As crises erupt throughout the world, the Washington Examiner published a two-part interview with me about two major international aggressors: Russia and the Islamic State. You can read Part I here and Part II here.
Monday, September 8, 2014
Resisting international aggression
As crises erupt throughout the world, the Washington Examiner published a two-part interview with me about two major international aggressors: Russia and the Islamic State. You can read Part I here and Part II here.
Friday, September 5, 2014
Talking Russia with John Batchelor
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| Vladimir Putin |
Yesterday
John Batchelor and I discussed Russia’s latest aggression. You can listen to
our talk here,
beginning at the 30:30 mark. If you missed my recent article about Russia, you
can read it here.
I
also wanted to note a Weekly Standard article by Stephen Hayes, who
writes about the Obama administration’s strange reluctance to disclose a trove
of documents seized from Osama bin Laden’s compound. You can read that article here.
Separately,
the Nunes Digest is updated for your weekend reading here.
Friday, August 29, 2014
Labor Day weekend reading: Taxes, Russia, and more
We
learned this week that Burger King will buy a Canadian restaurant chain and
open a headquarters for the new, merged company in Toronto, a move that may
allow the fast-food giant to lower its tax burden. The announcement sparked denunciations
of Burger King and threats of boycotts – the same response
that apparently caused Walgreens to stop considering a similar move abroad. The
White House is reportedly thinking
about circumventing Congress yet again and adopting new regulations to stem
corporate flight.
We
can’t afford to sit back and watch U.S. businesses pull up stakes and move
away. But I don’t believe the answer lies in exerting ever-more government
control over businesses. Like people, businesses respond to incentives. If the
U.S. taxes them much more than other countries do, then U.S. businesses have an
incentive to move.
So
I suggest we remove that incentive – and while we’re at it, we should revamp
the entire way businesses are taxed and provide new incentives for businesses
to stay here, expand, and bring money home that is now parked in foreign tax
havens. I have proposed using 100 percent expensing as a way to accomplish
those goals. You can read more about my proposal here.
Separately,
I have a new op-ed outlining a more effective response to Russia’s
belligerence. You can read it here.
Finally,
I wanted to share a few pictures of my trip this week to Sequoia National Park,
one of central California’s great natural treasures. Portuguese Ambassador Nuno
Brito and I had an instructive talk with the park rangers, who led a ceremony
declaring my daughters Julia and Margaret to be junior rangers after they
climbed to the top of Moro Rock.
Not
long ago, my daughters saw something they seemed to like as much as Sequoia
National Park – John Boehner’s toy monkey.
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Nunes office seeking interns
I am looking for college interns for the fall and spring semesters to work in my Visalia, Clovis, and Washington, D.C. offices. My current interns drew up a list of reasons to apply:
Top 10 Reasons
You Should Intern for Congressman Nunes
10.
You will encounter political figures whom you have only seen on
television.
9.
You will never be hungry because the offices have infinite amounts
of jelly bellies and pistachios to snack on, and sometimes you’ll even get
doughnuts.
8. You
will have a unique and often comical story to share with your friends and
family after every workday.
7. You
will constantly be amused by the staff’s sense of humor. (Some may call it
sophomoric.) You’ll get this once you meet Chief of Staff Johnny Amaral.
6. You
will become buddies with the Capitol Police, the Sparkletts Water Guy, and Art
the Mailman.
5. You
will never be bored because you will get to talk to new people on the phone all
day and conduct tours for visiting constituents.
4. You
will start answering your personal cell phone by saying, “Office of Congressman
Nunes.”
3. You
will become an expert at Google and acquire a whole new government-themed
vocabulary.
2. You
will always look snazzy because business casual is totally in.
1. You
will develop lifelong friendships, and your résumé will look great.
You
can find more information and applications for internships on my website here or
by calling (559) 733-3861.
Friday, August 22, 2014
Courtroom pushback on California water
Environmentalists
are looking to complete their destruction of the California water supply by
pushing legislation
to regulate groundwater usage. For a glimpse of what the enviros have already
wrought, look at the U.S. Drought Monitor’s list
of the top U.S. cities that are running out of water – every one of them is in
California and six are in the San Joaquin Valley. There was some pushback this
week, however, when a group filed a lawsuit
to end the double standard by which San Francisco, with its uninterrupted water
supply from Hetch Hetchy, is exempt from the water cutbacks that have plagued
the Valley. Read the court filing here.
Separately,
as the Department of Veterans Affairs in D.C. struggles to overcome years of
neglect, I received a briefing today at the Fresno VA about how it’s working to
improve care for our vets. We owe our veterans a lot, including a functioning
VA system that is responsive to their needs.
Finally,
the Nunes Digest is updated for your weekend reading here.
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
KMJ interview at noon Thursday
I’ll
be discussing the day’s issues with Ray Appleton on KMJ 580 am at noon PST
tomorrow. Listen live here.
Separately, along with Tulare Vice Mayor Carlton Jones, today
I visited the Aspens Apartments, which uses tax credits to provide affordable
housing for Tulare families. These sorts of public-private partnerships are an
innovative way to enlist the private sector in fighting poverty and assisting low-income
families.
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