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Foxx, House Vote to Keep Bipartisan Welfare Reform Strong
Washington, DC,
September 20, 2012
"The President might not like Article 1 of the Constitution, but he can't ignore it. His latest attempt to side-step Congress and undermine the successful bipartisan welfare reforms of 1996 will not be tolerated by the members of this House."
FOXX, HOUSE VOTE TO KEEP BIPARTISAN WELFARE REFORM STRONG Congresswoman Virginia Foxx today praised the successful passage of House Joint Resolution 118 from the House of Representatives. The legislation will prevent President Obama from unilaterally imposing an alternative policy to the successful bipartisan welfare reforms of 1996. “The President might not like Article 1 of the Constitution, but he can’t ignore it. His latest attempt to side-step Congress and undermine the successful bipartisan welfare reforms of 1996 will not be tolerated by the members of this House. “Republicans have a clear record of strengthening the work requirements at the heart of the 1996 welfare reform bill, and we stand with the 83 percent of Americans who want to see them upheld, and not undermined through the substitution of a weaker policy. “Rather than weakening welfare’s work requirements, the President should acknowledge the success of these bipartisan reforms and focus himself on removing tax and regulatory barriers from the private sector so that Americans can find jobs.” House Joint Resolution 118 will counter the overreach of the Executive by:
An identical measure to H.J. Res. 118 is being considered in the Senate.
Four Facts About Today’s Vote to Preserve Key Welfare Reforms Today the House will consider a joint resolution disapproving of the Obama administration’s attempt to undermine welfare reform. Education and the Workforce Committee Chairman John Kline (R-MN) joined Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp (R-MI) and Republican Study Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-OH) in introducing H.J.Res. 118 to block this latest example of executive overreach and preserve policies that have helped millions of low-income families. Here are four facts about today’s vote on H.J.Res. 118:
Fact #1. The resolution protects bipartisan reforms that have successfully helped families in need.
Fact #2. The resolution reins in the president’s unlawful and unprecedented waiver scheme.
Fact #3. The resolution demonstrates the right of Congress to review the president’s welfare waiver rule.
Fact #4. The resolution stops a flawed rule that will lead to more government dependency. The facts are clear: today’s vote on this important resolution will protect policies that have helped millions of families in need and rein in the president’s unlawful executive overreach. To learn more about H.J.Res. 118, click here. # # # |