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Debt Ceiling Fight

Issues / Elections - FEDERAL: What's Congress up to?

We are being sold a bill of goods on the debt ceuling and we need to call these folks and let them no we are watching and they need to vote NO on raising the debt ceiling: Here are the targets and below are the 5 reasons not to raise it:

 

Targets for Debt Ceiling Debate

 

 

 

REP Name

State and District

PHONE

FAX

EMAIL

 

 

 

 

 

Paul Gosar

Arizona : 1

(202) 225-2315

(202) 226-9739

https://gosar.house.gov/contact-me

Rick Crawford

Arkansas: 1

(202) 225-4076

202) 225-5602

https://crawford.house.gov/Contact/

Tim Griffin

Arkansas: 2

202) 225-2506

202) 225-5903

https://griffin.house.gov/contact-me/email-me

Steve Womack

Arkansas: 3

202.225.4301

202.225.5713

https://womack.house.gov/Contact/

John Campbell

California: 48

(202) 225-5611

(202) 225-9177

https://forms.house.gov/campbell/webforms/issue_subscribe.htm

Duncan Hunter

California: 52

(202) 225-5672

(202) 225-0235

https://forms.house.gov/hunter/webforms/zipauthen_contact.shtml

Ed Royce

California: 40

 (202) 225-4111

714) 744-4056

https://royce.house.gov/Contact/ZipCheck.htm

Bill Posey

Florida: 15

(202) 225-3671

(202) 225-3516

https://posey.house.gov/forms/writeyourrep/

Scott Austin

Georgia: 8

(202) 225-6531

202) 225-3013

https://austinscott.house.gov/contact-me

Robert Woodall

Georgia: 7

(202) 225-4272

202) 225-4696

https://woodall.house.gov/contact-me/email-me

Robert Dold

Illinois :10

202) 225-4835

202) 225-0837

https://dold.house.gov/contact-me

Randy Hultigren

Illinois :14

202) 225-2976

202) 225-0697

https://hultgren.house.gov/index.cfm?sectionid=89&sectiontree=3,89

Dan Burton

Indiana : 5

202) 225-2276

(202) 225-0016

http://burton.house.gov/contacts/new

Todd Rokita

Indiana : 4

202) 225-5037

(202) 226-0544

https://rokita.house.gov/contact-me

Todd Young

Indiana: 9

(202) 225-5315

202) 226-6866

https://toddyoung.house.gov/index.cfm?sectionid=58

Mike Pompeo

Kansas: 4

202) 225-6216

202) 225-3489

https://pompeo.house.gov/contact-me

Jeffrey Landry

Louisiana: 3

(202) 225-4031

(202) 226-3944

https://landry.house.gov/contact-me

Tim Walberg

Michigan: 7

(202) 225-6276

202) 225-6281

http://walberg.house.gov/index.cfm?sectionid=58

Steve Palazzo

Mississippi:4

202) 225-5772

202) 225-7074

https://palazzo.house.gov/contact-me

Vicki Hartzler

Missouri:4

202) 225-2876

202) 225-0148

https://hartzler.house.gov/contact-me

Joe Heck

Nevada: 3

202) 225-3252

202) 225-2185

https://heck.house.gov/contact-me

Frank Guinta

New Hampshire:1

(202) 225-5456

(202) 225-5822

https://guinta.house.gov/contact-me

John Runyon

New Jersey: 3

202) 225-4765

N/A

http://runyan.house.gov/contact-me/email-me

Ann Marie Buerkle

New York: 25

(202) 225-3701

(315) 423-5669

https://buerkle.house.gov/contact-me/email-me

Chris Gibson

New York: 20

(202) 225-5614

(202) 225-1168

https://chrisgibson.house.gov/Contact/default.aspx

Tom Reed

New York: 29

202) 225-3161

202) 226-6599

https://reed.house.gov/contact-me/email-me

Renee Ellmers

North Carolina:2

202) 225-4531

(202) 225-5662

https://ellmers.house.gov/index.cfm?sectionid=58&sectiontree=3,58

Walter Jones

North Carolina:3

202-225-3415

202-225-3286

http://jones.house.gov/Contact/

Rick Berg

North Dakota: At Large

(202) 225-2611

N/A

https://berg.house.gov/contact-me

James Lankford

Oklahoma:5

202) 225-2132

N/A

https://forms.house.gov/lankford/webforms/zipauthen_contact.shtml

Tom Marino

Pennsylvania: 10

(202) 225-3731

202) 225-9594

https://marino.house.gov/contact-me

Glenn Thompson

Pennsylvania: 5

202) 225-5121

202) 225-5796

http://thompson.house.gov/contact/email-me.shtml

Kristi Noem

South Dakota: At Large

202) 225-2801

202) 225-5823

http://noem.house.gov/index.cfm/contact?p=email-kristi

Michael Burgess

Texas: 26

(202) 225-7772

(202) 225-2919

https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml

Francisco Canseco

Texas: 23

202) 225-4511

(202) 225-2237

https://canseco.house.gov/index.cfm?sectionid=58

Sam Johnson

Texas: 3

(202) 225-4201

N/A

http://www.samjohnson.house.gov/Contact/

Kenny Marchant

Texas: 24

202-225-6605

202-225-0074

https://marchant.house.gov/Contact/default.aspx

Pete Olsan

Texas: 22

202) 225-5951

202) 225-5241

http://olson.house.gov/index.cfm?sectionid=3&sectiontree=3

Jaime Beutlee Herrera

Washington: 3

202) 225-3536

(202) 225-3478

https://herrerabeutler.house.gov/Contact/default.aspx#

David McKinley

West Virginia:1

202) 225-4172

(202) 225-7564

http://mckinley.house.gov/index.cfm?sectionid=3&sectiontree=3

Reid Ribble

Wisconsin:8

(202) 225-5665

202) 225-5729

https://ribble.house.gov/contact-me

 

Five reasons we don’t need to raise the debt ceiling:

 

 1.     We won’t default if we prioritize our spending.

  • Tax revenues for this year are projected to be around $2.2 trillion.
  • Interest payments for this year amount to approximately $300 billion.
  • If we pay the interest first, that leaves us with about $1.9 trillion to spend on our most important priorities, and we avoid a default.
  • If we enact Senator Toomey’s Full Faith and Credit Act (S. 163) directing the Treasury to pay principal and interest on the debt held by the public before all other obligations it would ensure that the nation does not default.

2.     If they raise it they will spend it:

  • The debt ceiling has been raised 10 times in 11 years.  In fact, since Congress enacted the first debt limit it has never failed to raise it.  (http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/Historicals)
  • The federal government spends more per second than the average family brings home in income per year.
  • Since World War II, government spending, on average, accounted for around one fifth, or 19.6 percent, of GDP. Today, federal spending accounts for nearly one quarter, or 23.8 percent, of GDP.
  • The national debt in 2006 stood at approximately $8.5 trillion, we are now over $14 trillion in debt (over $100 trillion if we count unfunded liabilities).

 

3.     We have been warned to stop the reckless spending:

 

  • Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s have warned us that our credit rating will be downgraded if we do not control our debt.
  • If the nation’s credit rating goes down, borrowing money becomes more expensive, making our existing debt crisis even worse.
  • China issued a statement, as our primary lender, saying that the US must rein in spending – now – or face severe austerity measures suddenly. 

4.     We don’t have to reinvent the wheel on spending:

 

  • It would take about $750 billion in spending cuts by the end of this fiscal year (ending September 30) to get us back to 2003 spending levels, which would allow us to avoid default and pay for the rest of government, all without raising the debt ceiling or increasing taxes.
  • The Federal Government holds more than $1 trillion in highly liquid assets that should be sold to the private sector, and doing this now would allow the cuts to be phased in more slowly.
  • If we even rolled spending back to the Clinton-era budget we could make our obligations without raising the debt ceiling or increasing taxes.
  • America’s politicians have a spending problem NOT and revenue problem.  There is no reason to raise taxes or the debt ceiling except to grow government.   

5.     A rising national debt hinders jobs and the economy:

  • Once the size of government, and its spending, increases, economic growth falls.
  • Government spending failed to create economic growth when tried in the 1930’s, ‘60’s and ‘70’s.
  • Every dollar spent by the federal government is money taken from the private sector. 
  • The International Monetary Fund (IMF) cut the US growth forecast and warned of a looming debt crisis. With little growth, unemployment will remain high.
  • Since February 2009 there are 2.3 million fewer people employed while government spending has increased by 19% since 2008. Raising the debt ceiling means increased spending means less jobs. Period.



 

 
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