Top 20 Fred Upton Quotes

Words matter. These are the best Fred Upton Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.

I'm not a rubber stamp, and people know that. If you ca

I’m not a rubber stamp, and people know that. If you can convince me of the merits, you will have my vote every time.
Fred Upton
We cannot afford the EPA’s continued expansion of red tape that is slowing economic growth and threatening to entangle millions of small businesses.
Fred Upton
Under President Obama’s new health care law, Medicaid will become a very different health coverage program than first envisioned.
Fred Upton
For those broadcasters who are less than responsible, the FCC needs to have sharper teeth to enforce the law.
Fred Upton
The national debate on health care once centered on improving access to quality care, yet the effect of Obamacare will be the exact opposite, resulting in the shameful degradation of care for the neediest individuals.
Fred Upton
While the Left seems obsessed with increasing taxes and spending even more money, conservatives have focused more heavily on the need for spending restraint and entitlement reform – primarily to preserve and protect the future of the Medicare program. Overlooked in all of this is the future of Medicaid.
Fred Upton
Nuclear is not only emissions-free, but renewing our commitment to nuclear power will create countless jobs at a time when our nation endures nearly double-digit unemployment.
Fred Upton
Americans want and deserve a broad array of health insurance choices so they can identify those that best fit their own individual or family needs. These choices expand when we allow free enterprise to foster innovation, not smother it with taxes and one-size fits all ideology.
Fred Upton
People in Michigan are good at separating fact from fiction. They know, better than most of the country, what happens to the economy and jobs when the scales are tipped too far in favor of one group over another.
Fred Upton
With the discovery of vast new North American energy resources – thanks to the application of proven technologies like hydraulic fracturing and commonsense regulatory processes on non-federal lands – the U.S. government should no longer be in the business of spending taxpayer dollars on risky, exotic energy projects.
Fred Upton
An imposing wall prominently divides the visions of President Obama and congressional Republicans when it comes to economic growth and creating jobs. Solyndra is on one side and the Keystone pipeline is on the other.
Fred Upton
Prior to passage of Obamacare, Americans spoke out against the individual mandate; they didn’t want to change the health care they had; they didn’t want a 3,000-page bill that empowered 15 Washington bureaucrats to decide the future of the doctor-patient relationship.
Fred Upton
I support renewable energy.
Fred Upton
If the EPA continues unabated, jobs will be shipped to China and India as energy costs skyrocket. Most of the media attention has focused on the EPA’s efforts to regulate climate-change emissions, but that is just the beginning.
Fred Upton
Without international participation, jobs and emissions will simply shift overseas to countries that require few, if any, environmental protections, harming the global environment as well as the U.S. economy.
Fred Upton
The Obama administration is on notice – they will not be allowed to regulate what they have been unable to legislate.
Fred Upton
You shouldn’t have an overbearing FCC. Let the market work itself. By allowing companies to compete in an unregulated forum, you’re going to allow the faster deployment of new services and new equipment consumers are going to want.
Fred Upton
We’ve heard this before; ‘things are bad, we are gonna fix them,’ and they remain unfixed.
Fred Upton
Obamacare represents a shocking display of political arrogance. It’s about time Washington started listening to Americans’ common sense voices.
Fred Upton
Originally created to serve the poorest and sickest among us, the Medicaid program has grown dramatically but still doesn’t include the kind of flexibility that states need to provide better health care for the poor and disadvantaged.
Fred Upton