When David Cuddy decided to run against Senator Ted Stevens for the Republican nomination for the US Senate in Alaska, he had no idea that Stevens was going to be indicted on federal corruption charges. He was simply tired of the excessive earmarks, the disapproval of Congress in general and that Stevens was not focused on the nation's problems.
Senator Stevens is the poster child of why the GOP got trounced in 2006 and his race was looking to be another Democrat pickup in 2008. However, chance kicked in and preparation with the right ideas met opportunity. Stevens was recently indicted, which has thrown the Republican primary wide open in a race that should be Stevens' to lose.
Of particular interest in this race, at least from a national perspective, is the debate on earmark reform. Earmarks are legislative tools whereby legislators insert "pet projects" into legislation without debate and shower gifts upon their friends. Senator Stevens, the earmark king, made the practice well-known and despised with the infamous "bridge to nowhere" project where he tried to direct $223 million of federal funds to build a bridge to an island of 50 people.
Cuddy seeks to reform this practice with a common-sense solution, to make earmarks public and subject to debate. In the long-term, he believes the federal government shouldn't be spending any money on local projects. If a town would like a public swimming pool, they shouldn't be able to charge taxpayers in another state with the bill. The practice of trying to get "free federal money" needs to stop. It is a bit like sending a sandwich to Washington and lobbying for the leftover crumbs and calling it "success".
Cuddy comes from a business background and applies economic approaches to policy issues. For health care, he argues it isn't about who pays. That's simply a matter of passing the high cost of health care around. The problem is the high cost and inefficiencies built into the health care system. He points to Walmart as a successful example of innovation to take an industry and radically reduce its costs. The high cost of health care is linked to another issue that he speaks on: immigration.







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