We need bold tax reform, but Mitt Romney wants to tinker at the margins.
America's budget
process is broken. Our economy and American families are struggling, and
the country needs bold reforms and major restructuring, not tinkering
at the margins. Obamanomics has left one in six Americans in poverty,
and one in four children on food stamps. Millions seek jobs and others
have given up.
Meanwhile, my opponent in the
Republican primaries, Mitt Romney, had a last-minute conversion.
Attempting to distract from his record of tax and fee increases as
governor of Massachusetts, poor job creation, and aggressive pursuit of
earmarks, he now says he wants to follow my lead and lower individual as
well as corporate marginal tax rates.
It's a good start. But it doesn't go
nearly far enough. He says his proposed tax cuts would be revenue
neutral and, borrowing the language of Occupy Wall Street, promises the
top 1% will pay for the cuts. No pro-growth tax policy there, just more
Obama-style class warfare.
By contrast, in my first 100 days as
president, I'll submit to Congress and work to pass a comprehensive
pro-growth and pro-family Economic Freedom Agenda. Here are 10 of its
main initiatives:
•
Unleash America's energy.
I'll approve the Keystone Pipeline for jobs and energy security, and
sign an order on day one unleashing America's domestic energy
production, allowing states to choose where they want to explore for oil
and natural gas and to set their own regulations for hydrofracking.
•
Stop job-killing regulation. All
Obama administration regulations that have an economic burden over $100
million will be repealed, including the Environmental Protection Agency
rule on CO2 emissions that's already shut down six power plants. I'll
review all regulations, making sure they use sound science and cost
benefit analysis.
Getty Images/Illustration Works
•
A pro-growth, pro-family tax policy.
I'll submit to Congress comprehensive tax policies to strengthen
opportunity in our country, with only two income tax rates of 10% and
28%. To help families, I'll triple the personal deduction for children
and eliminate the marriage tax penalty.
•
Restore America's competitiveness.
The corporate tax rate should be halved, to a flat rate of 17.5%.
Corporations should be allowed to expense all business equipment and
investment. Taxes on corporate earnings repatriated from overseas should
be eliminated to bring home manufacturing. I'll take the lead on tort
reform to lower costs to consumers.
•
Rein in spending. I'll
propose spending cuts of $5 trillion over five years, including cuts for
the remainder of fiscal year 2013. I'll propose budgets that spend less
money each year than prior years, and I'll reduce the
nondefense-related federal work force by at least 10%, without replacing
them with private contractors.
•
Repeal and replace ObamaCare.
I'll submit legislation to repeal ObamaCare, and on day one issue an
executive order ending related regulatory obligations on the states.
I'll work with Congress to replace ObamaCare with competitive insurance
choices to improve quality and limit the costs of health care, while
protecting those with uninsurable health conditions. In contrast, Gov.
Romney signed into law RomneyCare, which provided the model for
ObamaCare. Its best-known feature is its overreaching individual
health-care mandate. But it shares over a dozen other similarities with
ObamaCare and has given Massachusetts the highest health-care premiums
in the nation, and longer waits for health care.
•
Balance the budget. I'll
submit to Congress a budget that will balance within four years and call
on Congress to pass a balanced-budget amendment to the Constitution
which limits federal spending to 18% of GDP.
•
Negotiate and submit free trade agreements. Because
many Americans work for companies which export, I'll initiate
negotiations in the first 100 days and submit to Congress five free
trade agreements during my first year in office to increase exports.
•
Reform entitlements. I'll
cut means-tested entitlement programs by 10% across the board, freeze
them for four years, and block grant them to states—as I did as the
author of welfare reform in 1996. I'll reform Medicare and Social
Security so they are fiscally sustainable for seniors and young people.
• Revive housing. I'll submit plans to Congress
to phase out within several years Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's federal
housing role, reform and make transparent the Federal Reserve, and allow
families whose mortgages are "underwater" to deduct losses from the
sale of their home in order to get a fresh start in difficult economic
times.
I'll work with Congress and the
American people to once again create an economic environment where hard
work is rewarded, equal opportunity exists for all, and families
providing for their children can once again be optimistic about their
future.
Mr. Santorum, a former U.S. senator from Pennsylvania, is a Republican candidate for president.
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