Politics & Government
Bill O'Brien: 'The Government Was Bleeding. We Stopped The Bleeding' [VIDEO]
In Amherst, House Speaker says GOP deserves credit for improved job picture.
Republicans improved the state's job picture and business climate since winning legislative majorities two years ago, House Speaker Bill O'Brien said Saturday.
"Ten thousand more of our neighbors are working today in New Hampshire than when we were elected," O'Brien told the Amherst GOP over breakfast at Joey's Diner.
He accused Democrats before 2010 of going off on a "spending spree" that eroded the state's competitive advantages. The message going into the fall election, he said, is this:
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"The government was bleeding. We stopped the bleeding."
O'Brien, a Republican from Mont Vernon whose rise to power was helped by Tea Party members, spoke of "transformative change," citing right-to-work legislation as an example of such change. Gov. John Lynch, D-Hopkinton, who vetoed that legislation, was a popular target for O'Brien on Saturday.
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He accused Lynch of breaking promises, in connection with a controversial former "surcharge" on motor vehicle registrations. With Lynch in office and with Democrats as the previous majority party in the Legislature, New Hampshire "had worked itself down to being worst in the country" in terms of business taxes, according to O'Brien.
Though Democrats have criticized him of being distracted by social issues, O'Brien said the House Republican Leadership would continue to focus on jobs, including looking at further regulatory changes and a proposal to cap overall state spending.
He received his loudest applause of the morning when he mentioned a bill that would require people to show photo identification in order to vote.
"Government starts at the ballot box," O'Brien said. "It starts with knowing who's voting. It starts with voter ID."
In response to O'Brien's comments, New Hampshire Democratic Party issued a statement saying none of his changes are "transforming" the state for the better. Here is the statement from Pamela Walsh, a Democratic Party senior adviser, and former deputy chief of staff for Lynch:
"Bill O'Brien has brought a radical Tea Party agenda, which is moving New Hampshire in the wrong direction. Obrien's budget cut the tobacco tax and made it easier for people to evade taxes -- and he paid for those changes by cutting funding for higher education in half; cutting services for people with disabilities and raising taxes on hospitals.
Just last week, Bill O'Brien took a bipartisan jobs bills, including the
research-and-development tax credit, hostage to his anti-choice and
anti-worker agenda.As for the so-called right to work bill, at the behest of out-of-state
interest groups, Bill O'Brien is trying to pass a law that would overturn agreements freely entered into by companies with their workers."
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