Tim Scott on Health Care: First Do No Harm

September 29, 2010

One of the core principles of medicine is the famous maxim “first do no harm” – the idea that given an existing problem, it may be better to do nothing than to do something that risks causing more harm than good. Unfortunately, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which began to go into effect last week, does exactly that – taking a healthcare system which is the envy of the world and saddling it with layers of federal bureaucracy, while underfunding our commitments to seniors and overtaxing employers and states. If I am elected to Congress, I look forward to working with the Republican leadership to enact sensible healthcare reforms which preserve what is good about our system, while expanding coverage and reducing costs.

With over 50 million uninsured Americans, we must increase access to care, but we can find ways to do so without mandating coverage or putting the burden on employers. I believe that you should be allowed to purchase insurance from another state, and to take your policy with you when you relocate. I would expand the use of Health Savings and Flexible Savings Accounts, allowing tax breaks for purchase of insurance and medication. We must enact comprehensive medical tort reform to eliminate junk lawsuits, which currently cost taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars by inducing physicians to practice “defensive medicine”.

In our country’s history, as envisioned by our Constitution, the best solutions to our problems have not been those which are imposed by the federal government, but those which percolate through our local and state “laboratories.” Let’s encourage the states to increase coverage and reduce costs. Let’s keep our promises to our seniors, by providing adequate Medicare funding and reducing costly and counterproductive administrative burdens. Finally, let’s protect the doctor-patient relationship instead of creating a huge federal bureaucracy which will try to make our medical decisions for us, imposing its own values.

There is a reason why people from all over the world come to our shores to be trained in our medical schools, treated in our hospitals, and to benefit from our pharmaceutical products and medical devices. It is because our health care system is the best in the world. I believe that by enacting common-sense targeted reforms, we will make it even better.

Scott Opposes Earmark System

September 23, 2010

from THE POST AND COURIER, By Robert Behre

Unlike current Rep. Henry Brown, Republican 1st Congressional District candidate Tim Scott said he is opposed to earmarks.

“The earmark system as we know it is dead from the Republican perspective,” he told the Charleston Rotary Club on Tuesday.

“The earmark system leaves us with crumbs while others get the loaves.”

Brown and U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham have fought for a $400,000 earmark in the current budget that port officials have said is critical to maintain momentum on a plan to deepen the Port of Charleston for larger container ships.

But the allocation isn’t in the current budget, a fact that U.S. Sen. Jim DeMint chalked up to Washington politics. DeMint no longer seeks earmarks, and has praised Scott for his “courage to fight the culture of earmarks.”

State Ports Authority officials and others have said the earmark is the only way that the Army Corps of Engineers can proceed with planning to deepen the harbor.

If the earmark isn’t included this year, Charleston could fall behind competing ports in the Southeast, all of which already have earmarks in the budget for harbor-deepening projects.

Scott joked about how often he’s been asked about earmarks, but noted that the House Republican conference has placed a moratorium on them.

He also noted that Oregon has received three times the federal funding for its ports than South Carolina has, though Oregon’s ports are much less busy.

Scott’s appearance Tuesday before the club also solidified the perception that he is the front-runner in the crowded 1st District field.

His Democratic opponent, perennial candidate Ben Frasier, declined to appear before the club, which did not invite the five other candidates.

Those candidates are Green Party hopeful Robert Dobbs, Libertarian Keith Blandford, Working Families candidate Rob Groce, United Citizens candidate Mac McCullough and Independent Party candidate Jimmy Wood.

The election is Nov. 2.

Scott pledged to limit himself to four terms, if elected.

When club member and former Democratic 1st District candidate Andy Brack asked Scott if he would run for the U.S. Senate after that, Scott replied, “I might run home.

Tim Scott on The Tax Debate: Lower Taxes Encourage Growth

September 21, 2010

The debate about encouraging economic growth, lowering taxes and controlling the deficit has taken center stage as we approach the expiration of the tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003. I believe that we must take action to extend all the tax rates that have been in effect for almost ten years. There is never a good time to raise taxes if we want to encourage small business to grow and create jobs, particularly in a bad economy. According to Congress’ Joint Committee on Taxation, the proposed Obama tax increases will raise taxes on 50% of all small business income. And it is small business that has created 2 out of every 3 new private sector jobs over the last fifteen years.

In a recent CNNMoney.com survey, only 10% of the economists surveyed endorsed the Obama plan to extend the tax cuts for only the lower and middle class taxpayers and raise the tax rates on the top two brackets. The vast majority of the economists surveyed said that extending the tax cuts for all taxpayers is the most important thing that Congress can do to help the economy. High tax rates stifle economic growth and it is a good economy that makes everything else possible.

A growing economy allows companies to create jobs, encourages entrepreneurship and creates opportunity and upward mobility for all citizens. It provides the basis for a balanced budget and reduced government debt, enables us to maintain a strong national defense and allows us to keep our promises to our seniors, our veterans, our allies and business partners.

As a small business owner, I understand the economic challenges facing us today. First and foremost, we need to pursue policies that promote private sector job growth. We have a President and a Democrat-controlled Congress who believe that a policy of more spending and higher taxes is the answer. I strongly disagree. I know that higher tax rates will not put more Americans to work. We need to implement policies that encourage businesses to grow and expand by putting money in the private sector and not in the hands of the government.

I understand that business prospers when government gets out of the way. The federal government can ask business owners to either pay more taxes or hire more people. Small business cannot do both.

The prosperity of America is directly linked to a good economy. During challenging economic times, it is critical that our leaders focus first and foremost on tax policies that will encourage economic growth and job creation for the people of America. I am committed to fighting for principles I believe in – limited government, less government spending and lower taxes – and I believe a focus on these fundamental principles will result in a growing economy.

We Remember

September 10, 2010

I, like you, remember where I was when we first heard the news about the attack on our country. I remember the time, the place and what I was doing.

As 9/11 approaches, I am still moved by the sheer number of lives lost and the families who must hold the memories of their loved ones in their hearts.

I am also reminded of the price of freedom. I have two brothers currently serving in the military and understand that freedom is not free and it is not something we should take for granted.

Right after the attack, our country came together like nothing I’d ever witnessed in my lifetime. We saw American flags flying on buildings, from cars and in yards. We all had a sense of American pride that was felt throughout our communities. We truly felt like brothers and sisters of the same family.

As we remember those who lost their lives on 9/11, let’s also strive to build the same American pride and unity that we felt in the days following.

America is still the Land of the Free and we are blessed to be here.

Tim Scott’s Freedom Fries

August 9, 2010

from THE WASHINGTON TIMES, by Quin Hillyer

High school freshman Tim Scott could not afford Chick-fil-A sandwiches back in 1981, but the French fries were good and inexpensive. Eating those fries made him a success, a conservative and an odds-on favorite to be the next congressman from Charleston, S.C.

Mr. Scott has been garnering attention because he is a black Republican who won a primary over the son of the late one-time segregationist Sen. Strom Thurmond. South Carolina acquaintances, though, are coming out of the woodwork to say Mr. Scott bears watching not because he is black but because he’s the real deal: industrious, principled, consistent, thoughtful. In a word, authentic.

But to hear him tell it, it all began with the fries.

Mr. Scott’s parents were split – his father was in the Air Force in Colorado – and his mother, he said, worked two eight-hour shifts daily. “She was a nurse’s assistant cleaning up other people’s feces,” he said. “That’s nobody’s definition of fun.” Despite her example of hard work, though, his own schoolwork showed no signs of similar dedication. “I literally failed four subjects at once: world geography, civics, Spanish and English. Those last two subjects showed I wasn’t bilingual, I was bi-ignorant.”

Young Mr. Scott did, however, hold down a part-time job taking tickets at a movie theater. The Chick-fil-A was next door. He bought fries there regularly. The restaurant’s proprietor, a guy named John Moniz – a “Christian conservative white Republican, although I didn’t know it at the time,” Mr. Scott said – “just started recognizing me, and one day he came up and sat down next to me and started talking.”

Moniz (now deceased) somehow struck a chord with the young customer. Moniz talked about the virtues of discipline and concentration. They talked often and built a cross-generational friendship. Something clicked. Young Scott started applying himself to his studies. He earned a partial football scholarship to Presbyterian College, transferred (leaving football behind) to Charleston Southern University, and earned a degree in political science.

“My mother taught me how to shoot for the stars, but [Moniz] taught me how to think it through,” Mr. Scott told me. “It’s about thinking your way out of poverty.”

Tim Scott did just that. Now 44, he owns an insurance agency (property, casualty, life) and part of a real estate agency. He became politically active, always as a Republican, and served 13 years as one of nine members of the Charleston County Council (county population: 330,368), the final four years as chairman. He was elected to the state legislature in 2008, then took his shot at Congress when U.S. Rep. Henry Brown retired. In the primary, not only did he defeat Paul Thurmond but also Carroll Campbell, namesake son of another former South Carolina governor.

“The reason he is so popular is that he never went native as a government guy,” said Burnet R. Maybank III, the state revenue director under former South Carolina Govs. Mark Sanford and David M. Beasley and the son of a longtime Charleston County councilman. “He believes in limited government and lower taxes, and he never went native against those beliefs. He’s low-key and very sincere, and he just tends to win people over because he is conscientious and hardworking. He has stuck to his guns during his entire service.”

To listen to Mr. Scott himself is to hear the clear echoes of former Housing and Urban Development secretary and vice presidential nominee Jack Kemp, whom Mr. Scott revered. “That’s what I want to model as a public official. If it has to be done, let it be done by me with my own sweat equity. … The War on Poverty was four decades, and the same people are living in the same neighborhoods and the same bad houses, in the same poverty. A person who is full of compassion who is a conservative has to say that small business in a neighborhood creates jobs, not government. Government intervention does not lead to a more promising future. Entrepreneurship changes lives for real.” Also: “As a small-business owner, I cannot pay higher taxes and hire more people.”

Mr. Scott, though, seems far more comfortable talking about limiting government than Mr. Kemp was:

“If we are trying to honor the promises made to our senior citizens, how do you start new programs? Especially when 43 cents on the dollar are for deficit spending.” And: “There is nothing compassionate about an extra 99 weeks of unemployment benefits at the expense of unborn Americans and young Americans. It’s got to make cents as well as sense.”

Mr. Scott is pro-life, pro-Second Amendment, a Tea Party enthusiast and strongly supportive of the military. (One brother is a command sergeant-major in the Army, and the other a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force.) He supports a moratorium on congressional earmarks. And he credits his mother in a baseball, hot dogs, apple-pie way.

“I am living my mother’s dream, he said. “She modeled the behavior she wanted us to replicate. … People need to know this country’s system works. … We need the patience necessary to delay our gratification for the promise of the future to come to fruition.”

The Democratic nominee against Mr. Scott is retired federal worker Ben Frasier, who has run 17 times previously without ever even winning his party’s nomination. The district is heavily Republican; it went for John McCain over Barack Obama by 14 points. Mr. Frasier seems to have no significant fundraising operation, nor any national party support. In short, Mr. Scott almost surely will be coming to Washington. When he arrives, he’ll steadily pursue a limited-government agenda that may well leave official Washington fit to be fried.

Quin Hillyer is a senior editorial writer for The Washington Times.

School Supply Drive

August 2, 2010

Dear Friends,

You know as well as I do how important it is for children to be prepared for school and ready to learn. I certainly remember the people that helped me and my family when I was younger.

For this reason, we have partnered with two outstanding charitable organizations, the Seacoast Church Dream Center in the Charleston area and Chick-Fil-A’s partner, Fostering Hope, in the Myrtle Beach/Conway area.

I have placed a box to collect items in my office and have called on other Allstate agencies in the Charleston and Myrtle Beach area to do the same.

Will you join us by dropping off school supplies at the listed locations? Let’s all help those who need a hand during this back to school season.

Thanks for all you continue to do,

Tim
1-88-Vote-4Tim
1-888-683-4846

Supplies Needed:
pencils, pens, markers, crayons, hygiene items, paper (wide-rule), pencil cases, rulers, composition notebooks, spiral notebooks, binders, subject dividers, folders (pocket, 3 prong & both), facial tissues, hand gel, wipes, glue sticks, colored pencils, highlighters

Drop-off Locations:

Charleston
Tim Scott, 1405 Ashley River Rd
Phil Bradley 571 Folly Rd
Kevin Shealy 781 Saint Andrews Blvd
Lee Demarest 1890 Sam Rittenberg Blvd
Wally Burbage 1655-B Savannah Hwy

Moncks Corner
Richard Dixon 255 N Highway 52 Ste 2

Mt. Pleasant
Wally Burbage 826 Johnnie Dodds Blvd
Phil L. Bradley 401 Seacoast Pkwy
Langston Ins. 1143 Chuck Dawley Blvd

North Charleston
Jerry Bacon 4892-B Ashley Phosphate Rd
Joey Schooler 8410 Rivers Ave. Ste. J
Steve Peper 2138 Ashley Phosphate Rd

Summerville
Dennis Bailey 700 Central Avenue
Harry Blake 1668 Old Trolley Rd, Ste 104
Mark Williamson 909 North Main St

Myrtle Beach
Hugh Huggins 605 18th Ave

Conway
FeDora Cannon 1402 4th Ave

Tim Scott Rises in South Carolina

July 29, 2010

From THE WEEKLY STANDARD, By Fred Barnes, July 28, 2010

Tim Scott is the most heralded Republican House candidate this year, and for good reason. He’s likeable, experienced in politics at the local and state level, a self-described “bleeding heart conservative” of the Jack Kemp school, and the champion of an economic program he describes as “under the umbrella of fiscal sanity.” Scott, by the way, is an African-American from South Carolina.

Scott, 44, is a strong favorite to win the House seat being vacated by Republican Rep. Henry Brown, who is retiring. He defeated Paul Thurmond, son of Strom, in a runoff last month for the Republican nomination. Now, absent polling evidence, he figures he’s ahead by a dozen to 15 percentage points over his Democratic opponent Ben Frasier, an African American who’s run for office 19 times but never won.

Scott, amazingly enough, is already the toast of Republicans in Washington, where he spent the last few days meeting with Republican leaders, strategists, and the media. Republicans are eager for an African-American to join their ranks.

If he wins, Scott may not arrive on Capitol Hill as the only African-American Republican. Two others, Allen West in Florida and Ryan Frazier in Colorado, have at least an outside chance of ousting incumbent Democratic House members. There hasn’t been a black Republican in Congress since J.C. Watts retired from the House in 2003.

As he tells it, Scott became a Republican in three stages. First, there was the military influence. His father spent 27 years in the Air Force and his two brothers are in the military. “Having a strong military always made sense to me,” he told me. And Republicans support a strong military, he says.

Second, there was his becoming a Christian in college. That turned him into a social conservative and strong foe of legalized abortion. This, too, turned him toward Republicans, he says.

And third, he went into the insurance business after graduating from Charleston Southern. He became a tax payer. “If you pay enough taxes, you’ll be a Republican,” according to Scott.

In 1994, he decided to run for the Charleston County Council and announced his candidacy at a Republican meeting. “With a look of shock and cautious optimism, they clapped,” he says. He styled himself the “guru of economic development” as a council member for 13 years.

He spent two years as a state legislator, then declared himself a candidate for lieutenant governor of South Carolina in 2010, raising about $300,000. But since he was running on national issues, he was persuaded to switch to the House race after Brown announced his retirement. He had to return the unspent campaign money for state office. “That was painful,” he says.
Scott’s economic plan has three planks: limiting “government intrusion,” including the repeal of President Obama’s health care program, tax reform with reduced individual and corporate taxes, and deep spending cuts.

Why is the late Jack Kemp his model in politics? “He was a conservative who loved people,” Scott says, “and that is key to articulating a message people want to hear.” If he’s elected, Scott will be the one Republican freshman who will surely have an opportunity to be heard.

Fred Barnes is the executive editor of THE WEEKLY STANDARD.

FreedomWorks PAC Endorses Congressional Candidate and Champion of Freedom Tim Scott in South Carolina’s 1st District

July 27, 2010

From BUSINESS WIRE, July 22, 2010

FreedomWorks PAC is pleased to announce the endorsement of Republican candidate Tim Scott in the SC-1 congressional race. Tim Scott has earned the “Champion of Freedom” title because of his firm commitment to lower taxes, less government, and more freedom.

Tim Scott has pledged to oppose any and all tax increases and signed the grassroots “Contract From America”: a ten-point platform crafted with the input of tens of thousands of tea party and limited government activists from all across the country. The Contract best represents an agenda that will stay true to the guiding principles of the U.S. Constitution.

Scott is also an outspoken opponent of the Obamacare health care takeover and the job-killing cap and trade energy tax hike.

FreedomWorks PAC will support Scott’s congressional bid by funding Get Out The Vote (GOTV) efforts leading up to election day. This will include door-to-door literature drops, phone banks, and yard sign distribution.

FreedomWorks PAC President Matt Kibbe commented, “Tim Scott has a passion for limited government that will make him a fighter for lower taxes, less government, and more freedom once in Congress. FreedomWorks PAC is proud to name him as a Champion of Freedom.”

For more information about this race and others that FreedomWorks PAC will be targeting in 2010 as part of the Take America Back campaign, please visit the PAC website, http://pac.freedomworks.org/ or contact FreedomWorks PAC Managing Director Rob Jordan at (202) 942-7624.