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  • 06 Feb 2012 8:09 PM | Brandon Payne (Administrator)

    Courtesy of YallPolitics.com

    Governor Haley Barbour


    Remarks to Celebrate President Ronald Reagan’s 101st Birthday
    Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation & Library
    February 6, 2012

    Thank you. It is a high honor for me to be asked to speak at the celebration of President
    Reagan’s one hundred and first birthday, and I want to thank Mrs. Reagan and The Ronald
    Reagan Library for inviting me.

    As RNC Chairman in 1994 I was delighted President Reagan allowed me to organize an eightythird birthday dinner for a couple of thousand of his closest friends in Washington. It was a big GOP Gala, featuring Lady Margaret Thatcher and launching the 1994 campaign that led to the greatest mid-term majority sweep of the twentieth century.

    As always, the President was spectacular, and it turned out to be his last public event in
    Washington.

    That November he wrote me a very generous note about the ’94 victory, and according to
    Annelise and Marty Anderson’s book, Reagan: A Life in Letters, that note was the last personal letter President Reagan ever wrote anyone.

    So, this opportunity is not only heady stuff for a boy from Yazoo City, Mississippi, it is a unique chance for me, his one-time White House Political Director, to put the 2012 presidential election in the context of Ronald Reagan’s Republican Party.

    Of course a hundred and one years ago, Ronald Reagan was born into a Democratic family, and he remained a Democrat for decades.

    But the Republican Party of 1911 was in what would become a familiar state: a divided party, with two wings.

    The next year Woodrow Wilson, a Democrat and one of only three men elected and re-elected president without ever receiving a majority of the popular vote, won the White House because of the split. He got to run against two Republican presidents: Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft, so great was the rift in our party.

    For nearly seventy more years the Republicans were basically divided. Dewey vs. Robert Taft; Rockefeller vs. Goldwater; even Ford vs. Reagan.

    But after 1980 Ronald Reagan put a stop to that; he melded the GOP into one broad mainstream. It was, and is, the conservative party of the United States, while the Democrats are the liberal party.

    He didn’t unite our party by pushing pastels, or trying to find the lowest common denominator. Reagan never had his finger up in the wind, trying to figure out what to be for.

    He flew under bold, bright colors, and everybody knew where he stood.

    He stood for individual freedom and personal responsibility; for smaller, limited government, with lower taxes and less spending, with rational regulation. He was a free trader and an internationalist, who realized that the path to peace was through strength.

    Certainly he was the most conservative president of my lifetime; and the most successful.
    In the 2012 campaign every candidate has invoked Reagan and compared him or herself to
    Reagan. I don’t blame them a bit.

    But let me make sure one thing about Reagan’s Republican Party is clear: Reagan did not
    demand or expect everyone to agree with him on every issue. He wasn’t a purist.

    Indeed one of my favorite Reaganisms is, “Remember, a fellow who agrees with you eighty
    percent of the time is your friend and ally, he is not some twenty percent traitor.”

    President Reagan had an incredibly loyal following and one reason for this was that he
    recognized and tolerated the fact that his supporters didn’t agree with him on everything. They knew where he stood, understood their differences on this issue or that, but they supported him.

    In 2012 some candidates are vying to be the most conservative candidate, and some voters are seeking purity in their choice.

    In politics, purity is a dead dog loser. You need unity, and purity is the enemy of unity.
    In a party that will receive some seventy million votes in the November election, it’s silly to
    think that everybody will agree on everything. My wife and I don’t agree on everything.

    Reagan not only knew all his supporters wouldn’t agree with him on every issue, he also knew he had to compromise in order to achieve his policy goals.

    After all, Reagan had a Democratic majority in the House every day he was president. While there were still quite a few conservative House Democrats back then, the President had to compromise to get big things passed, and did he ever get them passed: the Reagan economic plan; Social Security Reform; Immigration Reform; the 1986 Tax Reform; to name a few.

    These were big and hard to get enacted. But Reagan knew he had a Democratic House, and he had the skills and the commitment to negotiate the deals and pass the laws that helped end the malaise that had led to the worst recession since the Depression. His work made it Morning in America again. Indeed these policies led to the greatest explosion of economic growth and expanding prosperity in the history of the world.

    For President Reagan politics was an aspiration, not a destination. He saw – and strove to reach that Shining City on the Hill, but he never imagined he’d get there in one fell swoop.
    Instead, he moved us toward that ideal place and the principles it represented. Moving us is what motivated him. Despite his career as an actor, it was not the role to which Reagan aspired, but our achieving the goals.

    He set the highest goals, but accepted progress toward those goals, one or a few steps at a time. Ronald Reagan had an ideology, a strong philosophy with matching principles; but he was not an ideologue. He didn’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

    We admire him today not only for his vision but for his accomplishments. They resulted from his ability to accept imperfect improvement on the road to something even better.

    President Reagan brought us together because he pushed us in the right direction. Results
    oriented, he left us a legacy of principled pragmatism.

    That gave us a united Republican Party.

    It also gave American presidents a model of leadership that is sorely missing today: a
    determination to work effectively with Congress, while being tolerant of those in either party who had different views from his own.

    To be a good Republican you didn’t and don’t have to agree with President Reagan or anybody else on everything. Yes, we’re the conservative party of the United States, but we are a big broad party with a wide mainstream. It’s a party that in Reagan’s day received sixty percent of the popular vote for president and carried every state but one.

    Reagan’s vision and the results it produced meant sixty percent of American voters voted for him; and we must always run our party so that the sixty or so percent of voters, who are willing to vote for our candidate for president or governor, feel comfortable and welcome in the GOP, not that they will agree on every issue.

    Both our eventual nominee and our supporters know the stakes of this year’s presidential
    election. Whoever we nominate will not be perfect.

    But whoever wins our nomination will, along with President Obama, present America with two dramatically different visions of our nation and of the principles and policies needed for our future. Those two visions will be farther apart than any competing visions in our lifetime; and possibly ever.

    The Obama Administration program was the biggest lurch to the left in our history. More
    spending, more borrowing, more taxing, more government control over the economy and our lives. And with miserable results.

    And that is what the 2012 election must be about: Obama’s policies and the terrible results
    caused by those policies.

    Compare for a moment the record of the Obama-Pelosi-Reid program with that of Ronald
    Reagan’s program, each having come into office facing enormous problems, economic and
    otherwise.

    While the Obama campaign and its allies in the news media are hailing the “great”
    unemployment figures, this recovery is anemic, especially compared to the Reagan expansion of
    1983 forward.

    In fact, as Phil Gramm recently noted in the Wall Street Journal, Reagan’s policies ignited a
    recovery so powerful that if it were repeated today, per capita GDP would be $5,694 higher than it is with Obama’s slow growth policies. That would equal $22,776 more for a family of four.

    And instead of millions having dropped out of the workforce, some 16.9 million more Americans would have a job if the Reagan growth rate replaced the tepid outcomes under Obama. What kind of recovery is it when 1.2 million Americans became so discouraged that they quit looking for work last month alone? In January five times more people quit looking for work than got a job!

    Unlike Reagan, Obama can’t run on his record. If this election is about Obama’s policies and the awful results those policies have produced, he’ll be back in Chicago next year, organizing communities.

    But we Republicans have to make the campaign a referendum on Obama’s record, and not get hung up on purity from our nominee.

    In 1980, I’m told President Carter’s political aides celebrated Reagan’s nomination, considering him the easiest Republican for Carter to beat. They thought moderate Republicans and Independents would abandon him; find him too conservative.

    Of course, those moderates and Independents plus a lot of Democrats - who came to be known as Reagan Democrats - made 1980 a referendum on Carter’s record; asking themselves, “Am I better off today than I was four years ago?” And Ronald Reagan became the fortieth president in a rout.

    Our job is to set purity aside, and I think a lot of our fellow conservatives are coming to the
    conclusion that the stakes are too high to pursue perfection.

    More than anything else, people ask me, “Who has the best chance to beat Obama? That’s who I want to be for.”

    I remind them of Bill Buckley’s old adage, “Our duty is to be for the most conservative
    candidate who can win in November.” And remember, whoever we nominate will be far, far
    better than Obama.

    Let me close by saying that Ronald Reagan’s Republican Party must have a place for every voter who knows Barack Obama shouldn’t be president – and that’s a majority of Americans; and our mission is to make them feel welcome and needed as part of our effort: as voters, volunteers, or donors... and hopefully all three.

    Our campaign must make this election a referendum on Obama’s counterproductive policies and his record of failure.

    Our attitude must be one of unity, because Americans are right to say they are concerned, for the first time in their lives, that their children and grandchildren will not inherit the same country they inherited.

    The stakes of the election are that high, and if we practice what Ronald Reagan taught us, we will win a great victory in November.

    Thank you for this honor. I hope I have done the President’s legacy justice.

  • 06 Feb 2012 5:06 PM | Brandon Payne (Administrator)

    Congressman Steven Palazzo, candidate for re-election in Mississippi’s 4th Congressional district, is searching for volunteers to help him for the March 13th Republican Primary election. Please send your contact information to info@palazzoforcongress.com if you are interested in volunteering or would like a yard sign or bumper sticker or you may call 228-265-7820. His campaign office is located at 2202 25th Avenue, Suite B in Gulfport.

    Let me know if you have any questions.

    Thanks,

    Jake

    Jake DeVantier
    Political Director
    Palazzo for Congress
    901-485-8426

    jake@palazzoforcongress.com


  • 01 Feb 2012 7:17 PM | Brandon Payne (Administrator)

    Official Commentary Written Exclusively for the Harrison County Republican Club:

    Congressman Steven Palazzo:

    Last year in Congress, I spent my time working with the leadership team to ensure conservative Republicans' values and voices were heard in the House.  I voted on a budget that cut $6.2 trillion in government spending and reduced deficits by $4.2 trillion over the next ten years.  I voted to repeal and defund the government takeover of healthcare.  I voted in favor of the 27 conservative, job-creating bills that House Republicans sent to the Senate where Democrat leadership has continued to ignore them.  After closing out the first legislative session of the 112th Congress in 2011, I came home disappointed, but not discouraged.
    In a new year and a new Congress, conservatives face similar challenges.  President Obama has shown he remains commited to railroading the American people with backdoor appointments and continuing to stand in the way of good, job-creating policies, like allowing construction of the Keystone XL pipeline.  He has publicly stated that in this election year he will abandon all appearances of working with Congress to get anything done, choosing instead to make Congress his campaign opponent.  Rather than truly reflect on the state of our union, he resorted to divisive, flawed rhetoric that simply doesn't match up to the reality of the past three years.  And when given the choice to govern, he has made it clear he will once again ignore the budget deadline set for February 3rd, for the third time since taking office, making him the most delinquent president when it comes to delivering a budget. 
    I and many others in the House remain committed to staying the course and continuing to work to reverse the harmful policies from this administration.  I have worked with House Armed Services Republicans to bring forth an alternative solution to looming defense cuts proposes by this administration;  our plan would save $127 billion without putting our men and women in uniform out of work or putting our national security in jeopardy.  Just this week we are voting to repeal one of the worst pieces of the government take over of health care, the CLASS Act, which even Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has admitted is a costly, unworkable idea with "no viable path forward." And I remain committed to working for passage of the RESTORE Act, which will bring much of the BP oil-spill fines back to the Gulf Coast states, to those most affected by this devastating spill almost two years ago. 
    I was proud to be able to be with your group last August, and I look forward to being with you again sometime soon.  I'd also like to extend a personal invitation to join me and Majority Leader Eric Cantor this Saturday, February 4th, at the Gulfport Yacht Club.  For more information, please visit http://palazzoforcongress.com/news/save-the-date/
    Don't hesitate to let me know how my offices can be of assistance to you by visiting my official website at www.palazzo.house.gov.  Finally, I want to thank Harrison County Republicans for your continued interest and support in these crucial issues facing our nation.   Together, we are changing the conversation in Washington, and we will put our nation back on the path to prosperity and purpose once more.

    Official Commentary Written Exclusively for the Harrison County Republican Club:

  • 31 Jan 2012 6:53 AM | Brandon Payne (Administrator)

    Official Commentary Written Exclusively for the Harrison County Republican Club:

    Justice Court Judge Brandon Ladner:

    Thank you for the support in my campaign for Justice Court Judge. I
    am proud to represent Harrison County in this seat and I am excited to
    serve our community in this capacity.

    Harrison County is divided into two Judicial Districts. I am working in the First Judicial District, which is seated in Gulfport. Many may not know, but Harrison County completed new Justice Court Buildings for Gulfport and Biloxi during
    the previous year of 2011. These buildings are very attractive and
    sufficient to accomadate the duties of the Court. This will help
    provide professional effiency and appearance.

    I researched statistics for the previous year of 2011 to help inform you all of the involvment and role of Justice Court in our community. There were 8,411 civil cases filed through the Gulfport Jusitce Court Office in 2011. There were 12,783 criminal cases filed through the Gulfport Jusitce Court Office. The
    civil and criminal combined total 21,194 cases, which are only the statistics through one Judicial District in Harrison County. High numbers through the Court are not something to be proud of, but should be a concern for our community. I can assure you that the Harrison County Justice Court Judges are working hard dealing with everyday issues and we are directly involved with the community dealing with these cases. I am proud to have a part in this service and I l look forward to helping resolve our communities issues.

    You may contact the Harrison County Justice Court Offices as follows:
    Gulfport Office: 228) 865-4203
    Biloxi Office: 228) 435-8250

    Your Justice Court Judges by representative districts is as follows:
    District 1: Judge Albert Fountain (Biloxi)
    District 2: Judge Brandon Ladner (Gulfport)
    District 3: Judge Dianne Ladner (Gulfport)
    District 4: Judge Melvin Ray (Gulfport)
    District 5: Judge Bruce Strong (Biloxi)

    Official Commentary Written Exclusively for the Harrison County Republican Club:


     

     

     

     

     

  • 30 Jan 2012 11:06 PM | Brandon Payne (Administrator)

    Official Commentary Written Exclusively for the Harrison County Republican Club:

    State Senator Tony Smith:

    Wow, the last few weeks here in Jackson have been amazing.  No one could ever prepare you for this experience.  It reminds me much of being in the restaurant business…moments of boredom interrupted by moments of panic!

     

    I do want to say what an honor it is to serve the people of District 47 and have such wonderful friends and supporters in the Harrison County Republican Club. I do believe that the South Mississippi delegation is poised to make a great impact in our State.

     

    I am pleased with the committee assignments that I received from Lt. Governor Tate Reeves.  I will be serving on the following committees: Local & Private (vice chair), Insurance, Transportation & Highways, Finance, Public Health & Welfare and Public Property.

     

    I will be posting weekly updates on my Face Book page https://www.facebook.com/pages/Senator-Tony-Smith/280786901977500.

     

     

    Official Commentary Written Exclusively for the Harrison County Republican Club:

  • 30 Jan 2012 11:00 PM | Brandon Payne (Administrator)

    Official Commentary Written Exclusively for the Harrison County Republican Club:

     

    Gulfport Councilman R.Lee Flowers:

     

    Gulfport has a great year ahead of us. With the planned reopening of Gulfport's front yard, Jones Park, once again the jewel of the Mississippi Gulf Coast will be ready for public use. What better way to make that announcement than kicking it off with a three day celebration called Gulfport Music Fest. Our inaugural year was a great success in the streets of Downtown. We expect the attendance will continue to grow along with the number of acts this year.

    Along with the great events planned for this year, we have our challenges. Much of the infrastructure put into the ground as the subdivisions and neighborhoods were first built has begun to deteriorate. Just as many cities and the nation, Gulfport has to address our aging infrastructure while we continue to bring service to citizens that were annexed 18 years ago. By state law, the enterprise fund for water and sewer service must remain self sustaining. The council remains resolute in determining a pricing structure that allows customers to pay for only what they use while keeping the burden on those with limited incomes bearable.

    R.Lee Flowers

    Councilman, Ward 6

    Gulfport, Mississippi

    (228)265-0806

     

    Official Commentary Written Exclusively for the Harrison County Republican Club:

  • 28 Jan 2012 2:02 PM | Brandon Payne (Administrator)

    Official Commentary Written Exclusively for the Harrison County Republican Club:

    State Senator Sean Tindell:

    The first four weeks of the 2012 legislative session have been very busy working on new legislation, organizing committees, and meeting with various constituents and leaders about their concerns.   

    I feel honored to have been named the vice president of the tourism committee and appointed to serve as the secretary on appropriations.  In addition to those committees I was also appointed to serve on the following committees: Energy, Minerals, and Public Utilities, Corrections, Environmental Protection and Water Resources, Judiciary A, and Judiciary B.  Currently I am working on several bills that would strengthen our exploitation of vulnerable adult laws, lower taxes on tag renewals, and offer incentives for economic development on the Mississippi Gulf Coast.  If you would like to contact me feel free to email stindell@senate.ms.gov or call me at 228-342-5963. begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              228-342-5963      end_of_the_skype_highlighting

     

    Official Commentary Written Exclusively for the Harrison County Republican Club

  • 28 Jan 2012 1:52 PM | Brandon Payne (Administrator)

    Source: TheHill.com

    http://thehill.com/blogs/floor-action/senate/206873-wicker-to-boycott-cordray-hearing-to-protest-recess-appointments

    Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) on Thursday afternoon said he would boycott a planned hearing next week in which Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Director Richard Cordray will testify, as a way of protesting Cordray's recess appointment to that post when the Senate was not in recess.

    "Let me be explicitly clear," Wicker said on the Senate floor. "Richard Cordray is not the duly constituted director of the CFPB. His purported recess appointment does not comply with the Constitution, and is in fact a nullity.

    "I will not provide the administration with the appearance of legitimacy in this action, and I will therefore not be in attendance at next Tuesday's hearing."

  • 20 Jan 2012 11:49 AM | Brandon Payne (Administrator)

    The South Mississippi chair and vice chair assignments:

    Appropriations: Herb Frierson, Chairman

    Banking and Financial Services: Hank Zuber, Chairman

    Conservation and Water Resources: Jessica Upshaw, Chairman

    Constitution: Scott DeLano, Chairman

    Ethics: Manly Barton. Vice Chairman

    Fees and Salaries of Public Officers: John Read, Chairman

    Gaming: Richard Bennett, Chairman

    Marine Resources: Casey Eure, Chairman; Jeffrey Guice, Vice Chairman

    Rules: Mark Formby, Chairman

    http://billstatus.ls.state.ms.us/htms/h_cmtememb.xml

  • 20 Jan 2012 11:27 AM | Brandon Payne (Administrator)

    Courtesy of: www.YallPolitics.com

    Gulfport Mayor and PERS Commission Chairman George Schloegel spoke Wednesday at the Harrison County Republican Club, giving those in attendance a rundown of the work he and fellow Commission members recently undertook at the behest of former Governor Haley Barbour.

    Schloegel said the Public Employees' Retirement System isn't "completely broken but it needs some attention."

    The PERS Commission Chairman noted, "There's not as many people in the system coming into the program and people are living longer so we're paying out more. We're downsizing government, which is good, but there's not as many to support the program."

    According to Schloegel, PERS collected around 88 cents for every dollar it distributed in the 1980s. "The rule of thumb," he added, "is if you can stay around 80 cents you're doing pretty good. Then the legislature decided that we were doing so well why not add some benefits to retirees."

    The former CEO of Hancock Bank would not say if the Legislature erred, but he did add, "They were betting on the fact that the stock market would always go up. That was a bad bet to make."

    Now PERS collects around 62 cents for every dollar distributed and its unfunded liabilities have risen from $1.9 billion in 1998 to $12 billion in 2011.

    Schloegel said, "We would have to shut down all of state government for the next three years to balance it."

    The employer (meaning Mississippi taxpayers) contributed 2% to PERS in 1953; now the employer's portion sits at 14%. Employees' contributions to PERS in 1953 was 4%; now employees contribute 9%, something former Governor Barbour fought to raise in recent years seeing the poor road PERS was traveling.

    In this vein, the PERS Commission is recommending that the employer (again, taxpayers) and employees each contribute 7.5%.

    Schloegel noted that PERS is currently "$483 million in the hole for what we're paying out versus what we're taking in."

    As for the much debated and discussed 13th Check, the Chairman says the practice began as a way to offer a cost of living adjustment to retirees, "but the time value of money compounds the interest meaning a person receiving a $363 dollar monthly check could get a 13th check for some $8000" since the Legislature made the practice retroactive. He says this was something the Legislature and many others did not fully comprehend.

    PERS paid out some $1.6 billion this year. Of that figure, Schloegel noted the 13th Check is $400 million. He said, "If you give somebody something three consecutive times it becomes an entitlement."

    Schloegel also mentioned that the PERS Commission recommended that there ought to be a regular annual review/audit of PERS as constitutionally outlined. He says this is not currently being done. He further added that the report should be submitted to the State Treasurer or an independent agency for review.

    Another recommendation was that PERS should not keep all of its assets in the stock market. Such a practice can be unsafe given the recent volatility.

    Schloegel also promoted adding private citizens independent of the outcome of their decisions to the PERS Board. "It would be in the best interest of the taxpayers," he said.

    As for SLRP, the legislature's own special retirement plan, Schloegel said the benefit accounted for close to $1 million, not a significant expenditure to PERS. But the issue here isn't the cost necessarily; he noted, it was whether or not it was the right thing to do.

    The Chairman closed by acknowledging any solutions would not be easy given the passions the discussion creates, but the effort is indeed worth it. "We didn't get into this over night and we can't fix it over night. We can fix it over the next 10 years, gradually, but it's up to the legislature. The Commission was just a recommending body."

    Courtesy of: www.YallPolitics.com

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