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Cruz, Paul Confirmed to Speak Next Month at RLC Convention in Nashua

NASHUA, NH – Senators Ted Cruz and Rand Paul are both confirmed as speakers at the 2015 Biennial National Convention of the Republican Liberty Caucus, a four day event in Nashua, New Hampshire that begins Thursday, October 8th.

“We’re thrilled to have Senators Cruz and Paul at the convention,” said Republican Liberty Caucus (RLC) Chairman Matt Nye. “Both men are powerful advocates for liberty; they have fantastic track records and offer a true alternative to the status quo.”

Cruz and Paul join an impressive lineup of speakers at the convention, including best selling author Peter Schiff of Euro Pacific Capital, media personality and author Wayne Allyn Root, noted economist Mark Skousen, tax reduction advocate Grover Norquist of American for Tax Reform, and Michael Steele, the former Chairman of the Republican National Committee.

The RLC National Convention brings together liberty activists from across the nation to organize and influence policy with the goal of returning the Republican Party to its core values of limited government, free enterprise and individual liberty. The features a presidential straw poll, informational panels, grassroots activist training and dozens of exhibitors.

Senators Cruz and Paul have consistently been the top two vote getters at straw polls conducted at RLC events around the country during the last 18 months or so, and Nye expects both to make a solid showing at the convention.

“The 2016 presidential primary is a true milestone for the liberty Republican movement,” said Nye. “This is the first time liberty Republicans have more than one candidate to choose from, and it will be interesting to see how our members and activists react to the way each candidate has carved out his niche during the course of the year.”

The Senators will be speaking on Friday October 9th in the middle of a schedule full of important issue panels and valuable activist training. You can learn more and register at the convention web site here.

RLC National Vice Chairman Lopez Challenges Chairman Nye for Top Leadership Spot

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In July of this year individuals on the National board that were eligible under RLC bylaws to seek the offices of Chairman and Vice Chairman were asked to declare their intentions so we could properly allocate time and resources at the convention for the business meeting and officer elections.

National Chairman Matt Nye announced he would be seeking re-election as Chairman, and National Vice Chairman Ed Lopez announced he would be seeking re-election as Vice Chairman. You can review the meeting minutes here.

This week Vice Chairman Lopez announced to the National Board on our monthly board call that he had been reflecting on his participation within the RLC and had decided to run for Chairman. With less than a month to go to convention, Vice Chairman Lopez announced not just his candidacy, but an entire slate of prospective Officers and Board Members which you can find here.

Because we are a 100% grassroots organization and elections are one of the primary reasons our members attend our biennial convention, I thought it important to make the membership aware of this important development.

If you haven’t yet made arrangements to attend convention, and want to have a say in the direction and leadership of the RLC, I encourage you to register here today. The business meeting begins at 8am on Friday, October 9th. I hope we’ll see you there!

RLC Endorses Matt Bevin for Governor in Kentucky

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This week the national board of the Republican Liberty Caucus (RLC) voted unanimously to endorse Matt Bevin in the race for Governor of Kentucky. Kentucky has become a key state, leading for liberty at the federal level with Thomas Massie in the House and Rand Paul in the Senate. We expect Matt Bevin to provide that same sort of leadership in state government.

Bevin’s background in business, his support for limited government and his mission of protecting the people of Kentucky from an overreaching federal government make him a strong champion of liberty, and the kind of candidate the RLC strives to see elected.

In this off-year election season Bevin has already distinguished himself with his common sense stand on the controversial marriage issue. In the vacuum created by Governor Beshear’s failure to act in the Rowan County Clerk case, Bevin stepped up with an outside the box solution that could solve this sort of problem in Kentucky and nationwide.

“It is utterly unnecessary that Rowan County clerk, Kim Davis, is sitting in a jail cell, when there is a simple solution that would respect the rights of every Kentuckian,” said Bevin. “Two consenting adults should not need to ask for permission from the government to enter into a contractual relationship – a license should not be needed.”

RLC National Chairman Matt Nye agrees the solution is less government, but finding candidates who both hold that belief and follow through on it once elected to office is difficult.

“Matt Bevin has already shown he has the courage and common sense to address the difficult challenges Kentucky faces,” said RLC Chairman Matt Nye. “We desperately need more Republicans like Bevin, who will stand up for the best interests of the people and for Constitutionally limited government; he has pledged to stand up for all Kentuckians, not just the ones who agree with him, and that is a level of honesty and commitment we find inspiring.”

Members of the RLC will be working hard in the next year to promote Matt Bevin and Republican candidates like him in order to return the GOP to its founding principles of limited government, free enterprise and individual liberty.

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More information on the Matt Bevin campaign is at http://www.mattbevin.com
Information on current and past RLC endorsees and office holders can be found at http://www.rlc.org/

RLC National Board Adopts Resolution to Restore the Rule of Law

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As a symbolic protest against out of control government at all levels, the National Board of the Republican Liberty Caucus has adopted the following resolution: 

Whereas the plain wording of the 10th Amendment to the Constitution for the United States of America is binding law;

Be it resolved that;

 

No federal law, agency, program or international treaty that depends upon authority not specifically granted by the Constitution for the United States of America shall be valid within the United States of America;

 

Any federal agency, law, program or international treaty transcending authority specifically granted by the Constitution for the United States of America is null and void;

 

Unconstitutional laws, agencies, programs and treaties have created both problems and dependencies that will take time to rectify;

 

All unconstitutional federal powers, delegations, laws, programs, treaties and entities that cannot be immediately nullified must be phased out within no more than ten years.

Rand Paul Makes Big Marks Out West

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    This past week Kentucky Senator Rand Paul made a campaign trip through western states and got a big reception from local Republican Liberty Caucus chapters and large crowds of enthusiastic supporters from Utah to Alaska.

    Calling out Donald Trump for being a “fake conservative” and promoting a non-interventionist foreign policy and substantial tax cuts he was well received by crowds which were noticeably younger and more diverse than those drawn by other GOP candidates.

    Western states with late primaries don’t get a lot of campaign stops, but these states have voters who tend to be more libertarian leaning, younger and demographically more receptive to Paul’s message so the trip made good sense in a nontraditional campaign. With the media is being dominated by a single fringe candidate Paul is working the Republican base where personal appeals matter more than media hype.

    In Washington Paul took Trump to task for his use of eminent domain and violation of individual property rights. “This whole thing with Trump is insane,” said Paul. “This is a guy who has used eminent domain to enrich himself.”

    At his Washington speech he was introduced by Matt Dubin, Vice Chairman of the Republican Liberty Caucus of Washington State who said “Rand Paul is the kind of Republican who can win in the state of Washington…Can Washington stand with Rand?” And the enthusiastic crowd clearly agreed that they could.

    Paul was eloquent in his defense of the increasingly abused bill of rights, saying: “To defend the Second Amendment, you have to defend the Fourth Amendment, the Fifth Amendment, the Sixth Amendment and the First Amendment…The problem with the Republican Party, and why we don’t win, is we are not for what we are supposed to be for?”

    His remarks were clearly directed at the other candidates whose records on civil liberties and the Bill of Rights are dubious or in some cases downright hostile to individual liberty.

    After the Seattle event Matt Dubin summarized why Senator Paul appeals to Washington voters:

    “He would not interfere with Washington’s legal marijuana or same sex marriage laws, he would end racially discriminatory mandatory sentencing, he would reform civil forfeiture laws, he would end bulk surveillance of people’s cell phone and credit card records, he would bring our troops home from pointless wars and interventions all over the world, he would enforce the 6th amendment right to a speedy trial, he would repeal the laws allowing indefinite detention of Americans without criminal charges, he would fight the crony capitalism status quo embraced by both parties, he would oppose bailouts of big banks and big corporations, and he would return authority and money to our communities, instead of forcing us to continue sending both to the other Washington and then beg for some of it back. Simply put, Rand is a new kind of Republican. One who has consciously worked for years to broaden the base of the party and to remake the GOP as the party of justice for all, not just the few. There is no longer a reason to choose between civil liberties and fiscal responsibility. You can have both. You deserve both.”

    One of Senator Paul’s most successful stops was at the NSA data center near Orem, Utah. He posted a selfie to Facebook and commented: “On my way to the airport, but we decided to stop by the NSA facility in Utah. When I become President, we’ll convert it into a Constitutional Center to study the Fourth Amendment! Bulk data collection must end! What would you turn it into?”

    Senator Paul has already succeeded in ending bulk collection of telephone data – at least temporarily – calling it a “clear and continuing violation of the Fourth Amendment.” Republican opponents, including Jeb Bush and Chris Christie, have openly said they want to expand NSA spying. He would like to make the shutdown permanent.

    He has also been vocal in opposing the drone war and has broken new ground for Republicans in reaching out to African American voters over abuses of due process and civil liberties around the nation. As Donald Trump talks about limiting trade and immigration, Senator Paul wants to discourage illegal immigration by making work visas and legal immigration more accessible and is strongly for free trade to bring American products to the world and businesses home to America with low business taxes instead of costly tariffs.

    Senator Paul is breaking new ground in the west with a non-traditional campaign which challenges political conventions and the party establishment over genuine areas of concern and principles of Republican government which have been neglected since the days of Ronald Reagan.

    John Baucum Picked to Lead Texas Young Republicans

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    The RLC of Houston’s John Baucum has won election as Chairman of the Texas Young Republicans Federation. He is expected to continue moving the YRs and the Party as a whole towards Liberty.

    (CORPUS CHRISTI, TX – August 16th, 2015) – This weekend while many here in Texas were celebrating Ron Paul’s birthday with Judge Napolitano and Tom Woods, John Baucum of the Republican Liberty Caucus of Houston was hitting it big in Corpus Christi at the Young Republicans of Texas statewide convention where he ended up elected as their State Chairman.

    John has been a tireless activist for liberty who has worked with the RLC and Republicans Against Marijuana Prohibition and lobbied the legislature on various issues of concern to RLC members. Super Activist Corie Whalen Stephens describes him as “the perfect person to grow an inclusive and forward-thinking GOP.”

    The Texas YRs have made a mark in recent years for leading the party on Liberty issues and have worked closely with the RLC in Houston and statewide. They made news last year for endorsing the legalization of same sex marriage and fighting to make the party platform more inclusive.

    Under John’s leadership we can expect to find them a powerful ally in the fight to reform the party platform and promote Liberty in the state and nationwide.

    Our Opinion: Minimum Wage Increases Hurt Those They Intend to Help

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    On August 5th, Ohio based fast food chain Wendy’s held their second quarter conference call, in which they were asked how the recent push for a minimum wage increase would affect the business. The response was something that many people have been saying for some time, but certainly one that bears repeating. The first response was from Wendy’s CFO, Todd A. Penegor:

    “The impact hasn’t been material at the moment, but we continue to look at initiatives on how we do work to offset any impact to future wage inflation through technology initiatives, whether that’s customer self-order kiosks, whether that’s automating more in the back of the house in the restaurant, and you’ll see a lot more coming on that front later this year from us.”

    When the follow-up question centered on taking price increases over staff cuts, CEO Emil Brolick stated:

    “…our franchisee will slightly likely look at the opportunity to reduce overall staff, look at the opportunity to certainly reduce hours and any other cost reduction opportunities, not just price. There are some people out there who naively say that these wages can simply be passed along in terms of price increases. I don’t think that the average franchisee believes that, and there will have to be other consequences, which is why we have pointed out that unfortunately we believe the some of these increases will clearly end up hurting the people that they are intended to help.”

    This is just the latest example of what will most likely happen as the minimum wage is raised beyond a sustainable amount. The argument of “greedy capitalists should pay their employees more out of the company profits” also doesn’t help much in this scenario. The domestic profit for Wendy’s is around $120 million a year, and there are approximately 37,000 employees. If each of those employees works 2,000 hours a year, then Wendy’s could afford to pay each employee an additional $1.62 an hour (if they want run a business without making a profit…). If the minimum wage rises above $9 an hour, they will either have to raise prices or increase automation, which will reduce employee hours and ultimately employees.

    The other “hidden” cost of the minimum wage increase is that most likely, more than one of these options will be taken. The most likely course of action, as eluded to by Mr. Brolick, will be to increase prices, at least slightly, while decreasing employee count and hours. Not only will those who need the increase the most be paid less through decreased hours, and possibly loss of a job, but they will then need to pay more for the things they need, because companies will need to increase their prices to cover their newly increased cost of production.  Overall, increasing the minimum wage will hurt, not help, those who need it the most.

    Minimum wage laws also have an amazing ability to constrict the workforce and get rid of low paying jobs, jobs that could train people and lead to higher wages. Remember the friend from high school who worked at the local gas station as an attendant? He’s a master mechanic now because he learned about cars from pumping gas and doing oil changes for minimum wage. Remember working at the local grocery store as a bagger or working as an usher at the local movie theater after school and on the weekends to save some money for summer? People can’t do that anymore, because those jobs don’t even exist now.

    If the intent of minimum wage increases is to help those in lower level jobs, it doesn’t work. A better way to help those people who make minimum wage is to stop making their job a higher paying opportunity. Most companies (and the federal government) have caps that people can make at certain levels of employment. For instance, an entry level position may have a cap of earning $9.60 an hour. If you want to make more than that, you need to advance in the company, take additional training, or find another company willing to pay you more for your skills.  By forcing companies to increase the pay of minimum wage employees, government is taking away an incentive to advance, and to learn. In fact, they are taking away the very vehicle that makes that learning possible: a paying job.

     

    Bill Yarbrough,

    Chairman, Republican Liberty Caucus of Ohio

    Act Now to Stop CISA

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      After a year of distractions, the Senate has managed to get the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (‘CISA’) out of committee and is preparing to pass it this week.

      CISA aggressively expands government surveillance powers on the internet and encourages corporate compliance in government spying with bribes and bullying, broad immunity clauses for companies, and vague definitions of key terms. It makes Facebook, Google and your ISP do the government’s dirty work for them, collecting your data and sharing it with the NSA and FBI, all without a search warrant or any due process of law.

      The #StopCISA campaign is encouraging people to send faxes to their Senators this week to express their concerns with the bill and stop it from being rushed through in early August.

      According to the ACLU:

      “The bill would create a massive loophole in our existing privacy laws by allowing the government to ask companies for ‘voluntary’ cooperation in sharing information, including the content of our communications, for cybersecurity purposes. But the definition they are using for the so-called ‘cybersecurity information’ is so broad it could sweep up huge amounts of innocent Americans’ personal data.”

      We know from past experience the chilling effect which these ‘voluntary’ government programs have. Companies feel threatened and become overly cooperative and your data becomes incredibly vulnerable. This allows the government to get away with gross violations of your privacy and security without any search warrant or due process of law.

      The government is not protecting your interests. They should be writing laws to provide additional security for your online communications, making clear that the 4th amendment applies online, not building loopholes to stop whistleblowers.

      The Obama administration is not our friend on this so we need to stop it dead in the House. The ACLU points out that “The Obama Administration has brought more ‘leaks’ prosecutions against government whistleblowers and members of the press than all previous administrations combined…If misused by this or future administrations, CISA could eliminate due process protections for such investigations, which already favor the prosecution.”

      We urge you to write your Senators. Use the handy tool provided by the #StopCISA campaign at http://stopcyberspying.com

      Republican Liberty Caucus Officially Charters Wisconsin Chapter

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      Group will focus on voter education and issue advocacy related to individual rights, limited government and voluntary, cooperative markets.

      (Madison, WI) – Wisconsin has a newly approved charter of the Republican Liberty Caucus (RLC-WI). The charter, accepted on May 24, makes Wisconsin one of over 30 official state charters of the national organization. Official recognition of the RLC-WI gives state activists a stronger voice in the national liberty movement. It also provides an opportunity to send delegates to the upcoming national RLC convention in October and to participate fully in any presidential endorsement votes.

      “With presidential hopeful Scott Walker coming from the state of Wisconsin, I think it is very important the activists within the liberty movement there have a unified voice,” said RLC National Chair Matt Nye. “We in the RLC, and other voters around the country, need to hear what they have to say about their Governor and his record on liberty issues.”

      State charters have their own bylaws and boards and the ability to endorse candidates up to and including the state level. Federal candidates, however, must be recommended to the RLC National Board for endorsement.

      “The RLC can endorse presidential candidates, but it requires a 2/3 majority of the state charters,” Nye said. “Now that Wisconsin is an officially recognized RLC charter, they have a voice in this process.”

      One of the RLC-WI’s first major projects will be the development of a legislative scorecard that identifies key votes and scores Wisconsin’s elected officials based on their actions. The project aligns closely to the new charter’s focus on issues-based advocacy and education on liberty positions among Republican Party of Wisconsin (RPW) members and officials, various RPW-associated organizations, and the general public. The charter will also be working to recruit and elect to office candidates who support its stated principles.

      “It’s important to ensure that the public is informed on issues and aware of how to make their voice heard in the political process,” said Jackie Johnson, newly elected Chair of the RLC-WI. “An informed and engaged electorate is essential in holding our elected officials accountable to their constituencies during their entire tenure in office, not just during campaign season.”

      Johnson noted a growing frustration among citizens of all political persuasions in relationship to politicians who curry votes by making promises during election season, only to flip-flop or make excuses when the opportunity actually arises to stand by their party platform and make good on campaign rhetoric.

      “A sound bite during election season is easy,” Johnson said. “It’s more difficult to stand for liberty when it means taking a tough vote or bucking pressure from party leaders. We need solid, principled statesmanship at all levels of government.”

      The Republican Liberty Caucus is a voluntary 527 organization dedicated to grassroots efforts within the Republican Party to advance the principles of individual rights, limited government and cooperative, voluntary markets. Founded in 1991, the national organization is the oldest continuously operating organization within the Republican liberty movement.