Rep. Flood at the Washington Examiner: Elizabeth Warren’s housing bill is already stopping developments. House amendments fix it
very least, they need a bill that doesn’t make things worse. Mike Flood is a member
Full-text search across every press release in the archive. Matches the title and body, with English stemming, “vote” catches “voted” and “voting.”
16 results for “doesn” · House · Nebraska
very least, they need a bill that doesn’t make things worse. Mike Flood is a member
open the door to ensure that red tape doesn’t stand in the way. Last year
surgical care and make sure your ZIP code doesn’t determine whether you can get the care
grow at a large, commercial scale doesn't make sense and only drives prices higher for consumers
from Argentina would undermine domestic producers. Argentine beef doesn’t hold a candle to what our families produce
left has attempted to paint anyone who doesn’t join in as a bigot. The left’s assault
previously appropriated, but unused funding. While $9 billion doesn’t sound significant when compared to our $37 trillion
this legislation." "Right now, our tax code doesn’t reflect the growing need for critical minerals that support
costs by 20% at the grocery store. California doesn't have the right to dictate to Nebraska farmers
enforcement, and immigrants caught in a system that doesn't work. The Dignity Act delivers a real solution
back this onerous regulation ensures that the CFPB doesn’t squash innovation and job growth with unnecessary
regulation is critical to ensuring that the CFPB doesn’t become a barrier to innovation for job creators
option for failure. There’s no route that doesn’t go through reconciliation. And then we talk recission
regulation is critical to ensuring that the CFPB doesn’t become a barrier to innovation for job creators … manage their financial lives. The CFPB’s rule doesn’t benefit consumers or the market, but it would
delivering tax cuts for working Americans. If Congress doesn’t act, working Americans will see a tax hike
time to finish the job. A broken IRS doesn't need more taxpayer dollars thrown at the problem