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#1
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Governor-In-Chief
in part: In a state with a surging population, Bush has presided over a booming economy with the highest rate of job creation in the country and an unemployment rate of 3.0 percent (the national average is 4.6 percent). Florida has no state income tax, but Bush has nonetheless found a way to cut taxes every year of the eight he's been in office. Meanwhile, he's trimmed the state employment rolls by 11,000. "Politics is a game for risk-takers," says Mike Murphy, a political strategist for Bush and other governors, including Mitt Romney of Massachusetts and Schwarzenegger. And Bush is an extraordinary risk taker and innovator. He's made Florida, in the jargon of bipartisan experts, a "laboratory of democracy." He's mined state and local think tanks for ideas that might streamline state government and make it more effective. He's the first governor to impose stringent testing and accountability on Florida elementary and secondary schools, along with three voucher programs, the most ambitious of which was struck down this year by the (liberal and majority Democratic) state supreme court. This achievement went beyond the No Child Left Behind program of his brother, President Bush, who dropped vouchers in a compromise with Democrats in 2001. On health care, no governor has attacked Medicaid, whose costs are swamping state budgets, more boldly than Bush. He wangled a breathtakingly broad waiver from the federal Department of Health and Human Services to privatize Medicaid in two populous counties, Duval (Jacksonville) and Broward (Fort Lauderdale). The new program, affecting more than 200,000 Medicaid recipients, goes into effect July 1. Two more things. Bush, after handling eight hurricanes and four tropical storms in 14 months in 2004 and 2005, has become the undisputed national leader in emergency management. Imagine if he had been governor of Louisiana when Katrina hit last summer. Does anyone doubt that the recovery would have gone far, far better with Bush in charge? |
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#2
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I don't think anyone would doubt he would have been the better Bush to be President. Too bad his brother screwed up so badly, no one would ever trust him.
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#3
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There are sales tax holidays, most notably at back-to-school time. What a concept. A 7% discount for all on select catagories of items like clothing. Bet you don't get that in Jersey.
Did I mention, no state income tax. I'm laughing at you CA. And just in case you're thinking of moving here, the summers are way too hot. And the fishing sucks. And nothing but old folks on the beaches, polluted beaches. |
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#4
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He also oversaw the biggest theft in american history.
Having Voucher programs and attacking Medicare also big negatives, so i would hardly say hes the best in america. |
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#5
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[ QUOTE ]
Did I mention, no state income tax. I'm laughing at you CA. [/ QUOTE ] 9.3% and they have budget problems. Pathetic. |
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#6
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Jeb is pretty awesome. He also speaks fluent Spanish.
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#7
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If Lawton Chiles campaign hadn't engaged in a sleazy last minute phone campaign to scare seniors in the 1994 election, Jeb would've won that year, and would be President today.
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#8
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There's no tax on clothing in NJ and just about every urban area in the state has a 3% sales tax.
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#9
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] Did I mention, no state income tax. I'm laughing at you CA. [/ QUOTE ] 9.3% and they have budget problems. Pathetic. [/ QUOTE ] When your state doles out far more in taxes to the Feds than it receives in aid and grants then you can talk. Florida is a political swing state filled with senior citizens (who vote at a higher rate than anyone). It's no wonder you guys are fat on all the pork. California rules. |
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#10
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McCain and Jeb Bush 2008?
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