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Tea Party Talking Points

April 10, 2009 | By Nathaniel Ward

Have you had enough of Congress borrowing, spending, and taxing away your future? It seems every time we turn around the ever-expanding government announces a new bailout package, "stimulus" plan or budget increase.

Next week, frustrated Americans around the country are participating in local tea parties on April 15, tax day. These tea parties will protest massive overspending and increases in the size and scope of the federal government.

Because the government is moving so quickly to pass these costly measures, the American people are having an increasingly hard time keeping up with the facts. But awareness of them remains extremely important to this debate.

That's why Heritage Foundation experts have compiled a list of talking points you can use to help get out the facts about the President's budget and tax proposals, as well as viable alternatives to both. (Click here to download a printable version in .pdf format.)

Heritage experts are working every day to get your voices heard in the halls of Congress. But it's just as important that you speak out in your own community. As Thomas Jefferson once said, "all tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." Your voice is your weapon — exercise it.

— Amanda Reinecker

Heritage Board of Trustees elects new chairman

The Heritage Foundation's Board of Trustees has elected Thomas Saunders as its new chairman. Saunders succeeds David Brown, who served as chairman since 1992.

"Tom's wide experience in the worlds of high finance and higher education proved to be perfect for Heritage," Heritage President Ed Feulner said during the April 2 announcement. "We're run like a business and aim to increase understanding that conservative policy solutions work. Tom is a steady leader who won't blink at the mounting challenges of this juncture in American history."

Saunders, president of a New York-based investment company, has long been a champion of American history and higher education. For his efforts, President Bush awarded him the National Humanities Medal in 2008.

— Amanda Reinecker

> Other Heritage work of note

  • For the new Congress, "a top priority will be to refocus on balancing the budget and ridding taxpayers of the burden the debt places on them," Heritage government relations expert Michael Franc says. However, as Franc points out, even those liberals in Congress who claim to be fiscally conservative are doing very little to stymie their spending-crazed colleagues.
  • Heritage energy expert Jack Spencer dismisses the draft legislation of the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 as lacking a crucial component of energy security. "If reducing carbon dioxide and other emissions, creating jobs, and promoting domestic energy sources were truly the objective," writes Spencer, "then nuclear energy should be central to the legislation."
  • The Heritage Foundation's Mackenzie Eaglen argues that "slashing the defense budget without first conducting a thorough strategic defense review, and without specifying which missions and commitments can be safely abandoned, would be the height of irresponsibility." Even though such a review is scheduled to come out next year, the Obama administration continues to make what she calls "arbitrary" defense cuts.
  • President Obama's address at the NATO summit "marked a low point in presidential speechmaking on foreign policy," says Heritage expert Nile Gardiner. Gardiner, the director of Heritage's Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom, says the "embarrassing spectacle" in Europe demonstrated the President's willingness to verbally bash his own country for the sake of global popularity.
  • "Americans don't need government in the business of building cars or telling us what type of cars we can buy," writes Heritage President Ed Feulner in the Washington Times. Yet with taxpayer funds continuously flowing into the industry, "CEObama, the car czar" will continue to micromanage and convince the auto experts that government knows best.

> In other news

Coming up at Heritage

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Nathaniel Ward is the Editor of MyHeritage.org—a website for members and supporters of The Heritage Foundation. Amanda Reinecker contributed to this report.