The Fiscal Responsibility Act Congress prevented a disastrous default on our nation’s debt this week. At the same time, House Republicans forced President Biden and Senate Democrats to accept multi-trillion dollar restraints on their addiction to deficit spending. There were essentially three choices here. First was to default. Second was to allow a clean debt limit increase with no conditions. Third was a deal that accepted a debt limit increase in exchange for historic deficit reduction measures.The bill was far from perfect, but options one and two were wholly unacceptable. I took the least bad option and voted for the deal. We scored some notable wins with this bill, which will: Reduce the federal debt by $2.1 trillion over six years compared to current law. Slash $400 million from the CDC “Global Health Fund” that sends taxpayer money to China; and cut billions in other wasteful, redundant, or unnecessary programs for the largest total rescissions package in history. Nix this year’s total funding request for new IRS agents who would have been unleashed on middle class taxpayers by the Biden Administration. Accelerate pro-growth infrastructure and energy projects and cut costs with the first significant permitting reform to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) in forty years. Radical environments have abused NEPA to cause endless delays on projects needed to strengthen our economy. Ensure full funding for critical veterans’ programs and national defense priorities, while protecting Social Security and Medicare. The fact is, we should have never been in this position to begin with, and that’s the real travesty. Spending in Washington has run amok and this law begins the long-overdue process to put an end to the spending insanity that endangers our economy and national security. H.R. 3746 – The Fiscal Responsibility Act – Yea Rescinds $1.4 billion in funding provided for IRS in the Inflation Reduction Act; the full amount of funds included in their FY23 spend plan for non-taxpayer services. Cuts total spending in FY24, including a return of non-defense discretionary spending (excluding veterans benefits) to below FY22 Levels. Requires borrowers to again pay off their student loan debts, including interest incurred, saving taxpayers an estimated $5 billion per month. Arkansas Democrat Gazette Arkansas delegation backs debt ceiling bill Crawford's next challenge involves a new farm bill, a sweeping agriculture measure to replace a statute set to expire in September. … Crawford, a House Agriculture Committee member, said he hopes the debt ceiling package lays a "conservative foundation" for the next legislation. "A lot of people might think 'conservative farm bill' is a mutually exclusive term. Not necessarily," he said. "If we start from the right position, we can do a heck of a lot better than what people expect in this environment if we do it right. I think this is a step in that direction." Arkansas Business Lack of Parking Remains Problem for Trucking Industry Lack of access to parking remains a priority issue for the trucking industry, and Rick Crawford wants something done about it. Crawford is Arkansas’ representative from the 1st Congressional District and is perfectly situated to have influence on such issues as a member of the House Committee on Transportation & Infrastructure, where he is chairman of the Highway & Transit Subcommittee. Rep. Crawford | 2422 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515 Unsubscribe
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