Pierce County Herald: Johnson discusses federal issues
Wisconsin U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Oshkosh) was in Hudson Saturday morning and took questions from reporters at the Hudson cable access studio on Fourth Street.
Johnson addressed several issues, including the perception Republicans are blocking progress in Washington, the Stillwater (Minn.) bridge, jobs, pulling out of Iraq, Social Security-Medicare-entitlements and the federal budget.
“The Republicans control only the House,” Johnson said. “Democrats control the oval office and the Senate. Over 100 bills have been approved in the House and were stopped in the Senate. The Democratic Senate has not approved a budget in two years.
“I refute the idea that the Republicans are the blocking party,” Johnson said. “Our government has evolved to the point where it needs presidential leadership. President Obama has not been leading. His budget lost in the Democratic-controlled Senate 0-97.”
Bridge
Johnson was complimentary to representatives from both parties for their support of the Stillwater bridge project.
“Republicans and Democratic representatives in both Minnesota and Wisconsin have been supportive of the bridge construction,” Johnson said. “I’m fiscally conservative, but I’m not against government. We need government for many things--including infrastructure like the proposed new bridge.”
Economy
“What are we doing to help people get back to work? What’s holding the economy back?” Johnson asked. He answered his own question by saying this is an area where less government is needed.
“Look at two examples--President Reagan and President Obama,” Johnson said. “Reagan came in with the approach that government is not the solution--government is part of the problem. He advocated less government and fewer regulations. Obama came in with the approach that government is the answer.”
Johnson said the best thing the government can do is to remove the uncertainty. He said tax increases harm the growth of the economy.
“We have to show businesses, people and the globe that we have control over the economy,” Johnson said.
The senator showed a couple of charts to illustrate he’s not against government growth, but it has to be contained. A one-year spending chart showed a budget of $1.9 trillion in 2001 and $3.6 trillion in 2011. The same chart showed the Obama budget showed a budget of $5.8 trillion in 2021--the proposed Republican budget was $4.8 trillion.
“It’s not a budget cut, it just decreases the amount of the increase,” Johnson said.
A similar 10-year spending chart showed similar numbers. The Obama 10-year budget showed $46.1 trillion in spending between 2012 and 2021. The Republican proposal showed $40 trillion--both a healthy increase over the 2002-2011 figure of $27.9 trillion.
Iraq
Johnson said the withdraw date for troops from Iraq could be a “short-sighted” decision.
“I hope it turns out okay, but we have lost 4,500 lives and American always seeks freedom for others--I think we’re seeing the results in the Middle East,” Johnson said. “I think President Obama’s decision may be purely political. The lost lives and money may be for naught.”
Jobs
Johnson praised the job climate in Wisconsin, but said Wisconsin and the United States have to recognize we are competing globally.
“Japan is about to lower its business tax--do you realize that when that happens, the United States will have the highest business taxes in the world?” Johnson said. “Not a good thing.”
He said job creation involves taxes, a good work force and regulations.
“We have a great work force, but we’re heavy on taxes and regulations,” Johnson said. “We need some regulations, but we are over-regulating.”