In today's Problem-Solver's Daily, lawmakers should channel their inner George Washington, Governors from different sides of the aisle find solutions and the ugliest fight on health care is coming.
In today's Problem-Solver's Daily, lawmakers should channel their inner George Washington, Governors from different sides of the aisle find solutions and the ugliest fight on health care is coming.
Yesterday The New York Times' Peter Baker wrote about the No Labels Make the Presidency Work! action plan. Now, No Labels has launched the Make the Presidency Work! site, where you can add your name to those calling for reform, contact the presidential candidates asking them to support the plan, and learn more about each reform idea
We elect presidents to change the way our government works, but they have been powerless to reorganize departments for decades. The No Labels solution: Give presidents the same power to reorganize their branch of government given to every president from Franklin Roosevelt to Ronald Reaga
Rep. Jim Cooper of Tennessee writes for the No Labels blog that friendships across the aisle and between branches of the government--like that of President Ronald Reagan and Speaker Tip O’Neill--just don’t exist anymore. That’s why we want the president to meet with opposition leaders at least four times a year.
Some in both major parties are frustrated by the Senate candidacy of independent Angus King. He refuses to say what party he'll caucus with if he wins in November, and in his own words, "I'll support Republicans when I think they're right, and I'll support Obama when I think he's right."
This morning the Supreme Court upheld the Affordable Care Act. The health care law could have been less contested if both sides had worked harder to find common ground on reform in the first place. Now that the Supreme Court has ruled, both sides must move forward and work together to solve America's many problems.
Yesterday, we announced that we will be releasing our Make the Presidency Work! action plan in the coming weeks. One of the No Labels reforms is to modify the presidency appointment process. Solutions include reducing the number of appointees subject to Senate confirmation, identifying a “slate that can’t wait” of critical nominees for expedited confirmation, and having up or down votes on presidential appointments.
Once upon a time, moderation in all things was the maxim by which most people tried to live their lives. Today moderation is merely boring. Extreme is the virtue of the cool, as well as of a populace whose attention span compares favorably to a gnat’s.