The populist Republican who knocked out House Majority Leader Eric Cantor last
fall in a stunning Virginia primary says his first eight weeks on Capitol Hill
“seemed like 14 years.”
“I’m even more in favor of term limits,” the former Randolph-Macon College
professor said.
“We need some big, big changes,” Brat told Watchdog.org in an interview. But he
said he sees no sign of things turning around as long as D.C. remains mired in
politics as usual.
“I’m a macro-economic guy,” the former economics and ethics instructor said. “I
vote no if it’s bad for the country.”
Citing recent examples, the 7th Congressional District lawmaker opposed the
bloated Cromnibus spending bill, as well as funding for the Export-Import Bank,
derisively known as “Boeing’s Bank” for its corporate dealings. He also voted
against returning John Boehner as House speaker, while managing to hold onto his
seats at the budget, education and workforce committees when the Ohio Republican
was re-elected.
Brat urges conservatives – and Americans at large — to stay focused on “big
issues.”
“The Keystone pipeline is symbolic. Don’t over-hype it. What’s most important is
speeding up the whole economy,” he said.
In that vein, Brat said the country would be better served by “getting rid of
the EPA, which is killing off small businesses.”
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Defying corporatist conservatives and libertarians alike, Brat calls
illegal immigration a linchpin to the coming elections.
“When you increase the supply of cheap labor by 12 million workers
through amnesty, wages go down,” he said.
Sounding more like firebrand Democratic Massachusetts U.S. Sen.
Elizabeth Warren than buttoned-down Mitt Romney, the GOP congressman
notes, “The bottom 80 percent of American workers are losing. This
is what 2016 is all about: Who’s really going to help the middle
class?”
While Brat and Warren talk tough about crony capitalism, he parts
company with the Massachusetts liberal on policy. “They have no
solutions,” Brat said of Warren and other statist Democrats. “We
do.”
The prescription, he said, starts with smaller government, free
markets and, most importantly, the rule of law. If voting that way
is boring or discommodes the Republican establishment, so be it.
“I ran on economics, and everyone is going to know how I’m going to
vote because I follow the Constitution. It’s about what’s good for
the country — not what’s good for special interests.”
Kenric Ward is a national reporter for Watchdog.org and chief of the
Virginia Bureau. Contact him at kenric@watchdogvirginia.org or at
(571) 319-9824. @Kenricward
[This
article courtesy of
Watchdog.]
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