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Entries in cornyn (5)

Wednesday
Jul082009

Sen. Cornyn Criticizes Democrats' “Power Grab” In Health Care Debate

By Learned Foote- Talk Radio News Service

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) harshly criticized the health care reform proposals put forward by the administration and Democratic congressmen.

“[There is a] continued power grab out of Washington, starting with the financial institutions, leading to car companies, and now to health care,” said Cornyn during a conference call with reporters Wednesday. He warned that the American government might take up policies practiced in England, the United Kingdom, and Canada, where “government ultimately makes a calculation on the value of individual lives" in rationing health care.

Cornyn, who serves on the Senate Finance Committee’s subcommittee on Health Care, said that reform should lower the costs of health care and make coverage accessible to more people, but argued that the proposals will not sufficiently address these needs. Instead, the Senator argued, they will “create a huge command-and-control infrastructure.”

Cornyn said that the government will undercut private insurance providers, and cited statistics from The Lewin Group, a health-care policy research firm. The groups’ report estimates that 119 million individuals, two-thirds of those currently privately-insured, will end up on a public plan.

Cornyn also criticized a proposal floated by some Democrats to tax health benefits, a practice he said Obama “derided” during the Presidential campaign.

Cornyn praised Senator Max Baucus (D-Mont.), the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, for attempting to work in a bipartisan fashion, but said that Baucus is “being dictated to” by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), who favors a public option.

“My hope is that common sense will prevail and that we will listen to the stake-holders, including the millions of Americans whose health care will be forever changed should some of these proposals pass without an opportunity for bipartisan input,” said Cornyn.
Wednesday
Jun242009

Republicans Shoot Down Sotomayor’s Second Amendment Interpretation

By Courtney Ann Jackson-Talk Radio News Service

Republican Senators are objecting to Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor's interpretation of the Second Amendment.

“In her decision making process in cases that she decided, Judge Sotomayor, earlier this year, rendered an opinion that held that the Second Amendment is not a fundamental right,” said Senator Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.), referencing a ruling Sotomayor issued as a 2nd Circuit judge for the city of New York last year. The Supreme Court nominee determined that the Second Amendment did not apply to city and states, but only the federal government.

Sen. Jim DeMint argued during a press conference with fellow Senators Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), John Cornyn (R-Texas) and Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) Wednesday that if the Second Amendment does not apply to every American, then the Constitution no longer has any bearing on controlling the role of the federal government.

“It’s a very important question that goes... beyond the question of bearing arms but whether or not we are still a Constitutional Republic.”

The Senators reiterated their belief that the right for the people to keep and bear arms applies to all Americans and stated that they plan to ask Sotomayor questions about her interpretation of the Second Amendment during her confirmation hearings in July.
Tuesday
Apr282009

McConnell: Specter’s Decision Purely Political 

By Jonathan Bronstein, Talk Radio News

IMG_0383
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell
The Republican ship is sinking and Senator Arlen Specter (R-Penn.) is first to jump off the boat. While to some experts the recent defection of Specter to the Democrats marks the end of an electable Republican Party, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and John Cornyn (R-Texas) said they were far less concerned.

“This was simply, nothing more and nothing less than political self-preservation,” said Cornyn, adding that “(Specter’s) own pollster told him that he could not win the Republican primary in Pennsylvania, so his only options were to leave the Senate or join the Democratic Party.”

Additionally, McConnell downplayed Specter’s decision as a Pennsylvania problem, and not a national problem for the Republican Party.

“This is a Pennsylvania story about his inability, according to his pollster, to be renominated by the Republican Party,” said McConnell.

But one aspect of Specter’s decision could not be denied, as he, coupled with Al Franken’s election in Minnesota, would give the Democrats the necessary votes to block any Republican filibuster.

“But it sets up the potential for the majority, if it chooses to, to run rough over the minority. To eliminate checks and balances and the kind of restraint that Americans have historically wanted from their government,” said McConnell.

Nevertheless, while the loss of Specter lessens Republican power, McConnell tried to lessen the blow by saying, “He (Specter) made a totally political decision.” and that the decision was not symptomatic of other underlying issues within the party.

Tuesday
Jul222008

Senate Republicans: It's economics stupid! 

New Mexico Republican Senator Pete Domenici said that the energy bill offered by his state's junior senator is "not a very big solution to a big problem." The reconfigured energy bill, written by Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) features a component that encouraged energy companies to "use it or lose it," when it comes to lands that are already under lease. "Use it or lose it doesn't mean anything," said Domenici at a press conference with Senate Republican colleagues.

Majority leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has offered little debate on the bill and is not allowing much room for amendments, said Sen. John Thune (R-S.D). Domenici said that their amendments are a good way of "finding more and using less." He cited the Repubicans' strong support for electric cars. Bob Bennett (R-Utah) said that oil shale is not addressed and that other countries, like Brazil, are taking advantage of this technology while oil shale is off limits in Utah and Colorado. He called for "massive" investment to recover oil shale, which he said is equal to 800 billion barrels of recoverable petroleum.

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) said that speculators represent about 20 percent of the problem when it comes to the current energy prices. He said that he spoke with billionaire Warren Buffet, a prominent U.S. businessman and investor, who told Cornyn that this problem will be solved with the simple law of supply and demand. Cornyn said that the Senate Republicans are dedicated to addressing the problem of supply and demand by drilling for more oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the oil shale of the American West.
Wednesday
Apr162008

"We have to remain competing!" 

Senate Republican Conference Chairman Lamar Alexander (R-TN) Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R-TX), Senator John Cornyn (R-TX), and Senator Orrin Hatch (R-UT) held a press conference today talking about the importance of funding the America Competes Act.

Since U.S. students place near the bottom in Physics and Mathematics, Senator Hutchinson talked about the importance of educating and encouraging the children for the future.

The America Competes Act will provide qualified teachers in secondary schools, and advanced placement courses, where students get the top education.
Funding for this legislation is very crucial, since the competitors, such as China, is moving forward quickly said all the senators.

Senator Hatch emphasized that it is time to pass this legislation to skip the yearly budgeting for the scientists.

Senator Cornyn touched upon all the foreign students who study in the United States and are not qualified to work here after their graduation. Sending the American-educated foreign students back to the competitors’ arms benefits the competitors, said the senator. He also mentioned that these students will not be stealing the Americans’ jobs; they are qualified to create new jobs.