A lot of what you have seen with third-party groups - like the Tea Party - these folks are conservative, and they are fed up with people in Washington who are not working for them but against them.
— Tim Griffin
I believe 2014 will be another historic year for conservatives in Arkansas, and I stand ready to help with that effort and make sure a conservative wins the 2nd Congressional District.
While others may get distracted, I will continue to focus on the problem of unemployment and seek to help create good, high-paying jobs for Arkansans.
The solution is to change the cake recipe, and that's the way it is with government. We can start adopting policies that work and that encourage economic growth. If you got incentives for encouraging big business development but not small or medium business development, it's not going to work. It needs to work for all three.
We are the ones that are trying to get Washington spending under control so it can live within its means.
We need more STEM grads, and we need to quit equipping our competitors.
The entire purpose of the State of the Union Address is for the president to outline where we stand as a nation.
The last thing we need to do when natural gas has been such a blessing is raise the severance tax.
I am very practical.
Historically, Congress hasn't paid much attention to the confines the Constitution establishes.
Currently, the Pegasus Pipeline runs through about 13 miles of the Lake Maumelle watershed and also crosses some of the lake's tributaries. I am especially concerned that the steepness of the shoreline at Lake Maumelle could exacerbate contamination of the water supply in the event of an oil spill and make cleanup more difficult.
Telling people more about yourself and distinguishing yourself from your opponent - they're both essential parts of communicating with voters.
I wasn't elected to avoid conflict. I was elected to represent the people of the 2nd District.
During my childhood, my father, a Southern Baptist minister, and my mother, a teacher, made sure I took educational trips to cities such as Washington, D.C., Williamsburg, Va., Philadelphia, and Boston to learn about America's history.
I love serving in the U.S. House of Representatives, and I have especially enjoyed my time on the Ways and Means Committee.
I go home every weekend to see my family.
I will complete my second term, but I have made no decision as to my plans after Congress except that I will continue in public service, including as a lieutenant colonel in the Army Reserve.
When I looked at it and did my homework on this issue, I concluded that a flat tax is better than a consumption tax.
There is nothing better than just policies that say, 'Come on: grow your jobs here.'
There was no surge in 501c4 applications in 2010.
For Arkansas, I think the sky is the limit, but I think we are going to have to fight the urge to avoid risks. We need to look first at where we are as a state. I think, as a state, we have made progress over the years, but there are two kinds of progress: absolute progress and relative progress.
It's not fair that people who work, save, and pay for their cell phones are forced to fund the Lifeline program that pads the pockets of people like Carlos Slim, the foreign billionaire who has repeatedly been named the World's Richest Man.
If someone really wanted to end Medicare, they wouldn't propose a reform: they would do nothing.
Should the federal government be giving people cellphones?
It's not fair that people save and work and pay for phones from whatever funds they have, and other people get them for free.
I don't want to shut down the government.
The health care law's individual mandate forces nearly all individuals to buy health insurance or pay a penalty. The mandate cannot be severed from the rest of the law because it is the primary mechanism through which the law's changes are supported. Without the mandate, the law collapses.
Pipelines are the safest way to move oil.
We can't be paying pensions to the next generation of federal workers when hardly anyone in the private sector gets them.
I had someone call me this morning telling me they had somebody who would only work a certain number of hours a week because if they worked too many hours a week, then they couldn't get their government assistance.
I grew up when 'Schoolhouse Rock' taught millions of American kids how a bill becomes a law.
While I am talking about private sector job creation, the cap-and-trade energy tax, Speaker Pelosi's health-care bill and card-check legislation, Washington Democrats are defending groups like ACORN. They are on the wrong side of the issues and know their views are wrong for Arkansas, so they attack me.
I'm in the gym every morning and have lockers by Democrats. You know, I don't ask person X or person Y to go out to dinner. Not because they're bad people - I just have very little in common with them.
We have decided that now is the time for me to focus intently on my top priority, my family, as Elizabeth and I raise our two young children. To that end, I will not seek reelection to a third term.
I hear people saying we need this and we need that as a society, but is it really fair for the government - i.e. the taxpayers - to provide people with cell phones? I don't think so.
Working at the White House is an honor for any preacher's kid from Magnolia, but the issue is jobs.
If you do what you've always done, you just get more of what you have always had. We've now got to dream big and act bold.
I think it's inevitable that aviation is a part of the economic growth that surrounds airports.
You're never as ready as you think you are. You're never as ready as you need to be.
Instead of more talk about salmon and high-speed rails, more criticism of the Supreme Court or more praise for the Soviet's Sputnik mission - President Obama should use his State of the Union Address to tell the American people the truth about the fundamental financial challenges our country faces.
I respect Sen. Elliott and expect that she will be a strong opponent.
People say, 'Well everybody needs a cellphone.' Well, what does 'need' mean? Do you need an iPad? How about a computer? A printer?
The framers never intended an infinitely broad Commerce Clause that would let Congress dictate individuals' purchases.
I believe our health care system is in drastic need of innovative, patient-centered reforms that encourage competition and increase consumer choice, not the bloated bureaucracy, tax increases, rationing, and mandates in the president's government takeover.
My whole deal is reforming, changing, shaking up Washington. It sure needs it.
Most private-sector folks don't get a pension.
We ought to be incentivizing people to save more of their own money for use taking care of their healthcare expenses, and what we have done is we have set it up where health savings accounts are harder and harder to use for narrower and narrower purposes.
Serving the people of Arkansas' 2nd District is the honor of a lifetime, and I'm grateful for the opportunity I have been given by my fellow Arkansans.
So far, Senate Republicans are good at getting Facebook likes and town halls and not much else. Do something.
People love to talk about the old bipartisanship. But it wasn't really bipartisanship. Yeah, they had a different label. But they're replaced now by people with basically the same views.