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Plan for America's Job Creators
Delivering the Weekly
Republican Address, Rep. Pat Meehan (R-PA) highlights Republicans’
Plan for America’s Job
Creators, which offers better solutions to help
small businesses and opportunities to build on common ground in Washington.
Initiatives highlighted in the address include legislation to
extend the payroll tax cut for a full year
and the American
Energy & Infrastructure Jobs Act, which, Rep.
Meehan notes, “will support the creation of more than one million private-sector
jobs – not by wasting your money on pork-barrel projects and so-called
‘stimulus’ spending, but by removing government barriers that are getting in the
way of American job growth.”
Hello,
I’m Pat Meehan, and I represent the hardworking people of Pennsylvania’s Seventh
Congressional District.
The
need for Washington to act on jobs is as urgent as ever. The nation’s
unemployment rate has now exceeded eight percent for three years running – the
longest stretch since the Great Depression. Struggling families and
workers want to end the gridlock and get our economy moving. House
Republicans have offered good ideas that will help create jobs, but to execute
them, we need leadership from President Obama and help from his fellow Democrats
who control the Senate.
As part of Republicans’ Plan for America’s
Job Creators, the House has passed nearly 30 bipartisan jobs bills that the
Senate hasn’t considered, proposals to help small businesses grow and create
jobs. It was promising to see the president come out this week and endorse
several of our ideas, but what would really be helpful is for him to urge the
Senate to actually vote on them.
One of our jobs bills would extend
the payroll tax cut for a full year, as the president requested. The
Republican-led House has passed this bill, but the Democratic-controlled Senate
hasn’t. A bipartisan conference committee is working to change that,
but time is running short.
Our Democratic colleagues in Washington
have a responsibility to tell the nation what they’re prepared to do to extend
the payroll tax cut for a full year and give middle-class families and small
businesses much-needed certainty.
Another jobs bill in the works is
an energy and infrastructure plan that will support the creation of more than
one million private-sector jobs – not by wasting your money on pork-barrel
projects and so-called ‘stimulus‘ spending, but by removing government barriers
that are getting in the way of American job growth. This marks a sea
change from the way things were done in the past by both parties, who stuffed
highway bills with earmarks, many of which only drained resources from urgent
projects that have a direct connection to economic growth.
In 2005,
I’m sad to say, a Republican-led Congress passed a highway bill that contained
more than 6,300 earmarks, including the ‘Bridge to Nowhere.’ John Boehner
was one of only eight members who voted against that bill. He’s now our
Speaker, and those days are over.
Instead of more earmarks or new
taxes, our bill will remove barriers to job growth by expanding American energy
production – which will help lower gas prices – and using the revenue to repair
and improve our roads and bridges. Repairing our roads and bridges isn’t
just a safety issue, it’s an economic one. Pennsylvania has more
structurally deficient bridges than any other state, and a half-million people
in the Commonwealth are out of work. That’s why our bill removes barriers
to job growth and reforms the process by ending needless delays, empowering
states and communities, and ensuring resources go to projects that have a direct
connection to our economy.
This is another good idea that will help put
Americans back to work, and it, too, is built on common ground. The
president supports improving infrastructure and recently echoed our party’s call
for an ‘all-of-the-above’ energy strategy. To learn more about the
American Energy & Infrastructure Jobs Act and the Republican jobs plan, visit
jobs.GOP.gov.
Our economy faces serious challenges right now – gridlock in Washington doesn’t
have to be one of them. The House is acting on good ideas, and with help
from the President and Democrats in the Senate, we can get these things done.
The people we represent sent us here to find solutions and move the country
forward – not further divide it.