A two-time Republican governor says U.S. President Barack Obama has
resorted to "extremism" with what he called anti-growth policies and a
plan to divide Americans rather than unite them.
Indiana
Governor Mitch Daniels delivers the Republican response to President
Obama's State of the Union speech, Jan 24, 2012
In Tuesday's Republican response to the president's State of the Union
Address, Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels said the Obama administration
has sought to win favor with some Americans by castigating others.
He said the president's policies stifle the development of homegrown
energy and have canceled plans for what he called a "perfectly sane
pipeline", the proposed Keystone XL pipeline from western Canada to the
Gulf Coast of Texas, that supporters say would employ tens of thousands
of workers.
Mr. Obama has refused approval for the pipeline through the U.S. at
least temporarily, while pursuing policies aimed at reducing pollution
and climate change.
Daniels also said the move will raise consumer utility bills and fail to
improve human health or stabilize world temperatures, calling it a
"pro-poverty policy.'
He said Republicans prefer a pro-growth approach that supports private
sector jobs that will restore opportunity for all and generate public
revenues to pay the nation's bills. He said that during Mr. Obama's
three years in office, an "explosion of spending" has added trillions to
the national debt. He said the president has put the nation on a course
to make things radically worse in the years ahead.
Daniels said Republicans do not accept the view that the nation will be
one of "haves and have-nots." Instead, he said, Republicans want a
nation of "haves and soon-to-haves." He called for "a dramatically
simpler" tax system of fewer loopholes and lower rates. He said the
nation should maximize new domestic energy technologies, which he called
"the best break our economy has gotten in years."
Former Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain delivered a
response for the conservative Tea Party movement operating within the
Republican party. He called Mr. Obama's speech " a hodgepodge
[collection] of little ideas" and said what the country needs is more
comprehensive reform. He criticized the country's rising national debt
and called for a balanced budget and a simpler, fairer tax code.
Concluding, he said Washington has forgotten that it works for for the
American people and added that the people, in his words, "want our power
back."