Paul Ryan Gets His Way

Read Time:4 Minute, 40 Second

By  USDR.

Paul Ryan (R-WI) has agreed to become Speaker of the House after a week of drama.  This statement is from his Congressional  office:

“Tonight, I shared with my colleagues what I think it will take to have a unified conference and for the next speaker to be  successful. 

“Basically I made a few requests for what I think is necessary, and I asked to hear back by the end of the  week.

“First, we need to move from being an opposition party to a proposition party. Because we think the nation is on the wrong path, we have a duty to show the right one. Our next speaker needs to be a visionary  one.

“Second, we need to update our House rules so that everyone can be a more effective representative. This is, after all, the people’s house. But we need to do it as a team. And it needs to include fixes that ensure we don’t experience constant leadership challenges and  crisis.  

“Third, we, as a conference, should unify now, and not after a divisive speaker  election.  

“The last one is personal. I cannot and will not give up my family time. I may not be able to be on the road as much as previous speakers, but I pledged to make up for it with more time communicating our  message.

“What I told the members is, if you can agree to these requests, and I can truly be a unifying figure, then I will gladly serve. And, if I am not unifying, that is fine as well. I will be happy to stay where am, at the Ways and Means  Committee.

“Here is how I see  it. . . .

“It is our duty to serve the people the way they deserve to be served. It is our duty to make the tough decisions this country needs to get back on  track.

“The challenges we face today are too difficult and demanding for us to turn our backs and walk  away.  

“Global terror . . . wars on multiple fronts . . . a government grown unaccountable, unconstitutional, and out-of-touch . . . persistent poverty, a sluggish economy, flat wages, and a sky-rocketing  debt.

“But we cannot take them on alone. Now, more than ever, we must work  together.

“All of us are representatives of the people—all the people. We have been entrusted by them to  lead.

“And yet the people we serve do not feel that we are delivering on the job they hired us to do. We have become the problem. If my colleagues entrust me to be speaker, I want us to become the  solution.

“One thing I’ve learned from my upbringing in Janesville is that nothing is ever solved by blaming people. We can blame the president. We can blame the media. We can point fingers across the aisle. We can blame each other. We can dismiss our critics and criticism as  unfair.

“People don’t care about blame. They don’t care about effort. They care about results. Results that are meaningful. Results that are measurable. Results that make a difference in their daily  lives.

“I want to be clear about this. I still think we are an exceptional country with exceptional people and a republic clearly worth fighting for. It’s not too late to save the American idea, but we are running out of  time.

“Make no mistake: I believe that the ideas and principles of results-driven, common-sense conservatism are the keys to a better tomorrow—a tomorrow in which all of God’s children will be better off than they are  today.

“The idea that the role of the federal government is not to facilitate dependency, but to create an environment of opportunity . . . for  everyone.

“The idea that the government should do less. . . . And do it  better.

“The idea that those who serve should say what they mean and mean what they  say.

“The principle that we should determine the course of our own lives . . . instead of ceding that right to those who think they are better than the rest of  us.

“Yes, we will stand and fight when we must. And this presidency will surely require  that.

“A commitment to our natural rights. A commitment to common sense . . . to compassion . . . to co-operation—when rooted in genuine conviction and principle—is a commitment to  conservatism.

“Let me close by saying: I consider whether to do this with reluctance. And I mean that in the most personal of  ways.

“Like many of you, Janna and I have children who are in the formative, foundational years of their  lives.

“I genuinely worry about the consequences that my agreeing to serve will have on  them.

“Will they experience the viciousness and incivility that we all face on a daily  basis?

“But my greatest worry is the consequence of not stepping up. Of some day having my own kids ask me, when the stakes were so high, ‘Why didn’t you do all you could? Why didn’t you stand and fight for my future when you had the  chance?’

“None of us wants to hear that  question.

“And none of us should ever have  to.

“I have shown my colleagues what I think success looks like, what it takes to unify and lead, and how my family commitments come first. I have left this decision in their hands, and should they agree with these requests, then I am happy and willing to get to work. Thank  you.”

f t # e

– See more at: http://paulryan.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=398406#sthash.YQX9g0oA.dpuf

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
Videos