Polk County Democrats > Press Releases > News > Press Releases > Steve King Takes Credit For...
Steve King Takes Credit For Blocking Health Care Coverage for 26,000 Kids in Iowa
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Contact: Brooke Borkenhagen, Press Secretary
515-244-7292 Ext 680 (office)
###
Sunday, June 29,
2008
But in his three terms in
But just
how effective has King been since
he was first elected in 2002?
Political
opponents point to King's
relative lack of success passing sponsored
legislation and decry what they call
embarrassing behavior. Of the 44 bills King
has sponsored according to www.GovTrack.us,
three
have made it out of committee and only one has
been acted. The piece of
legislation? House Resolution 847: Recognizing
the importance of Christmas the
Christian faith.
"That shows you
something. (King) talks a big game, but
he can't back it up," said Jon Neunaber of
Sponsored legislation,
however, is just one measure. In fact,
U.S. House Office of the Clerk press secretary
Kyle Anderson said far less than
1 percent of all bills introduced make it into
law. For example, 6,375 bill have
been introduced in the 110th Congress and 247
have been passed.
In
mulling his effectiveness as a congressman,
King said western Iowans will answer
the question differently, in part given their
political affiliation.
"I
don't know how I can give you numbers and
quantify my service here," King
said.
Neunaber said King focuses on
getting national publicity -- like
his advocacy on the House floor of a model
wall he'd build to stem illegal
immigration from
"He does what his bosses in
King's
priorities
When discussing
successes, King points to the role
he played in shepherding into law an expansion
of a tax credit available to
small ethanol and biodiesel producers.
Introduced in the first few weeks of his
U.S. House career, the language King argued
for expanded the blender's credit
for ethanol producers and was included in the
Energy Users Act of
2005.
"I introduced it, it was wrapped
up in another bill, we (passed it
and) sent it over to the Senate. The Senate
picked it up, I think (Iowa U.S.
Sen.) Chuck Grassley put a hand on it, gave it
a nudge along the way, and it
arrived to the president's desk," King
said.
"I'm the first one to
introduce that language, so no one else can
claim to originate it. I did work it
hard and worked it through here in the House.
But if it hadn't been for Grassley
in the Senate, I don't know what would have
happened."
In three terms
spanning five and a half years, King has
focused on taxation, ethanol
production, immigration reform and social
issues.
"I have been a budget
hawk, and I've been clear about that. (Fifth
District residents) don't have a
congressman equivocator representing them.
They know where I stand," King
said.
In fall 2002 when running for the
congressional seat, King set two
infrastructure goals -- dredging the lake at
King,
59, said he's not satisfied
with the funding directed to Storm Lake and
U.S. 20, but said both projects are
well on the way to being accomplished. King's
office reports he has been
responsible for $35 million for U.S. 20, but
did not provide a
U.S. Sen. Tom
Harkin, also an outspoken advocate for
The cost for
expanding U.S. 20 from two to four lanes over
90 miles from Moorland to Moville
is estimated to cost $520 million. King has
specified his $35 million is for
portions west of U.S. Highway 71 in Woodbury,
Ida and Sac counties.
"It's
a given that Highway 20 will be completed all
the way to
King said as he's served in
Congress, he's broadened the infrastructure
funding list to Interstate 29
interchanges in
How
others view him
Siouxland
Chamber of Commerce president and
Iowa Department of Transportation Commissioner
Debi Durham, the 2002 Republican
candidate for lieutenant governor, said the
$35 million King has secured for
Highway 20 is "realistic."
"I think it
is a good number," she said. "I
would say that Congressman King's office, when
it comes to Highway 20, has been
extremely effective."
Neunaber said
King's funding for Highway 20 isn't
flush enough. Neunaber, born in 1970, said
four-laning Highway 20 has been
discussed since he was a newborn, and
predicted King won't
deliver.
"He was
tenacious on that and actively engaged," she
said.
However, she said the
chamber's position on immigration reform has
some variances with King's
stance.
On issue like immigration and
terrorism, King has been
particularly outspoken and drawn the ire of
opponents and some constituents in
the process.
In 2004, King compared the
treatment of Abu Ghraib prisoners
in
Earlier this year, King was
under fire for predicting that if
Barack Obama was elected president "the
radical Islamists, the al-Qaida ...
would be dancing in the streets in greater
numbers than they did on Sept.
11...."
He's never backed down from
those comments or apologized. In
fact, he has said such comments are needed to
spark debate and
discussion.
After the comments about
Obama in March, Iowa Democrats
didn't hide their disdain.
"I didn't
take it to be about religion at
all," said Monona County Democratic Party
chairman Ken Mertes. "I just took it
to be his consistently racist
remarks."
Slayer of the Democratic
agenda?
King said Congress
has changed in the two years since
Democrats took control of the House in
2006.
"I'm sitting in an
environment where the Speaker of the House is
Nancy Pelosi, so the aspirations
to pass legislation between now and the end of
this (110th) Congress is an
entirely different arena than it was in the
109th Congress," King said. "That
(Democratic) agenda is an entirely different
agenda and I have to work within
the confines of that. It's going to sound like
my aspirations have diminished,
(but) I'm still swinging for the fences all
the time I can. So I'm not going get
done what I'd like to get done."
King
said, in spite of being in the
minority, he introduced and successfully
passed 12 amendments on the House floor
in 2007 and 2008.
King said his No. 1
legislative goal is to get rid of
the national income tax and replace it with a
national sales/consumption tax,
dubbed Fair Tax. He's advocated for that tax
change all his years in Congress,
contending it would unhook the anchor of tax
compliance dragging down the
economy. He's also been a cosponsor for the
Fair Tax, which hasn't made it out
of committee. In King's first term, for
instance, the bill was HR46 and had
about 50 cosponsors.
King said another
way to look at his effectiveness
is to examine how many Democratic bills he's
blocked in the last two
years.
"That very well may be the best
contribution that I have made in
this 110th Congress, is slowing down,
sometimes stopping" Democratic-sponsored
bills," he said.
King said the extended
2007 funding debate for
reauthorization of the federal State
Children's Health Insurance Program was a
key moment. The measure was initially written
for an increase of $35 billion,
but was scaled back before being signed by
President Bush in
December.
King took to the House floor
last fall with a sign that said
the SCHIP acronym should instead stand for
"Socialized Clinton-style Hillarycare
for Illegals and their Parents."
"I do
believe if you took me out of the
equation, there would have been a different
(funding) result," King
said.
