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PRESS RELEASE FROM AMERICANS FOR TAX REFORM
Contact: John Kartch (
jkartch@atr.org or 202-785-0266)
Click here
for a copy of this file in Adobe Acrobat
7/11/03
New
Proposal to Shrink Government:
Term-Limit the Big-Spending Appropriators
Taxpayer advocacy group Americans for Tax Reform (ATR)
outlines proposal to cut government spending by term-limiting
those in Congress who spend the money.
WASHINGTON - The
size of government continues to grow: Today, Americans for
Tax Reform (ATR), the nation's leading taxpayer advocacy organization,
released its annual Cost of Government Day (COGD) report showing
that the total cost of government at the federal, state, and
local levels has risen to near-historic levels.
But where to lay
the blame? Taxpayer advocate Grover Norquist, president of
ATR and a longtime critic of government overspending, says
the blame lies with the appropriations process and those who
run it.
"There's an
old saying that Washington has three political parties: the
Republicans, the Democrats, and the Appropriators," said
Norquist on Friday in a press conference marking COGD. "Budget
Committee members are already limited to 6 years, and serious
reform of the appropriations process - beginning with four-year
term limits for those on appropriations committees - should
be considered to keep the government from spending out of
control," he added later.
Today's COGD press
conference marked today, July 11th, as the date in the calendar
year when Americans had paid off their share of the entire
cost of government spending and regulations at the federal,
state and local levels. The cost of government, after declining
for eight years between 1992 and 2000, has risen so much in
the past three years that COGD has been pushed back to near
1992 levels.
"Government
is growing at unsustainable rates at all levels: local, state
and federal," continued Norquist, "and much of the
increase is due to those at the head of the appropriations
processes, both here in Washington and in our 50 state capitols
across the country."
The idea of term-limiting
appropriators comes after the great success of term-limiting
committee chairmen in several reform acts in 1995, during
the 104th Congress.
"Before the
1995 reforms, so much power was concentrated in the hands
of a few ancient old men like Jack Brooks Dan Rostenkowski
who were so entrenched that they worked for no one but themselves,"
continued Norquist. "They were rooted out, and a good
sanitization of the appropriations committee should be next
on the reforms list."
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Americans for Tax Reform is a non-partisan
coalition of taxpayers and taxpayer groups who oppose any and all federal
and state tax increases. For
more information, or to arrange an interview with Mr. Norquist please contact John Kartch at (202)785-0266 or by email at
jkartch@atr.org.
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