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obamacare-obama-lie

President Obama depicted in front of an American flag in reference to his signature healthcare law, ObamaCare.

When one thinks what we’ve been told since the law’s passage, it’s hard to identify the biggest ObamaCare lie.

In other words, just about everything we were told was a fib. Even the tiny slivers of good news resulting from ObamaCare were based on falsehoods.

So I almost feel like I’m guilty of piling on by writing about another big Obamacare lie.

But Charles Krauthammer has such a strong critique of ObamaCare’s mandate for electronic health records that I can’t resist. He starts by pointing out that doctors are unhappy about this costly new mandate.

…there was an undercurrent of deep disappointment, almost demoralization, with what medical practice had become. The complaint was not financial but vocational — an incessant interference with their work, a deep erosion of their autonomy and authority…topped by an electronic health records (EHR) mandate that produces nothing more than “billing and legal documents” — and degraded medicine.

Not just unhappy. Some of them are quitting and most of them are spending less time practicing actual health care.

Virtually every doctor and doctors’ group I speak to cites the same litany, with particular bitterness about the EHR mandate. As another classmate wrote, “The introduction of the electronic medical record into our office has created so much more need for documentation that I can only see about three-quarters of the patients I could before, and has prompted me to seriously consider leaving for the first time.” …think about the extraordinary loss to society — and maybe to you, one day — of driving away 40 years of irreplaceable clinical experience.

Then Krauthammer exposes the deceptions we were fed when Obamacare was being debated.

The newly elected Barack Obama told the nation in 2009 that “it just won’t save billions of dollars” — $77 billion a year, promised the administration — “and thousands of jobs, it will save lives.” He then threw a cool $27 billion at going paperless by 2015. It’s 2015 and what have we achieved? The $27 billion is gone, of course. The $77 billion in savings became a joke. Indeed, reported the Health and Human Services inspector general in 2014, “EHR technology can make it easier to commit fraud,” as in Medicare fraud, the copy-and-paste function allowing the instant filling of vast data fields, facilitating billing inflation.

A boondoggle on the back of taxpayers. Flushing $27 billion is bad enough, but the indirect costs also are large.

That’s just the beginning of the losses. Consider the myriad small practices that, facing ruinous transition costs in equipment, software, training and time, have closed shop, gone bankrupt or been swallowed by some larger entity. …One study in the American Journal of Emergency Medicine found that emergency-room doctors spend 43 percent of their time entering electronic records information, 28 percent with patients. Another study found that family-practice physicians spend on average 48 minutes a day just entering clinical data.

Here’s the bottom line.

EHR is health care’s Solyndra. Many, no doubt, feasted nicely on the $27 billion, but the rest is waste: money squandered, patients neglected, good physicians demoralized.

Not much ambiguity in that sentence. To put it bluntly, “EHR” is the kind of answer you get when you ask a very silly question.

Medical privacy-obamacare-cartoons

But on a more serious note, now read what Dr. Jeffrey Singer wrote about electronic health records. Simply stated, this is like Solyndra, but much more expensive. Instead of wasting a few hundred million on cronyist handouts to Obama campaign donors, EHR is harming an entire sector of the economy.

The only thing I’ll add is that neither Krauthammer nor Singer contemplated the possible risks of amassing all the information contained in EHRs given the growing problem of hacking and identity theft.

P.S. On another topic, I’ve written several times about the excessive pay and special privileges of bureaucrats in California.

Now, thanks to Reason, we can read with envy about another elitist benefit for that gilded class.

…a little-known California state program designed to protect police and judges from the public disclosure of their home addresses had expanded into a massive database of 1.5 million public employees and their family members… Because of this Confidential Records Program, “Vehicles with protected license plates can run through dozens of intersections controlled by red light cameras and breeze along the 91 toll lanes with impunity,” according to the Orange County Register report. They evade parking citations and even get out of speeding tickets because police officers realize “the drivers are ‘one of their own’ or related to someone who is.”

You may be thinking that the law surely was changed after it was exposed by the media.

And you would be right. But if you thought the law would be changed to cut back on this elitist privilege, you would be wrong.

…the legislature did worse than nothing. It killed a measure to force these plate holders to provide their work addresses for the purpose of citations — and expanded the categories of government workers who qualify for special protections. This session, the legislature has decided to expand that list again, never mind the consequences on local tax revenues, safety and fairness. …Given the overwhelming support from legislators, expect more categories to be added to the Confidential Records Program — and more public employees and their families being free to ignore some laws the rest of us must follow.

This is such a depressing story that I’ll close today with this bit of humor about bureaucracy in the Golden State.

[mybooktable book=”global-tax-revolution-the-rise-of-tax-competition-and-the-battle-to-defend-it” display=”summary” buybutton_shadowbox=”true”]

When one thinks about all we were

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File photo: IRS Commissioner John Koskinen testifies in front of the House Committee on Government Oversight and Reform Committee on June 23, 2014 . (Photo: House Committee on Government Oversight and Reform’s Flickr page)

When I debate class warfare issues, here’s something that happens with depressing regularity. I’ll cite research from a group like the Tax Foundation on how an overwhelming share of the income tax is borne by upper-income taxpayers.

The statist I’m arguing with will then scoff and say the Tax Foundation is biased, thus implying that I’m sharing bogus data.

I’ll then respond that the group has a very good reputation and that their analysis is directly based on IRS data, but I may as well be talking to a brick wall. It seems leftists immediately close their minds if information doesn’t come directly from a group that they like.

So I was rather happy to see that the Internal Revenue Service, in the Spring 2015 Statistics of Income Bulletin, published a bunch of data on how much of the income tax is paid by different types of taxpayers.

I’ll be very curious to see how they respond when I point out that their favorite government agency admits that the bottom 50 percent of earners only pay 2.8 percent of all income tax. And I’ll be every more curious to see how they react when I point out that more than half of all income taxes are paid by the top 3 percent of taxpayers.

IRS-Class-Warfare-Data

There’s a famous saying, generally attributed to Daniel Patrick Moynihan, that “Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts.”

With this in mind, I’m hoping that this data from the IRS will finally put to rest the silly leftist talking point that the “rich” don’t pay their “fair share.”

This doesn’t mean, by the way, that the debate about policy will be settled.

Getting statists to accept certain facts is just the first step.

But once that happens, we can at least hope that their minds will be opened to subsequent steps, such as understanding the economic impact of punitive tax rates, recognizing that high tax rates won’t necessarily collect more revenue, or realizing that ordinary workers suffer when harsh tax policies reduce economic vitality.

Though I’m not holding my breath and expecting miracles. After all, some leftists openly state that they don’t care if the economic damage of high tax rates is so significant that government doesn’t collect any tax revenue.

You can see an example of one of these spite-motivated people at the 4:20 mark of the video I narrated on class-warfare taxation.

[brid video=”9205″ player=”1929″ title=”Five Key Reasons to Reject ClassWarfare Tax Policy”]

P.S. Shifting to another tax topic, some of you may have heard about the massive data breach at the IRS. Here’s some of what CNN is reporting.

The Internal Revenue Service believes that a major cyber breach that allowed criminals to steal the tax returns of more than 100,000 people originated in Russia, Rep. Peter Roskam confirmed to CNN on Thursday. …The IRS announced Tuesday that organized crime syndicates used personal data obtained elsewhere to access tax information, which they then used to file $50 million in fraudulent tax refunds.

I suppose I could use this opportunity to take a few potshots at the IRS, but there’s a far more important issue to raise.

I’m guessing the IRS probably has the best computer security of any tax bureaucracy in the world. Yet even all the IRS’s expertise couldn’t stop hackers from obtaining sensitive information.

Now let’s contemplate something truly frightening. The Obama Administration wants the United States to be part of an OECD pact that obligates participating nations to promiscuously share information with dozens of other governments, including untrustworthy, hostile, and/or corrupt regimes such as Russia and China, not to mention make information available to jurisdictions that presumably will have very little technical capacity to guard data from hackers and identity thieves. Here’s the list of participating nations on the OECD website, and it includes Azerbaijan, Cameroon, Greece, Indonesia, Mexico, Nigeria, Romania, Saudi Arabia, and Ukraine.

Yet none of this reckless endangerment would be an issue if we had a simple territorial tax system like the flat tax. Under such a simple and fair system, only income inside America’s borders would be taxed (unlike the wretched system of worldwide taxation we have now), so there would be no need to have risky information-swapping deals with dodgy foreign governments.

P.P.S. Senator Rand Paul is one of the few lawmakers fighting to protect Americans from having their information shared with foreign governments.

P.P.P.S. Shifting back to the original topic of class-warfare taxation, here’s a lesson on the Laffer Curve I offered to President Obama.

[mybooktable book=”global-tax-revolution-the-rise-of-tax-competition-and-the-battle-to-defend-it” display=”summary” buybutton_shadowbox=”true”]

Not only is the overwhelming share of

martin-omalley-2016

Martin O’Malley is joined by his wife Katie O’Malley as he announces his intention to seek the Democratic presidential nomination. (Photo: Jim Bourg/Reuters)

Former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley announced his candidacy for the presidency on Saturday at Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, slamming heavyweight Hillary Clinton.

“I declare that I am a candidate for president of the United States and I am running for you,” he said. “The presidency is not a crown to be passed back and forth by you between two royal families.”

During the announcement, which was introduced by Bruce Springsteen, an online YouTube video was released of the candidate introducing himself to voters.

O’Malley, who will try to run as the true progressive Democrat in the race, somewhere to the right of self-proclaimed socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-Vermont, and the left of Clinton, made his controversial time as Baltimore mayor and Maryland governor the cornerstone of his pitch.

In fact, there wasn’t a single bloc of voters O’Malley didn’t slice into an individual group and name outright, including women, men, black Americans, white Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans and lesbian, gay and transgender Americans. He said “the urgent calling for us today” was to “rebuild the American dream in our time” for what he called “a nation of immigrants”.

O’Malley, thus far, is the third candidate to jump into the race for the Democratic nomination, behind Hillary and Sanders. However, it is widely believed that he is the viable, despite some serious questions regarding the progressive record he has so proudly touted.

Though he is to the left of frontrunner Clinton on issues such as same-sex marriage, immigration reform and trade, he couldn’t even get his lieutenant governor elected after two terms in a deeply blue state. Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, defeated O’Malley’s chosen one in an upset victory during the 2014 elections, and turnout was not the reason.

Further, perhaps a reflection of just how far left the Democratic Party has moved in the last decade, or at least openly, Sanders is far out-polling O’Malley. According to the latest PPD average of polls, Sanders has shot to up to nearly 10 percent support, while O’Malley hasn’t even registered a statistical point. Sanders has raised more than $4 million since announcing his campaign in late April and aimed to build support among far-to-the-left liberals in the party who are disillusioned with Clinton.

Still, with his slogan “New Leadership,” O’Malley clearly and rightfully believes that there is a number of Democratic primary voters who do not want a coronation. Polls show Democrats don’t want a crown simply placed on a member of the almost-aristocratic class, and O’Malley is hoping they will see him as a more electable candidate than Sanders.

He focused on Wall Street chief executives and their role in the 2008 financial crisis, an issue Clinton has received warranted criticism on, considering her established ties to Wall Street and big business.

“Tell me how it is that in this country you can get pulled over if you have a broken tail light, but if you wreck the country you are absolutely untouchable?”

While he lags in the polls, O’Malley has put together a well-respected political operation that includes top Iowa operatives and his own superPAC. O’Malley has been laying the ground for a potential presidential bid for years, sending nearly a dozen staffers to Iowa alone on his behalf in 2014 and speaking at scores of party fundraisers across the country.

The Democratic nomination field, while weaker than it has been in recent political memory, is set to get another runner. Former Republican-turned-independent-turned Democrat Gov. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island will announce his bid on June 3.

[brid video=”9197″ player=”1929″ title=”Former MD Gov. Martin OMalleys Touts New Leadership in Campaign Video Announcement”]

Former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley announced his

Back in March, I shared a remarkable study from the International Monetary Fund which explained that spending caps are the only truly effective way to achieve good fiscal policy.

And earlier this month, I discussed another good IMF study that showed how deficit and debt rules in Europe have been a failure.

In hopes of teaching American lawmakers about this international evidence, the Cato Institute put together a forum on Capitol Hill to highlight the specific reforms that have been successful.

I moderated the panel and began by pointing out that there are many examples of nations that have enjoyed good results thanks to multi-year periods of spending restraint.

I even pointed out that we actually had an unintentional – but very successful – spending freeze in Washington between 2009 and 2014.

But the problem, I suggested, is that it is very difficult to convince politicians to sustain good policy on a long-run basis. The gains of good policy (such as what was achieved in the 1990s) can quickly be erased by a spending binge (such as what happened during the Bush years).

Unless, of course, there’s some sort of constraint on the desire to spend money. And the panelists discussed the three most successful examples of reforms that constrain the growth of government.

We started with a presentation by Daniel Freihofer from the Swiss Embassy. He talked about Switzerland’s “Debt Brake,” which actually is a spending cap.

It’s remarkable how well Switzerland has performed while most other European nations have suffered downward spirals of more spending-more taxes-more debt. Here’s a chart I put together on what’s happened to spending in Switzerland ever since 85 percent of voters imposed the Debt Brake early last decade.

swiss-debt-brake

By the way, Herr Freihofer said during the Q&A session that support for the Debt Brake is now probably about 95 percent, so Swiss voters obviously understand that the policy has been very successful.

Our second speaker was Clement Leung, Hong Kong’s Commissioner to the United States. He talked about Article 107 and other rules from Hong Kong’s Basic Law (their constitution) that limit the temptation to over-tax and over-spend.

And if you want to see some of the positive results of these rules in Hong Kong, here’s some of what Commissioner Leung presented.

Spending-panel-HK

By the way, the burden of government spending in Hong Kong averages about 18 percent of economic output. That’s the most impressive result. And Commissioner Leung explained that there’s a commitment to keep the burden of spending below 20 percent of GDP.

The final panelist was Jonathan Williams from the American Legislative Exchange Council, and he talked about Colorado’s Taxpayer Bill of Rights, popularly known as TABOR.

Jonathan talked about how the pro-spending lobbies keep attacking TABOR, and he mentioned that they narrowly succeeded in getting a five-year suspension of the law back in 2005. But Colorado voters generally understand they have a good policy.

The most recent attempt to enable more spending came in the form of an increase in the state’s flat tax back in 2013 and voters rejected it by a stunning 66-34 margin (almost as impressive as the recent vote against tax hikes in Michigan) even though Jonathan said advocates outspent opponents by a 289-1 margin.

Here’s a slide from his presentation showing what happened during other attempts to enable more spending.

Spending-Panel-Col

By the way, Jonathan also mentioned that Colorado’s voters are about to get a TABOR-mandated tax cut because taxes on marijuana are pushing revenues above the limit. Talk about a win-win situation!

To wrap up, one of the big lessons from all the presentations is that governments generally get in trouble because they can’t resist over-spending when the economy is doing well and generating lots of tax revenue.

I fully agree, and I’ve previously explained this is why Alberta got in fiscal trouble, and also why California suffers a boom-bust budgetary cycle.

The way you solve this problem is not with a balanced budget requirement (which often serves as the justification for tax hikes), but some sort of spending limitation rule.

CATO Institute forum with panelists and guest

Bevin-Comer-GOP-Governor-Kentucky

May 19, 2015: These photos show Kentucky Republican gubernatorial candidates James Comer, left, and Matt Bevin, right. (Photos: AP)

James Comer has conceded in the Kentucky Republican primary for governor to Matt Bevin, and said he enthusiastically endorses his candidacy.

In a news release Friday morning, Comer said he called Bevin and conceded minutes after a Thursday review of the May 19 primary results. It showed Bevin maintained his 83-vote lead in one of the closest elections in state history. Comer also said that during the campaign he has come to find a new appreciation for Bevin’s stances on the issues, character and work ethic.

It was a divisive and bitter campaign, with Comer spending the last two weeks denying allegations from Marilyn Thomas, his former college girlfriend, who claimed he emotionally and physically abused her when they were in a relationship at Western Kentucky University more than two decades ago. That left Bevin, who used his name recognition gained during his failed primary bid for U.S. Senate against Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, to raise $5 million.

“This is a great reminder that we’re in a long-term battle and even if a good candidate loses a race … they may win the next one!” Senate Conservatives Fund President Ken Cuccinelli said in an email to PPD. “Matt Bevin has a bold plan to cut taxes, shrink government, repeal Common Core, fix the pension system, repeal the state’s Obamacare exchange, and stop the federal government’s war on the states.”

Bevin scheduled a news conference at the Republican Party of Kentucky’s headquarters for 10 a.m. Friday along with the other Republican nominees in November’s general election. He will face liberal Democrat Jack Conway in November, and starts as a heavy favorite in a state that has nearly expelled all Democrats from statewide office.

“I bet there is a 1000 people in Kentucky that thinks they are personally responsible for those 83 votes, and you know what… they’re right,” Bevin said. “This is a government of, by, and for the people. And that is a beautiful thing.”

James Comer has conceded in the Kentucky

Gap-consumer-sentiment-reuters

(A shopper leaves the Gap with a bag in New York City. (Photo: REUTERS)

A gauge of consumer sentiment from Thomson Reuters and the University of Michigan rose to 90.7 in May, beating Wall Street expectations of 89.9. However, at the markets, there are no celebrations over the news.

The Commerce Department reported Friday that the U.S. economy contracted in the first quarter by 0.7 percent, down from the initially estimated gain of an abysmal 0.2 percent.

Further, the Chicago Business Barometer not only showed Midwest manufacturing contracted again in May, erasing any hope that April’s gains would be sustainable, but also all five components dropped by more than 10 percent into contraction territory.

A gauge of consumer sentiment from Thomson

midwest-manufacturing-goods

Surveys gauging growth or contraction in Midwest manufacturing. (REUTERS)

The Institute for Supply Management-Chicago’s gauge of factory activity in the Midwest region fell to 46.2 in May from 52.3 the month prior. Wall Street, which had expected April’s rebound to hold, expected the gauge to rise to 53.

Readings above 50 point to expansion, while those below indicate contraction.

“We had thought that the April bounce was consistent with a partial return to normal following the weather and port related slowdown in the first quarter,” Chief Economist of MNI Indicators Philip Uglow, said. “The latest data for May, however, suggest that this was a false dawn and that sluggish activity has carried through to the second quarter.”

The Chicago Business Barometer fell 6.1 points in May from 52.3 in April, while all five components dropped by more than 10 percent. All five components are also below the 50 break-even mark, indicating contraction across the board.

The report is the second devastating piece of economic data to come out Friday. The Commerce Department also reported that their initial GDP estimates were off the mark. Revised estimates show that the U.S. economy, as a whole, contracted in the first quarter by 0.7 percent instead of growing by the initial 0.2 percent reported.

Experts had expressed some degree of optimism that the economy would pick back up in the second quarter. However, at least in the Midwest manufacturing sector, that does not appear to have been the case.

The ISM Chicago Business Barometer shows Midwest

[brid video=”9159″ player=”1929″ title=”Mark Levin Rips Michelle Obama for Commencement Speeches”]

Conservative radio host Mark Levin ripped First Lady Michelle Obama for giving a “despicable” set of commencement speeches, one of which on Memorial Day.

He also discussed the 2016 GOP field on “Hannity” Thursday night.

Conservative radio host Mark Levin ripped First

GDP-Shipping-Cranes-Trade-Portland-Oregon

File photo: Shipping-cranes-in move containers at a port in Portland, Oregon. (Photo: REUTERS)

The Commerce Department reported Friday that the U.S. economy contracted in the first quarter as it buckled under a ballooning U.S. trade deficit. As PPD estimated, the government cut its gross domestic product (GDP) estimate to show it shrinking at a 0.7 percent annual rate rather than the 0.2 percent growth pace it previously estimated last month.

A larger trade deficit and a smaller accumulation of inventories by businesses than previously thought accounted for much of the downward revision. There was also a downward revision to consumer spending.

Experts are estimating second quarter growth at roughly 2 percent, which would mean the U.S. economy has given its worst first-half performance since 2011. However, when measured from the income side, which is a far more favorable method used by the government, the economy is shows to have expanded at a 1.4 percent rate in the first quarter.

But, sadly, that’s not the reality.

A measure of domestic demand was revised up one-tenth of a percentage point to a 0.8 percent rate and business spending on equipment was stronger than previously estimated. Economists had expected GDP would be revised down to show it contracting at a 0.8 percent pace.

“The economy is clearly shrinking,” said Stu Varney, an economic analyst at FOX Business. “It is the trend that is pointing to a recession.”

A sharp decline in investment spending in the energy sector — including from companies such as Schlumberger and Halliburton — was not offset by an expected increase in consumer spending due to a plunge in crude oil prices.

Spending on nonresidential structures, which includes oil exploration and well drilling, was revised to show it tumbling at a 20.8 percent rate. The government previously reported a 23.1 pace. Mining exploration, shafts and wells investment also plummeted to a 48.6 percent pace, the largest drop since the second quarter of 2009.

Some will blame the trade deficit explosion on a strong dollar and the ports dispute, the former of the two being valid. The port dispute, which was resolved in March, was not a clear driver of the increase in imports.

That revision to the trade deficit slashed 1.90 percentage points from GDP instead of the 1.25 percentage points initially reported last month.

The GDP report also showed after-tax corporate profits declined 8.7 percent, which is the largest drop in a year and the second quarterly decrease.

Meanwhile, data on retail sales and industrial production have suggested only a modest pace of economic growth early in the second quarter. But reports on housing, consumer confidence and business spending plans have been a bit more positive. Pending home sales hit a 9-year high in April, but for the first time since the survey began tracking, the NMRI found more high-risk than low-risk mortgages were injected into the market.

Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, was revised down by 0.1 percent to a 1.8 percent rate.

Inventory in the first quarter was revised to an increase of $95 billion, down from the $110.3 billion increase initially reported last month. That slashed GDP contributions down to 0.33 percent instead of the previously reported 0.74 percent.

Americans, despite lower oil prices, are saving much more than last year. Personal savings increased at a hefty $726.4 billion pace.

The Commerce Department reported Friday that the

george-pataki-announcement

Former New York Gov. George Pataki announces his White House bid in New Hampshire on May 28, 2015.

Former Gov. George Pataki, R-N.Y., joined a growing GOP field of candidates Thursday and announced he is running for president at an event in Exeter, New Hampshire. The three-term governor of New York chose the Granite State because it is an early primary state and is more in line with his more moderate views.

Pataki, who has never lost an election, invoked his three favorite Republican presidents, Abraham Lincoln, Ronald Reagan and Theodore Roosevelt. But he also knocked the likely 2016 Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton, and the Democratic Party as a whole.

“They say we are against the middle class. This too is nonsense,” he said. “Unless by middle class, they mean someone who left the White House ‘dead broke,’ and 10 years later had $100 Million. Unless by middle class they mean someone who charges a poor country $500,000 for a half-hour speech. That’s their party’s candidate. She speaks for the middle class? They are the party of privilege; we are the party of the middle class.”

“They say we, are anti-immigrant,” he said. “We, the proud children, grandchildren, and descendants of immigrants, know that immigration has and will continue to enhance the greatness of this country.”

After thanking his Hispanic supporters in Spanish, Pataki said any serious immigration reform plan “must secure the border” in the interest of national security. In fact, the son of immigrants speaks Hungarian, Spanish, French and German. He spoke another line of Spanish in his speech, stating that “everyone coming here is coming not to harm us, but to be a part of a better America.”

Because Pataki falls on the more moderate scale of Republican candidates, particularly in his support for abortion, he focused on other issues that serve up red meat to the Republican base.

“I’d repeal oppressive laws like Obamacare and end Common Core,” Pataki said. “And I’d shrink the size of the federal work force, starting with bureaucrats overseeing Obamacare, and fire every corrupt IRS employee abusing government power to discriminate on the basis of politics or religion.”

In addition, Pataki railed against the government-business partnership that breeds cronyism and leaves middle class Americans behind. He said, in one of his more passionate statements, he would invoke a ban on members of Congress from lobbying.

“Today, there is one former member of Congress lobbying for every current member and the first thing I would do is ban members of Congress from ever lobbying. If you serve one day, you are banned, go home,” he said.

Starting with the mayoral election in his hometown of Peekskill, New York in 1982, Mr Pataki is undefeated in political elections. In 1984, he successfully won as an underdog for the New York House, and in 1992, he won a state Senate race. But it was his three gubernatorial election victories that the former governor, who received widespread praise for his leadership during the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the World Trade Center, plans to tout and point to as evidence he can defeat Hillary Clinton.

However, Pataki, as do most of the other GOP candidates, faces an uphill battle for the Republican nomination. He is the ninth candidate to announce he will seek the nomination and, according to the average of polls, would be excluded from the first Republican debate hosted by FOX News. The rules state that only the top 10 candidates in the national polling average will have a place on the debate stage.

Former Gov. George Pataki, R-N.Y., joined a

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