Paul Ryan Showing Some Leadership

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I could see myself pulling the lever for him if he gets the nod after a brokered convention, if the R's turn to him. He's not crazy, and in the land of today's R's, that's about the highest compliment a sane person can give. I'd still prefer Kasich, but Ryan is tolerable.

POLITICS[h=1]Paul Ryan Apologizes For Calling The Poor ‘Takers’[/h]BY ALICE OLLSTEIN MAR 23, 2016 12:41 PM

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CREDIT: AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE


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In a Capitol Hill speech billed as a repudiation of the tone of the 2016 election, House Speaker Paul Ryan apologized for his own past rhetoric about poor people of color.
“There was a time when I would talk about a difference between ‘makers’ and ‘takers’ in our country, referring to people who accepted government benefits,” he said. “But as I spent more time listening, and really learning the root causes of poverty, I realized I was wrong. ‘Takers’ wasn’t how to refer to a single mom stuck in a poverty trap, just trying to take care of her family. Most people don’t want to be dependent.”
Later, in response to a question from a Capitol Hill intern, he went further, saying of his past characterization of low-income Americans: “I was callous and I oversimplified and castigated people with a broad brush. There is a lot of that happening in America today.”
For several years — as he has pushed policies to slash Medicaid funding, food stamps, unemployment insurance, and other social programs — Ryan has repeatedly referred to poverty as a “culture problem” among people in “inner cities,” where “generations of men [are] not even thinking about working.”
His most recent poverty plan takes a punitive stance, punishing people who can’t find a job by a certain mandated deadline by reducing their benefits. While Ryan did express a willingness in Wednesday’s speech to evolve on policies like criminal justice, he offered no changes to this economic model other than more respectful rhetoric regarding the poor.
When speaking about the 2016 presidential election, Ryan similarly focused on tone over content lamenting the state of political discourse “from both sides,” but declining to call out any candidate or any policy directly.
“Our political discourse, it did not used to be this bad, and it does not have to be this way,” he said. “We don’t have to accept this, and we can’t enable it either…We should demand better from ourselves. We should demand better from one another.”
While offering a mild denunciation of the anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim, anti-woman, and pro-white supremacist rhetoric in the 2016 race, Ryan failed to acknowledge that the Republican Party has for years pushed bills in Congress that advance similar views and helped create a space for the current election tenor.
Republicans in the House, for instance, introduced legislation suggesting that President Obama wasn’t born in America. Prominent Republicans warned that the Muslim Brotherhood wasinfiltrating the Obama Administration.
“The Republican establishment has allowed a decades old anti-Latino movement to fester within its ranks,” noted Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid in a speech in Washington last week. “Republican leaders looked on approvingly while extremists like Congressman Steve King used repugnant language against Latinos, such as likening DREAMers to drug mules. Republican leaders said nothing as Mitt Romney urged a policy of self-deportation, as Jeb Bush spoke of “anchor babies” and as Marco Rubio called for deporting all DREAMers.”
Though he did not mention Trump once by name, Ryan did seem to refer to him Wednesday when he urged his party to adopt a more optimistic and forward-looking tone with voters. “Instead of playing to your anxieties, we can appeal to your aspirations,” he said. “We don’t just resort to scaring you. We dare to inspire you.”
 

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[h=1]Speaker Paul Ryan's lecture to Capitol Hill interns turns into a coded swipe at Donald Trump[/h]



  • House Speaker Paul Ryan delivered a speech to congressional interns today calling for a more 'confident' America
  • The speech condemned the current political rhetoric and seemed to be aimed, at least partially, at his party's frontrunner Donald Trump
  • Ryan told the young people 'we shouldn't accept ugliness as the norm' recalling a more civil time in Washington when he started his career


By NIKKI SCHWAB, U.S. POLITICAL REPORTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 16:55, 23 March 2016 | UPDATED: 18:33, 23 March 2016




House Speaker Paul Ryan addressed a hall of Capitol Hill interns today about the 'state of American politics' in what seemed to be a running dig at his party's frontrunner Donald Trump.
'We shouldn't accept ugliness as the norm, we should demand better for ourselves,' Ryan advised, never once mentioning the presidential candidate's name.
'Instead of playing to your anxieties we can appeal to your aspirations. Instead of playing the identity politics of our base versus their base, we unite people around ideas and principles,' Ryan continued. 'And instead of being timid we go bold – we don't just resort to scaring people, we dare to inspire people.'
Ryan's subtle remarks served as another way to show that he and other Republicans are not fully on board the Trump train as it cruises toward the GOP nomination with just two candidates left who could possibly stand in the billionaire's way.



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327E863F00000578-3506390-image-a-1_1458751349752.jpg

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House Speaker Paul Ryan spoke to a group of Capitol Hill interns today and called for a more 'confident' America that wouldn't use fear and posturing for political gain

327E879300000578-3506390-image-a-2_1458751361675.jpg

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House Speaker Paul Ryan told the interns that he's been wrong on issues in the past - including labeling poor people 'takers' during his vice presidential run in 2012

The House Speaker showed today his own measured and positive approach to politics, explaining to the young people in the audience – some who geeked out at the opportunity to ask the Republican leader a question – that things didn't have to be this way.
'Looking around at what’s taking place in politics today, it is easy to get disheartened,' Ryan said. 'How many of you find yourself just shaking your head at what you see from both sides?'
Ryan recalled his early years in Washington, reminding the interns that he once had student loans too and worked as a waiter at the popular Capitol Hill watering hole Tortilla Coast.
That's where Ryan ran into one of his mentors, the Congressman Jack Kemp, a former Buffalo Bills quarterback-turned-politician who eventually went on to work in the Bush 41 White House and become the GOP's vice presidential nominee, losing to the Clinton-Gore ticket in 1996.
'I didn't bother him that day, but I told a friend that one day I would love the chance of working for that man,' Ryan said.
Ryan talked about the days of yore on Capitol Hill when people 'disagreed without being disagreeable,' which extended through the time when he transitioned from aide to full-fledged House Member.
'I speak of this in the past tense only because I no longer serve here in the Ways and Means committee,' the congressman said, as he used his old committee quarters for the backdrop to today's speech. 'But it almost sounds like I'm speaking of a different time. It sounds like a scene unfamiliar to many in your generation.'
Ryan then talked about what he called a more 'confident' America, hinting that this America had no need for a leader like Donald Trump.
'We all know someone who we love who disagrees with us politically, who votes differently, but in a confident America we are not afraid to disagree with each another,' Ryan stated.
'We don't shut down on people and we don't shut people down,' he continued. 'If someone has a bad idea why don't we tell them that our idea is better.'

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'We don't insult them into agreeing with us, we try to persuade them,' he added. 'We test their assumptions and while we're at it, we test our own assumptions too.'
Part of that confidence, he explained, means admitting that sometimes you're not right.
Ryan then talked about what he viewed as one of his biggest political mistakes.
'There was a time when I would talk about the difference between makers and takers in our country, referring to people who accepted government benefits,' Ryan recalled.
The 'makers and takers' line was often something Ryan deployed in 2012 while running as the Republican's vice presidential nominee.
'But as I spent more time listening, really learning the root causes of poverty, I realized something, I realized that I was wrong – takers was not how to refer to a single mom stuck in a poverty traip tryig to take care of her own family – most people don't want to be dependent,' he explained.
'And to label a whole group of Americans that way – we shouldn't castigate a whole group of Americans just to make a point,' he added, perhaps trying to slightly swipe at Trump for comments he's made about American Muslims.
Ryan admitted that he, like many Democrats and high-profile Republicans like Sen. Rand Paul, has slowly come around to being an advocate for criminal justice reform – potentially some bipartisan light at the end of a tunnel filled with years of congressional gridlock.
On poverty, which is intertwined with the criminal justice system, Ryan says he's now edited any comments he makes.
'So I stopped talking about it that way,' he said. 'But I didn't come out and say this to be politically correct, I say this because I was just wrong.'


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Mike_Carrington, Indianapolis, 11 hours ago
Ryan had his mandate from the 2014 elections, and he p!ssed it away. He is one of the major reasons Trump has risen.


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Travelingintheus, USA, United States, about 2 hours ago
What a coward - his address took forever and basically said nothing because he was too afraid to make any one clear statement. If he offends Trump supporters, he's turning off the majority of republican voters - if he doesn't, he offends the establishment. So what does he do? What any DC politician does - say a lot without meaning anything. He is the perfect example for why there are too many career politicians.


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marvelman1776, los angeles, United States, 11 hours ago
Being lectured by this guy lol, biggest tool bag


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About the reason why, Irving, United States, 11 hours ago
Do not believe in anything he said. Ryan is a conniving weasel. The RINO GOP establishment is a nonsense. They do not represent the people.


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Joe Adragna, Chicago, United States, about 2 hours ago
I can't stand looking at Ryan. Just seeing him evokes rage and anger in me. He is sickening. Ryan is the problem.


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mike armstrong, saint john, Canada, 10 hours ago
this ryan guy is a political hack controlled by both sides. when will the americans take their country back..






Jesse-SW.44, Republic of Texas, United States, 10 hours ago
I hate Ryan. Just another bloodsucking lapdog. Sell out POS.





simply irresistible, Amanda, United States, about 2 hours ago
This guy is such a sleaze ball. How can he even live with himself? I can't stand this man.





Joe Adragna, Chicago, United States, about 2 hours ago
Ryan is a piece of living sh.1t. These snakes in the establishment GOP need to know how much we despise them for continually stabbing us in the back.


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Guesser, like Ryan, is an idiot. Single mother of four? We get it...happy to give people help when they need it.

The generational welfare family drinking and drugging their lives away and you want me to support them?

Go fuck yourself.
 

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Fuck that entire party. Not one candidate had the balls to attack the bully narcisist from the outset because they were afraid to confront him one on one. Not even those who weren't running dare say anything until he emerged as the frontrunner. And now that he has withstood the press, the debates, the test of time, and done everything needed to secure the right to run as the party representative all the sniveling weasels want to band together and collectively bully him out of the nomination. The poster NFLTrends is correct. It makes me want to vote for him.

"Vote for Donald Trump. He's the least unqualified candidate to be president this election."
 

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