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OFFICERS
Mary Windsor Saggus
President
Janie Dollar First Vice President
Rhonda Hethcox Second Vice President
Kay Harlow Secretary
Elene Stovall Treasurer
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UPCOMING EVENTS |
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GBRW August Luncheon Monday, August 12 12:00 p.m. The Cafe at the Bontanical Gardens Birmingham, AL
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ALGOP Summer Dinner
featuring
Governor Scott Walker
of Wisconsin
Renaissance Hotel
Montgomery, AL
August 23, 2013
6:00 pm Reception
7:00 pm Dinner | | |
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Purchase an ad to support the GBRW Newsletter
Your advertisement will appear in this space
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Newsletter August 2013 |
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GBRW August Luncheon
Monday, August 12
The Cafe at the
Botanical Gardens
Lunch is $20.00 with reservation
$25.00 without.
Payment accepted at the door
For reservation
contact Elene Stovall
please feel free to invite your friends.
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Letter from GBRW President
Mary Windsor Saggus |
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As I know are many of you, I am frustrated, confused, puzzled, and often annoyed by the GOP. I had not been able to get a grip on what has caused our national problems but believe I have stumbled across the culprit. It is so simple, maybe you all have known, but I had overlooked the obvious.
WE HAVE NO MESSAGE! Or at least we are not communicating a message, which is just as bad or worse.
Let me explain. I committed to NFRW to present the differences in opinion between the GOP and the DNC on Obamacare. Like you, I am pretty darn well informed, but I wanted to present full-fledged research, which means honestly exploring both sides of the issue. I expected to go to DNC and GOP websites and print a "we say," 'they say" article.
The DNC said pretty much what I expected. They had a well done video, a list of sound bites and photos of diverse Democrats beside quotes. There was no information of substance (Democrats) but it was slick and lengthy. I could see how the uninformed and under informed could buy into the "feel good" message with no practical application. Check it out for yourself here.
Next up, the RNC. I was looking forward to information with substance (Republicans, right). What I found was NOTHING, two sentences that say NOTHING. " We support common-sense reforms that will lower costs, ensure quality health care that Americans deserve, and end lawsuit abuse. We oppose government-run health care, which won't protect the physician-patient relationship, won't promote competition, and won't promote health care quality and choice." It bores me every time I read it. That may be enough information for the informed but, stating the obvious, the informed are not who we need to reach.
I could go on about the differences in our websites, but our website is not "the" problem, only a symptom of the problem. You and I are informed but the Party is not communicating our message. We can, we should, we must expect and demand more of those in leadership positions.
I understand that the GOP has hired someone from the Silicon Valley to revamp the website, to which I say, finally! How about putting some money toward marketing our message and branding the party. Act like a business, instead of like the government. We are, after all, the pro-business party.
I sat with three friends at lunch last week. These are ladies you know, active members of the Party, all well informed, well educated, and highly intelligent. Each admitted that she is weary, disappointed, and considering less involvement. I understand how they feel, but we cannot back away. We, as women, are the ones who can turn this around IF we make our expectations known and demand action. Let the GOP hear from us, hear our concerns, our expectations, and demand action that produces results.
I propose that we come together with ONE goal. Forget special interests, please. Forget that we don't like Obama; everyone knows that already. Our agenda should be to brand the Party and get our message out in clear, concise terms. We can do that by presenting to the public what we BELIEVE, what we can ACHIEVE, and how we will ACCOMPLISH our goals. It seems obvious and simple to me.
Sincerely,
Mary Windsor |
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The Crisis of Government Cronyism
By Cameron Smith, Alabama Policy Institute
For the last several election cycles, Democrats have successfully branded Republicans as the protectors of corporate greed, companies that are too big to fail and the much maligned "one percent."
 | | Photo courtesy of API website |
This branding strategy succeeds because it resonates on some level with most Americans. The policy and political arguments of an executive whose annual compensation is more than many of us will make in our entire lives fails to draw sympathy regardless of political leanings.
Republicans respond to the political left's successful messaging with the sentiment that government should focus on job creation instead of penalizing success or picking economic winners and losers.
The cycle continues predictably with the only consensus between the political left and right being that government must grow. The American people simply are left to decide which party will determine how much it should grow and where. This is a dangerous false choice, and our nation's future success hinges on rejecting it.
Continued growth of government is largely fueled by cronyism, or unmerited political favoritism. Many Republican politicians support the corporate rent-seeking that comes with many taxpayer-funded economic development deals. Democrats claim that they are the champions of the middle class, but they conveniently ignore the health care companies and insurers intimately involved in the creation and passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. They also turn a blind eye to the large banks exercising their "duty" to help the Obama Administration craft regulations under the Dodd-Frank Act. To make matters worse, both sides vote for subsidies to favored industries.
Right now federal, state, and local government accounts for 34 percent of America's Gross Domestic Product. It accounts for more than a third of our economy. The most aggressive political ideas for curtailing the size of our national government suggest "controlling" spending at about 18% of GDP. According to a Real Clear Markets article by Dean Kalahar, "for the first 130 years of [America's] existence, federal spending as a percentage of GDP averaged around 2.5%."
The most beneficial crony for businesses and unions is a well-funded and powerful government. At the same time, nothing is more destructive to our economy than government cronyism used to block out competition, impose barriers to market entry, saddle competitors with burdensome regulation or feed off government inefficiency and waste. Economist F.A. Hayek notes that cronyism results in a state "more and more identified with the interest of those who run things than with the interests of the people in general."
For those who are not particularly concerned with free markets, ask yourself whether income inequality has declined as the size and scope of government has increased.
Even the most liberal estimates show rapidly growing inequality in spite of a government that has radically expanded as a percentage of our economy. If more government regulation and spending reduce inequality, the result should be inverted.
The growth of government gives tremendous power to the few unions, corporations and lobbying associations that have the time and resources to spend in Washington, D.C. and state capitals around the nation.
Taxes that fuel spending and heavy-handed regulations rarely affect these entities, largely because they are present when politicians put those measures together. Instead, your dry cleaner, your favorite restaurant, your healthcare provider, and most importantly, you and your family are left out of the discussion except when cameras are rolling or elections are around the corner.
The solution to job creation, income inequality and even strong communities is to push government that favors the political elites out of the way for Americans who want to build, manufacture and work to build new jobs for Americans. Unfortunately, significant changes like comprehensive tax, spending and regulatory reform are difficult mountains to climb specifically because they challenge the political establishment.
Change must first come from Americans rejecting the narrative that growing government in one direction or another is the only way to improve our society, our economy and our lives.
Americans on both the left and the right must begin solving problems without turning to and expanding the power of elected officials lest their government become, as Barry Goldwater noted, a "monolith of power...bounded only by the will of those who sit in high places."
To see the full article, click here.
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