Perry slams Washington's spending "addiction"

Texas Governor Rick Perry speaks during the CNN/Tea Party Republican presidential candidates debate in Tampa, Florida September 12, 2011. REUTERS/Scott Audette

Texas Governor Rick Perry speaks during the CNN/Tea Party Republican presidential candidates debate in Tampa, Florida September 12, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Scott Audette

BOSTON | Tue Sep 13, 2011 10:09pm EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - Republican presidential hopeful Rick Perry said on Tuesday Washington lawmakers need the equivalent of a 12-step addiction-fighting program to break their overspending habit.

"Admit you are powerless over your spending addiction and that your budget has become unmanageable. Just admit it," Perry said in a speech to a conservative public policy group in Boston.

Excess federal spending is "generational theft" that "jeopardizes our children's futures," said Perry, calling for "sound fiscal policies that remove the millstone that will sink future generations."

Perry spoke at the Pioneer Institute's annual "better government competition" awards dinner -- an appearance scheduled months before the Texas governor jumped into the race for the White House in August.

Running on a record of strong jobs creation in Texas and what he calls "common-sense conservative," Perry has jumped to a lead in polls among Republicans vying to run against President Barack Obama in the November 2012 election.

But front-runner status has meant stepped-up attacks on Perry, including a focus in Monday's CNN/Tea Party debate on his view that the popular Social Security retirement program is the equivalent of an illegal Ponzi scheme.

Perry was unapologetic and said some of his rivals are happy to criticize the program -- until pressed.

"When it comes to Social Security, every Republican candidate knows that the current system is unsustainable," he said. But other candidates "start sounding like liberals" when pressed on the need to change the program, Perry said.

Perry also criticized Obama, terming the nation's army of unemployed a tragedy and calling new regulations introduced by the Obama administration job killers.

Perry spoke hours after his campaign got a major boost with the endorsement of Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval.

Nevada falls third among 2012 Republican primaries and caucuses, preceded only by Iowa and New Hampshire, according to the current calendar.

"Governor Rick Perry has the strongest record of job creation, fiscal discipline, and executive branch leadership among the presidential candidates," Sandoval, Nevada's first Hispanic governor, said in a statement.

(Reporting by Ros Krasny; Editing by Bill Trott)

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Comments (21)
jbrinkmeyer wrote:
What a joke. Spending rose just as much if not more under Reagan and Bush, Jr. The only difference is Republicans prefer to spend it on military toys. Actually the real difference is they spend just as much, but refuse to ask those who benefit most from their largess to pay. It was vodoo economics when Reagan was president. It remains vodoo economics today.

Sep 13, 2011 10:22pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
txgadfly wrote:
Is this another one of those Republicans that has never seen a war he did not like? We spent $1.2 trillion on wars in 2010. Not *THAT* is an addiction. Funny though, Washington (and Austin!) politicians never want to give you what they have charged you for. They charge you for retirement and give you the Afghan War. What a deal! When it is time to cut, it is your retirement and medical that goes, not the Mechanized Infantry.

Just another thief, people. Ask him about the Texas tax on electric bills to help the poor pay for their air conditioning. They are “diverting” (a nice Republican word for “steal” — so much more accurate!) the money to pay for other State expenses and not for the poor either. Lies and theft, lies and theft. And the press does not even mention these missing billions while Texas poor die from the heat.

They charge you for a pension and give you nothing except bills for burying the new dead after charging you to turn them from the living into the dead. And opine how you are always “complainers” when you want what you paid for. Abraham Lincoln should have hung Robert E. Lee and we would not have to endure such effrontery from fearless officials. Prosecute them!

Sep 13, 2011 10:47pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
SanPa wrote:
Perry is correct: Washington has been out of control when it comes to spending on tax cuts.

Sep 13, 2011 11:00pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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