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			 Republicans are highlighting Detroit, which emerged in December 
			from a 17-month bankruptcy, as an example of the perils of big 
			government and a possible testing ground for conservative ideas like 
			tax reductions. 
			 
			"If you want to do something for Detroit, why don't we dramatically 
			cut the taxes?" said Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, who called for a 
			big federal tax cut for city residents. 
			 
			Paul, who is considering a run for the White House in 2016, said tax 
			breaks would lure new residents and bolster the city's economy in 
			comments at Bowie State University in Maryland on Friday. 
			 
			No matter what they say, Republicans are not likely to pick up many 
			votes in the heavily Democratic city. Perhaps that's why they've 
			been so willing to criticize it. 
			 
			Jeb Bush, another possible 2016 contender, called Detroit's woes "a 
			warning to all of us" during a visit to the Rust Belt city last 
			month. 
			
			  In a speech to the Detroit Economic Club, Bush, a former Florida 
			governor, promised to outline policies in the coming months that 
			will increase opportunities for the poor, but didn't provide many 
			specifics. 
			 
			Chris Christie, the New Jersey governor who is weighing a 
			presidential run, has argued that his state cannot afford to keep 
			traditional defined-benefit pensions for public workers. "It 
			bankrupted Detroit, it bankrupted General Motors, and it will 
			bankrupt us," he said on February 25 in a town hall event in 
			Moorestown, New Jersey. 
			 
			Detroit, which filed for the biggest-ever U.S. municipal bankruptcy 
			in July 2013, has long been synonymous with automobile manufacturing 
			and industrial decay. 
			 
			
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			"It's an easy place to point to say, 'Here's where the politics of 
			the past have failed,' and say what can be done," said Saul Anuzis, 
			a former chairman of the Michigan Republican Party and a native of 
			Detroit. 
			 
			Bush offered one idea in 2013 that angered some conservatives: using 
			immigrants to repopulate the city. 
			 
			At a gathering of conservative activists in February, Christie said 
			that idea was "misdirecting the priorities." 
			 
			"What I would be concerned about are the people who are in Detroit 
			right now," he said at the Conservative Political Action Conference. 
			 
			(Reporting by Andy Sullivan; editing by Andrew Hay) 
			
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