The
Heritage Foundation
Jim
DeMint: My First Day as
Heritage's President
Today
is my first full day as
president of The Heritage Foundation, and the first thing I want to do
is thank
my predecessor Ed Feulner for the institution he has built over the
past 36
years. The second thing I will do is tell you that we will not change
the
boundless optimism and pride in our country you’ve come to expect from
Heritage—or our commitment to make sure America remains a beacon of
freedom to
the world.
Heritage
has always believed the
values that made America great—honesty, industriousness, courage,
determination—should inform our policies and our public institutions.
We must
never forget the ideas and principles that made America the strongest
and most
prosperous nation in history.
Our
principles will stay the same,
but we will constantly need innovative policy ideas to address our
nation’s new
problems. Heritage’s experts and researchers are busy every day working
out
solutions to our myriad national challenges. We don’t need new
principles. Our
values have stood the test of time. It’s important that we draw this
distinction between timeless values that have been with us for
centuries and
new policies that we will need in the 21st Century.
I’ve
been traveling across our
country since being selected to succeed Ed, and I can report that our
country
shows what works and doesn’t. After 50 years of liberal policies,
Detroit is
bankrupt, culturally as well as financially. There are more than 400
liquor
stores in Detroit, but not one chain supermarket. And states like
California
that have been controlled by liberals for decades might soon go the way
of the
Motor City.
But
conservative principles are
working while liberal schemes are failing. In Louisiana, they’re
getting their
schools to work by giving parents the freedom to choose. In Michigan,
they have
found freedom to work.
Despite
facing long odds, Americans
aren’t giving up.
In
South Carolina last week, the
Heritage team met Lisa Stevens. She had served in the State Board of
Education
and was told that there was nothing that could be done to fix some
middle
schools in that state. Lisa didn’t give up—and she fought regulators
until she
and a bunch of parents opened Langston Charter School, which now has
1,500
students competing for 450 places.
We
also met Willard Galvez. When he
lost his job in 2010, he and his wife decided they didn’t want to rely
on
others to support them and their four children, so they started their
own
business.
Liberal
policies have destroyed
families and communities and created dependence on government. Putting
our
society back together will require work.
Take
Obamacare. Our government has
been making promises it cannot keep. Medicare and Medicaid are already
on an
unsustainable path, leaving health care for seniors and the poor at
risk.
Obamacare’s
promises fuel our
fiscal challenges, but that’s not the worst thing they do. They make
millions
of Americans dependent on the government for their health care. By
2021, nearly
half of all health care spending will be controlled by the government.
To
protect the country from this tipping point, Congress must stop the new
spending on expanding Medicaid and subsidizing coverage through
Obamacare.
Dependency
is a scourge eating away
at our national fiber and undermining the values that made us a shining
city to
the rest of the world.
Today,
more people than ever
before—69.5 million Americans, from college students to retirees to
welfare
beneficiaries—depend on the federal government for housing, food,
income,
student aid, or other assistance once considered to be the
responsibility of
individuals, families, neighborhoods, churches, and other civil society
institutions. The United States must reverse the direction of these
trends or face
economic and social collapse.
And
the most important social tool
to fight dependence on government, the family, is also under attack.
The
Supreme Court is considering challenges to two marriage laws, and
hopefully the
judges will stand up for marriage as we have known it since the dawn of
time.
Whatever
the Court’s decision in
June, Heritage will redouble its efforts to restore a culture of
marriage in
this country, particularly for the most vulnerable. We know that
children born
and raised outside marriage are five times more likely to experience
poverty.
Marriage precedes government, and government policy will either witness
to the
truth or tell a lie about this fundamental institution.
The
last point I want to make is
about the energy sector and the federal government’s attempt to
micromanage it.
Never has there been so much promise—or so many hurdles—to exploring
and
developing the nation’s natural resources. Energy production on private
and
state lands is thriving, while production on federal lands has slowed
or is
nonexistent, because large swaths of land and water are completely off
limits.
Congress
and the federal government
need to open access to America’s resources on federal lands and
ultimately
transition the permitting and regulatory process to the state
regulators where
that energy lies. This is one of the keys to getting our economy going
again.
I
promise you that Heritage will
not let up on these and many other issues in the years to come. All of
us here
will put our shoulder to the wheel to restore American society to what
it once
was. This is my guarantee to you on my first day.
Sincerely,
Senator
Jim DeMint
President
Heritage
Foundation
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