[Vision2020] In D.C., Bill Sali Quick to Take Lead

Pat Kraut pkraut at moscow.com
Thu Jan 11 09:37:05 PST 2007


Re: [Vision2020] In D.C., Bill Sali Quick to Take LeadAh! But is this article the truth or only part of the truth??

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Mark Solomon 
  To: Tom Hansen ; Vision 2020 
  Sent: Thursday, January 11, 2007 7:27 AM
  Subject: Re: [Vision2020] In D.C., Bill Sali Quick to Take Lead


  Too bad Sali probably doesn't read the NY Times which features an excellent article today on the effect of minimum wage laws on border towns in WA and ID. No, Moscow doesn't get a mention, but Post Falls and Clarkston do.


  http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/11/us/11minimum.html?hp&ex=1168578000&en=bf304392cdc5baf4&ei=5094&partner=homepage


  Mark




  At 6:06 AM -0800 1/11/07, Tom Hansen wrote:
    >From today's (January 11, 2007) Spokesman Review -

    What Rep. Sali voted against:
    HR 1 - Homeland security measures
    HR 2 - Increase of minimum wage

    What Rep. Sali is sponsoring:
    HR 26 - Commends Boise State University for their victory in the Fiesta Bowl
    (other bills establishing English as the official US language and a
    balnced-budget amendment)

    ---------------------------------------------------------------

    In D.C., Bill Sali quick to take lead
    Sense of humor key to his approach
    Parker Howell
    Staff writer
    January 11, 2007

    New Idaho Congressman Bill Sali proposed a bill Wednesday to combat obesity
    by reducing the Earth's gravity, saying that's no more unreasonable than the
    Democrats' legislation to increase the federal minimum wage.

    Both defy "natural laws," he said.

    "The well-intentioned desire to help the poor apparently will not be
    restrained by the rules and principles of the free market that otherwise do
    restrain American businesses and workers," Sali told the House of
    Representatives. "Apparently, Congress can change the rules that would
    otherwise affect the affairs of mankind."

     
    The Democratic-controlled House voted 315-116 to raise the federal minimum
    wage to $7.25 an hour, with more than 80 Republicans joining Democrats to
    pass it. But Sali stuck to his stance that the market, not government,
    should determine how much workers are worth to employers.

    "Obviously, it was a facetious notion to suspend the laws of gravity," he
    told The Spokesman-Review by phone from Washington, D.C., about his "Obesity
    Reduction and Health Promotion Act," which proposed helping Americans shed
    pounds by cutting gravity by 10 percent. "The same is true of the act we
    took today."

    In his first few days on the job, Sali, 52, has been elected leader of the
    small freshman class of Republicans, was invited to a meeting with President
    Bush and voted against several bills sponsored by Democrats.

    Although Sali spent 16 years as a state representative from Kuna, moving to
    Washington, D.C., has taken some getting used to, he said.

    "Things are so much bigger in terms of scale and scope here," he said. "In
    the Idaho Legislature, for example, I didn't have any staff. It was just
    me."

    He now has to deal with OSHA inspections of his office and training his
    employees in ethics and anti-discrimination policies, he said.

    As president of his class, he is helping fellow freshmen learn legislative
    processes and procedures, he said. On the advice of past class presidents,
    he is coordinating social events with new Democrats - both for building
    relationships and for the "practical benefit" of moving legislation.

    Sali and a small group of other legislators met with President Bush at the
    White House last week to discuss the Iraq war.

    "It was really something to be in there," he said. "It was kind of one of
    those 'pinch me' moments."

    He said Bush has "spent a lot of time listening" to military commanders and
    will act on their advice.

    "The notion that we're going to end sectarian violence over there, I think,
    is not even on the table; the president expressed that through a number of
    his people," he said, adding that making peace between warring factions is
    "not achievable."

    "I don't think that's our job. I do think our job is to help make sure this
    fledgling Iraqi government is going to stand on its own two feet," he said.
    "There's a bunch of pent-up emotion over there and a lot of pent-up desire.
    We may end up with a civil war before they get things straightened out. In
    the affairs of mankind, sometimes that's what you need."

    Sali has also participated in several House votes, including the
    $2.10-an-hour minimum wage increase, to take effect over two years. The
    increase is arbitrary, not tied to how much an employee's work is really
    worth, he said.

    "It's just to give people a perceived pay raise," he said. "The underlying
    problem is government spending."

    His obesity speech is characteristic of the congressman's outspoken style,
    said former colleagues from the Idaho Legislature.

    "That's his sense of humor," said Rep. Frank Henderson, R-Post Falls.

    Rep. Phil Hart, R-Athol, agreed, recalling a time Sali proposed licensing
    legislators when lawmakers discussed licensing contractors. Even though he
    didn't plan to introduce it, he actually held up a completed bill.

    "He's a very principled man, and he's not afraid to stand by himself if he
    has to," Hart said. "I think he's already showing that. He hasn't changed
    since he's been in the Legislature."

    But Rep. George Sayler, D-Coeur d'Alene, said using the logic of Sali's
    obesity proposal, legislators should revoke government regulations that
    benefit businesses as well.

    Congressional Democrats will likely succeed in their "100 Hours" plan to
    pass several bills within the first 100 working hours of the new Congress,
    Sali said. But he said Democrats are circumventing the committee process and
    claiming to know what Americans need, which is "elitist" and "arrogant."

    "If they were trying to do what's right, they would be spending the time to
    go through the committee process," he said. "I've always been a real
    advocate of slowing down the legislative process and giving everyone the
    opportunity to have their say."

    So far, Sali has voted against "pay-as-you-go" rules designed to prevent
    legislators from adding to the national debt. He said it will lead to "tax
    increases combined with cuts to programs like defense."

    He has also voted against legislation that would add another committee with
    oversight power over intelligence. Adding one actually counters the Sept. 11
    Commission's findings by adding another layer of bureaucracy, he said.

    Sali has signed up to co-sponsor amendments to balance the budget and make
    English the official U.S. language, he said.

    He and fellow Idaho Republican Rep. Mike Simpson are co-sponsors of H.R. 26,
    which commends the Boise State University football team on its recent win
    against Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl, he said. He attended the game, calling
    it "an indescribable experience."

    The bill will "probably pass on a consent calendar," he said. "It will be a
    nice piece of congressional history."

    ---------------------------------------------------------------

    Seeya round town, Moscow.

    Tom Hansen
    Moscow, Idaho

    "Forty percent of the mass of every tree in the forest is crude oil.  Stop
    and think about that.  We call them fossil fuels because they used to be
    live stuff . . . now in the ground is turned into crude oil."

    - Bill Sali (September 21, 2006)




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