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Thursday, May 08, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 4:35 PM
It's just like Democrats to think they can tax their way into a housing recovery.  Now they want the 95 percent of homeowners who are paying their mortgage on time to pony up taxdollars to pay for their neighbor's mortgage, too.  On top of that, Democrats are funneling a 35 MILLION dollar slush fund to their best friends, the trial lawyers! 

Here is conservative Congressman Tom Feeney's take on it from the House floor...well said. 
 



Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 5:08 PM

            If Congressional Republicans allow Nancy Pelosi and her Democrats to skirt responsibility for rising gas prices, they will once again earn the time-honored mantle of “The Stupid Party.”  Two years ago this week, Nancy Pelosi – as part of a concerted campaign of opportunistic mendacity – said she and her party had a “commonsense plan to help bring down skyrocketing gas prices.”   Their "plan" conveniently came to fruition after Democrats voted against a comprehensive energy plan that would increase fuel production and open up untapped oil reserves.

            Democrats won control of Congress partly because of such promises.  The day she took over as speaker, the average price of a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline was $2.33.  Today, it’s $3.60.  This $1.27 “Pelosi Premium” is the single most pernicious factor behind the struggling economy in general and middle class anxiety.  Recent polls demonstrate rising gas prices are the most important economic issue facing Americans today.  And here’s the thing: it’s all their fault.

            The spiraling cost of energy in the United States today is not one of those things that is nobody’s fault, nor is it a matter of shared responsibility.  The fault is absolutely, completely at the doorstep of the Democrat Party.  Their Kool-Aid-cult attachment to environmental extremism, their ideological hostility to free markets and free trade, their barking threats of tax hikes on American energy production, their weak and indecisive foreign policy toward the Middle East, and their limousine-liberal NIMBY hypocrisy are not present on both sides of the aisle. 

            To date, the only thing Nancy Pelosi’s Democrats have tried to do on energy is raise taxes.  The tax hike they passed in the House not only targets American energy companies, it specifically exempts foreign oil companies.  So, foreign energy companies, many of them subsidized by regimes hostile to the United States, would enjoy a reverse subsidy benefit from the Democrat Congress.  Is that really their “commonsense plan”? 

            Nobody knows.  All we know, for sure, is what the plan is not.  The Democrats’ plan to lower gas prices cannot include opening up the billions of gallons of oil underneath the Gulf of Mexico or Alaska because… well, because the Democrats apparently care more about caribou, fish, and even the views from their vacation homes than energy independence.  There is enough accessible oil in the United States to fuel 60 million cars for 60 years, and the Democrats will not allow it to be drilled. 

            This week, truckers rallied in Washington, D.C. to protest the failure of Congress to do anything about gas prices.  They were mad; they should be.  They should be furious at the arrogant refusal of Nancy Pelosi’s Democrats to lift a finger to lower gas prices.  They won’t allow increased production, they won’t allow the creation of new nuclear power plants, they refuse to reform our ethanol subsidy programs, which are not only driving up the cost and driving down the efficiency of our gasoline, but are now helping to starve the third world.

            If we wanted to, we could lower the price of fuel in a month – by opening up our oil reserves to exploration, by encouraging the development of next-generation nuclear power plants, and by removing government mandated manipulation of the energy market.  But Democrats oppose all of these measures for reasons ranging from partisan cynicism to ideological fanaticism.  But they maintain they have a “commonsense plan.”  Well, what is it?

            Voters have a right to know what exactly Mrs. Pelosi’s “commonsense plan” entails.  Her number is 202-225-0100.  Call your Congressman and Senator, ask the Democrats what their plan is to reduce the price of gasoline.  If they don’t give you a straight answer, if they don’t renounce tax hikes, if they don’t support increased domestic production, and if they feed you some nonsense about “biofuels,” you’ll know all you’ll need to.

            Energy prices are bankrupting the middle class, and the Democrats in Congress are doing nothing about it.  The real question now is: will conservatives do something about that?




Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 7:05 AM

    Is there a more inspiring movie than Rocky?  Everyone knows and loves the story of the underdog boxer seizing his once-in-a-lifetime chance to fight for the world heavyweight championship.  This year’s Democrat presidential primary is turning out just like the first bout between Rocky Balboa and Apollo Creed.  It’s a grueling match in which neither fighter gives an inch, nor can he can knock the other out.  Remember, Rocky lost that match, yet went on to become a great champion in sequels, while Apollo kept his belt but never won another fight. 

    The question conservatives should be asking is this: will the Democrats’ grueling, 15-round presidential primary produce a washed up champion or a colossus?  Many conservatives are giddy about the bloodletting now between Senators Obama and Clinton, excited about poll numbers giving John McCain a fighting chance to beat them in November.  The conventional wisdom is that this long, drawn-out fight will weaken the eventual nominee.  I’m not so sure.  It seems to me that as much fun as we’re all having watching Clinton and Obama gut-shoot each other across the country all spring, there are more important things to do.  Two, to be specific.

    First of all, conservatives need to remember everything Clinton and Obama have said since their grudge match turned ugly about three months ago.  When the dust settles and one of them emerges as the Democrat nominee, we cannot allow them a honeymoon period to sweep all the ugliness of primary season under the rug.  Barack Obama’s minister is an anti-American bigot, and Obama refused to condemn the man’s ministry of hate or apologize for generously funding it.  Hillary Clinton is an unrepentant liarthe Bosnian sniper scandal only the latest example – whose inability to manage her campaign, her staff, and her sociopath husband should give pause to anyone who thinks there’s no difference between the choices this November. 

    Opinion sites like this one, as well as other conservative blogs, the Republican National Committee, and even Democrat researchers are going to be valuable resources for cataloguing all the misinformation and media spin that will follow the Democrats’ nominating convention.  When the general election campaign begins in earnest and Clinton or Obama try to reframe their image for the American people, conservatives need to be armed with – and motivated by – the ugly truth.   

    Second, conservatives need to rally around the most conservative candidate remaining in the presidential contest, John McCain.  My differences with Senator McCain are many and well known, but the fact of the matter is that he cannot defeat Clinton or Obama with conservatives grumbling on the sidelines.  We cannot sit back and hope or expect Democrats to lose this election – we have to go out and win it.

    We cannot know whether the Democrats’ slug-fest will leave their nominee bloodied and bruised, or if he’ll have a knock-out punch with John McCain’s name on it, but we do know this – whoever the nominee is, he’s going to have one helluva tough jaw.




Thursday, April 17, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 10:35 AM
For those of you who are looking for the older posts from TomDeLay.com, here is the archived site.


Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 9:27 AM

    Pinning down Congressional Democrats’ positions on taxes is kind like trying to castrate a waking bull… and about as practical.  They simply won’t give it up.  I remember once, New York Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan – who was about as straightforward as Washington Democrats get – was asked if Americans are taxed too much.  Moynihan answered, “Well, they’re taxed wrongly.”  Notice how the dodge, as in a champion middleweight, effortlessly flows into the counterpunch.

    Unfortunately, the current crop of Democrats in Congress aren’t Pat Moynihan – as George Will has noted, Moynihan wrote more books than most of his colleagues read.  They’re not as straightforward and not as bright.  Ask them what they want to do about taxes, and, like on most issues, the first thing they say is that they hate what President Bush did.  So, what would they do differently?  Well, they want to make the tax code fairer?  How?  By taking away loopholes for the rich.  Which ones?  The ones that working class families can’t use.  Which are they? 

    No answer.  Listening to the Democrats, you get the sense that they definitely think taxes should be higher than they are, but they’re loathe to admit which ones.  Meanwhile, as we noticed throughout the last tax debates in 2003, the only income taxes Democrats think should be lowered are the ones on people who don’t pay income taxes at all.  So, what do they really believe?

    This tax day, Americans should make a real effort to find out what the Democrats really want to do with the Internal Revenue Code.  Conservatives, especially those represented by Democrats in Congress, should be flooding their members’ offices with letters and emails and phone calls asking exactly what their Senators and Representatives want to do on taxes.  Do they believe taxes should be higher?  Which ones?  Lower?  Again, what are the specific proposals?

    Or more importantly, what about fundamental tax reform.  Since no thinking person honestly believes the current system is an efficient means of generating revenues for the government, what would your representatives do if they could rewrite the code from scratch?  A flat tax?  A national sales tax like the Fair Tax? 

    Democrats have made no secret of their mistrust of the American with our own money; the least they can do this Tax Day is tell us exactly how they want to take it.




Monday, April 14, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 12:56 PM

It seems the voters have purchased a Congressional lemon in House Democrat leadership.  When Democrats took back the House in 2006, their 10 year long PR battle against their version of "corruption" finally started to stick.  As the first order of business, Democrats announced an overhaul in the House ethics process and, after years of losing legislative battles, they also decided to change the rules on how bills came to the floor, when they could be up for a vote, etc.  Well now that they're losing their battles under the very rules they designed, Pelosi has deemed it time to alter the way Congress approves of trade policies.  That seems to be their new credo: if you can’t beat them on politics or policy, just change the rules….or file a lawsuit.

Even the liberal San Francisco Chronicle lambasted Pelosi, calling her out for “playing politics by pandering to free-trade foes.” I don’t know how else to put it - they lie, they cheat, they steal, but not for nothing.  It’s all to pay back the protectionist unions that own them   

Minority Leader John Boehner has done an excellent job of compiling this information, and it’s our job to keep it on hand as yet another reason to distrust the Democrats.

“Pelosi’s Bad Faith,” Wall Street Journal <http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120778566399303309.html?mod=opinion_main_review_and_outlooks> editorial, April 10, 2008:

“Trade Talks,” Las Vegas Review-Journal <http://www.lvrj.com/opinion/17456019.html> editorial,  April 10, 2008

“Drop Dead, Colombia,” Washington Post <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/09/AR2008040903638.html> editorial, April 10, 2008

“Running Scared From Free Trade,” Investor’s Business Daily <http://ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=292632935793780> editorial, April 9, 2008



UPDATE: And if anyone wants to make the comparison to the Medicare vote, where Democrats cried foul simply because they lost, I am more than happy to argue that point. 




Thursday, April 03, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 3:03 PM

Today is the second anniversary of my resignation announcement, and I want to put something to rest.  In nearly every newspaper article I read mentioning my decision to leave Congress, never once do they get it right.  More often than not, the article states that I was either forced or driven out of office under a cloud of scandal.  Let me make one thing clear – there was no force in it, and no real pressure to leave other than the pressure I personally felt dragging my family and the 22nd District through a very divisive and costly race.   The decision was all my own and on my terms, and I do not regret it.   I would also like to point you to my interview with Mike Allen, who at the time was reporting for Time magazine, and my video resignation announcement, which I completed in the first take, in the dead of the night, with a lump in my throat.

Since leaving office, my life has changed drastically.  First, I lost weight, which was a nice way to transition.  I wrote a book, which I think only those who really love me or really hate me read, and I started organizing conservative activists in an effort to revitalize the movement I have been working with for 20 plus years.  I’ve been raising money to help conservatives combat the growing number of liberal groups and union-backed political activities.  I quickly started to blog at www.tomdelay.com, and then after taking a break to get CCM up and running, I transitioned over to Townhall where I feel very at home with my thoughts and opinions.  It's been a very busy and interesting time , and I hope you all will join me as we continue to fight in this new arena.

Keep the Faith,

Tom DeLay




Thursday, March 27, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 2:35 PM

You heard it here first.  Please see the below article highlighting my criticism of Rep. McDermott and his trip to Iraq...from November of 2003. 

Roll Call - November 6, 2003

War of Words Over Iraq

By Amy Keller

A bitter dispute between House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Texas) and Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) grew even more heated this week, as the Majority Leader fired off an acrid missive accusing the Seattle Democrat of exhibiting "deplorable behavior" during a visit to Iraq last year by criticizing President Bush "while being escorted around a barbaric dictatorship by the dictator's minions."

"You traveled to Iraq on a humanitarian mission, and while there, enjoying the warm reception of Saddam Hussein's terrorist regime, you attacked President Bush for 'setting up to throw out Saddam Hussein,' the very proposition you voted for [H.R. 4664, 105th Congress) under the previous [Democrat] administration," DeLay charged in a personal letter he sent to McDermott on Tuesday.

"Your words, had they been spoken in the United States, would have amounted to mean-spirited but predictable mediocre partisan hackery," continued DeLay's letter. "That they were uttered in Saddam's Iraq, however, perhaps within shouting distance of a torture chamber or mass grave, elevated (or lowered) those remarks to the sickening embarrassment they were."


Read More...



Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 12:58 PM

Consider me old-fashioned, but why is it that Democrats always feel the need to outsource the work of elected officials to these so called "working groups"?  It's the duty of Congress to suggest, and in fact pass, legislation that would address the problems that arise, within the proper role of the federal government.  I think this tactic is far more popular on their side of the aisle due to their complete lack of confidence in their political philosophy.  If they can't sell their bogus "buy outs" to other Democrats, they put together a group of their buddies - mostly political has-beens who will do anything to make headlines again - and allow them to do the dirty work of selling it to the public.  It then gives them political cushion if the proposed solutions are enacted and fail, or if they never see the light of day.  "I followed the recommendation of experts" they say, when it's their job, and constitutional responsibility, to filter what the experts say and put it into sound public policy.  And let's not forget, it's also a way for them to do what they do best - throw money at a special interest group/traditional Democrat voting bloc.

Congress was designed as a far superior system than these informal "working groups", and if members of Congress or the Administration would like to include outside input, they should sign their own name to it. 




Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 10:22 PM
I think my dear friend Ken Blackwell said it best...

Eloquent Speech, Troubling Worldview

Barack Obama just gave an eloquent speech, but one that
does not address the underlying nature of Senator Obama's
beliefs. Rev. Jeremiah Wright, like Mr. Obama, believes in
a state-centered 21st century form of big-government
socialism.  This 21st century form of socialism is at the
heart of the Liberation Theology Rev. Wright preaches from
the pulpit. Today, Mr. Obama again made it clear, with all
his eloquence, that he still embraces these beliefs that
would require dismantling the free-market system that has
made our country's economy the most prosperous in all of
human history.

In contrast to Liberation Theology, the Christian
orthodoxy teaches about the nature of God, the nature of
man, the relationship between the two in this life, and
about the hereafter. Liberation Theology, on the other
hand, is a belief system about political agendas,
socialistic economic policy, and redistribution of wealth.
Proponents of Liberation Theology, like Rev. Wright, teach
that God commands us to form a government that will
supervise our economy to create government-subsidized jobs
under central-government planning; guarantee healthcare and
education by having government control both; and achieve
'economic equality' by redistributing wealth through
massive taxes on the affluent and massive government
entitlements for the poor. And it advocates replacing
governments that do not embrace this socialistic agenda.

Those are the beliefs of Liberation Theology. Those are
the offensive root beliefs underlying many of Rev. Wright's
sermons. And though Barack Obama does not embrace Mr.
Wright's offensive language, he does embrace this
government-solves-everything-through-socialism worldview.

His speech was magnificent in its elegance and rhetoric,
but today Mr. Obama reminded me yet again of his worldview
that embraces, among other things, partial-birth abortion,
military weakness, and economic socialism.   Thank God for
religious liberty, free market, and free elections!






Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Posted by: Tom DeLay at 10:14 PM

First of all, I’d like to thank to all of my friends in the blogosphere who helped me jumpstart TomDeLay.com and give me, and activists like you, an opportunity to highlight conservative thought and to voice our common ideas and frustrations.   

When I first left Congress in 2006, I was able to pour myself into the blog, posting and commenting and meeting with other bloggers in the effort to keep online conservatism active.  As I transitioned into life in the private sector, many new opportunities arose, including writing and publicizing my first book, spending time with my wife and our foster community in Texas, and working on building my consulting firm.  But starting last summer, a new project completely consumed me, and I decided it was best to focus full time on traveling around the country, signing up conservative activists in targeted media markets, and raising funds from conservative donors.  This project, Coalition for a Conservative Majority, has been a dream of mine since I started organizing activists as a freshman member of Congress, and under the leadership of former Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell, it’s off and running with 9 media market chapters underway.  Now that CCM is in the best of hands, I have the time to kick around a few ideas with some old friends, including those here at Townhall.com.

I would like to especially thank Chuck DeFeo and Matt Lewis here at Townhall.com for giving me a new forum where I can help rally conservative activists on specific, targeted causes that will…well…just make liberals miserable.  Here you will find everything from my media appearances to columns and general thoughts on political matters.  You will also find my “Action Points” (as I like to call them) because our superior political philosophy just isn’t enough anymore.  I look forward to reading and responding to your posts and suggestions.  But please, keep it civil, and I will, too. 

Keep the Faith,

Tom DeLay




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