many Americans. This is the measure to disenfranchise African Americans, Native Americans. It is wrong and we will not stand for it.
Reference: Federal Election Integrity Act;
Bill H R 4844
; vote number 2006-459
on Sep 20, 2006
Voted NO on restricting independent grassroots political committees.
A "527 organization" is a political committee which spends money raised independently of any candidate's campaign committee, in support or opposition of a candidate or in support or opposition of an issue. Well-known examples include MoveOn.org (anti-Bush) and Swift Boat Veterans for Truth (anti-Kerry). Voting YES would regulate 527s as normal political committees, which would greatly restrict their funding, and hence would shift power to candidate committees and party committees. The bill's opponents say: This legislation singles out 527 organizations in an effort to undermine their fundraising and is a direct assault on free speech.This bill would obstruct the efforts of grassroots organizations while doing nothing to address the culture of corruption in Congress.H.R. 513 is an unbalanced measure that favors corporate trade associations over independent advocates. Corporate interests could continue spending unlimited and undisclosed dollars for political purposes while independent
organizations would be subject to contribution limits and source restrictions.H.R. 513 also removes all limits on national and state party spending for Congressional candidates in primary or general elections--an unmasked attack on the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act and clear evidence that the true intention in advancing H.R. 513 is not reform, but partisan advantage in political fundraising.The bill's proponents say: - 527s' primary purpose is to influence the election or defeat of a Federal candidate. They have to file with the FEC because after Watergate in 1974 this Congress passed a law that said if you are going to have a political committee whose primary purpose is to influence an election, then they have to register with the FEC.
- The FEC ignored 30 years of congressional actions and Supreme Court jurisprudence in allowing 527s to evade the law. In short, the FEC failed to do its job and regulate 527s as required under the Watergate statute.
Reference: Federal Election Campaign Act amendment "527 Reform Act";
Bill H.R.513
; vote number 2006-088
on Apr 5, 2006
Voted NO on prohibiting lawsuits about obesity against food providers.
The Personal Responsibility in Food Consumption Act ("The Cheesburger Bill") would prevent civil liability actions against food manufacturers, marketers, distributors, advertisers, sellers, and trade associations for claims relating to a person's weight gain, obesity, or any health condition associated with weight gain or obesity. A YES vote would: - Prohibit such lawsuits in this act in federal or state courts
- Dismiss any pending lawsuits upon this bill's enactment
- Maintain an individual's right to bring a lawsuit to court for false marketing, advertising or labeling of food when such information led to injury, obesity or weight gain
Reference: The Cheesburger Bill;
Bill HR 554
; vote number 2005-533
on Oct 19, 2005
Voted YES on limiting attorney's fees in class action lawsuits.
Class Action Fairness Act of 2005: Amends the Federal judicial code to specify the calculation of contingent and other attorney's fees in proposed class action settlements that provide for the award of coupons to class members. Allows class members to refuse compliance with settlement agreements or consent decrees absent notice. Prohibits a Federal district court from approving: - a proposed coupon settlement absent a finding that the settlement is fair, reasonable, and adequate;
- a proposed settlement involving payments to class counsel that would result in a net monetary loss to class members, absent a finding that the loss is substantially outweighed by nonmonetary benefits; or
- a proposed settlement that provides greater sums to some class members solely because they are closer geographically to the court.
Reference: Bill sponsored by Sen. Chuck Grassley [R, IA];
Bill S.5
; vote number 2005-038
on Feb 17, 2005
Voted YES on restricting frivolous lawsuits.
Lawsuit Abuse Reduction Act of 2004: Amends the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to: - require courts to impose sanctions on attorneys, law firms, or parties who file frivolous lawsuits (currently, sanctions are discretionary);
- disallow the withdrawal or correction of pleadings to avoid sanctions;
- require courts to award parties prevailing on motions reasonable expenses and attorney's fees, if warranted;
- authorize courts to impose sanctions that include reimbursement of a party's reasonable litigation costs in connection with frivolous lawsuits; and
- make the discovery phase of litigation subject to sanctions.
Reference: Bill sponsored by Rep Lamar Smith [R, TX-21];
Bill H.R.4571
; vote number 2004-450
on Sep 14, 2004
Voted NO on campaign finance reform banning soft-money contributions.
Shays-Meehan Campaign Finance Overhaul: Vote to pass a bill that would ban soft money contributions to national political parties but permit up to $10,000 in soft money contributions to state and local parties to help with voter registration and get-out-the-vote drives. The bill would stop issue ads from targeting specific candidates within 30 days of the primary or 60 days of the general election. Additionally, the bill would raise the individual contribution limit from $1,000 to $2,000 per election for House and Senate candidates, both of which would be indexed for inflation.
Reference: Bill sponsored by Shays, R-CT, and Meehan D-MA;
Bill HR 2356
; vote number 2002-34
on Feb 14, 2002
Voted NO on banning soft money and issue ads.
Campaign Finance Reform Act to ban "soft money" and impose restrictions on issue advocacy campaigning.
Reference: Bill sponsored by Shays, R-CT;
Bill HR 417
; vote number 1999-422
on Sep 14, 1999
Limit federal power, per the 10th Amendment.
Paul adopted the Republican Liberty Caucus Position Statement:
As adopted by the General Membership of the Republican Liberty Caucus at its Biannual Meeting held December 8, 2000. - WHEREAS libertarian Republicans believe in limited government, individual freedom and personal responsibility;
- WHEREAS we believe that government has no money nor power not derived from the consent of the people;
- WHEREAS we believe that people have the right to keep the fruits of their labor; and
- WHEREAS we believe in upholding the US Constitution as the supreme law of the land;
BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Liberty Caucus endorses the following [among its] principles:- The power of the federal government should be limited, as per the tenth amendment to the US Constitution.
- The US Department of Commerce should be abolished, per the tenth amendment of the US Constitution.
-
The National Endowment for the Arts should be abolished, per the tenth amendment of the US Constitution.
- The National Endowment for the Humanities should be abolished, per the tenth amendment of the US Constitution.
- The US Department of Housing and Urban Development should be abolished, per the tenth amendment of the US Constitution.
- Subsidies to agricultural and other businesses should be eliminated.
- Corporate taxes should be eliminated simultaneously and proportionally with the elimination of subsidies to businesses.
- Recommendations by the Grace Commission and the Council for Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW) should be reviewed and implemented, where possible, beginning immediately.
- Privatization of government assets, management and services should be implemented for cost-effectiveness wherever applicable.
Source: Republican Liberty Caucus Position Statement 00-RLC1 on Dec 8, 2000
Unlimited campaign contributions; with full disclosure.
Paul adopted the Republican Liberty Caucus Position Statement:
The Republican Liberty Caucus endorses the following [among its] principles:- Election campaigns should not be subsidized by tax payers.
- No individual should be compelled to support a political candidate he or she does not support. Government should not empower trade unions to collect funds from their members for use as political contributions without their members’ expressed consent.
- All limits on campaign contributions should be eliminated.
- There should be full and timely public disclosure of all the sources and amounts of all campaign contributions upon their receipt.
Source: Republican Liberty Caucus Position Statement 00-RLC7 on Dec 8, 2000
Require all laws to cite Constitutional authorization.
Paul signed Enumerated Powers Act
A bill to require Congress to specify the source of authority under the United States Constitution for the enactment of laws.
Each Act of Congress shall contain a concise explanation of the specific constitutional authority relied upon for the enactment of each portion of that Act. The failure to comply with this section shall give rise to a point of order in either House of Congress. The availability of this point of order does not affect any other available relief.
Constitutional Authority for This Act: This Act proposes to establish new procedures by which legislation shall be considered by Congress and is enacted pursuant to the power granted Congress under article I, section 5, clause 2, of the United States Constitution establishing that each House may determine the rules of its proceedings.
Source: S.1319&HR450 2009-S1319 on Jun 22, 2009
Repeal automatic Congressional pay raises.
Paul signed Stop the Congressional Pay Raise Act
A bill to prevent Members of Congress from receiving any automatic pay adjustment in 2010.
For purposes of the provision of law amended by section 704(a)(2)(B) of the Ethics Reform Act of 1989 (5 U.S.C. 5318 note), no adjustment under section 5303 of title 5, United States Code, shall be considered to have taken effect in fiscal year 2010 in the rates of pay under the General Schedule.
Source: S.542&HR.156 2009-S542 on Jan 6, 2009
Page last updated: Feb 08, 2010