Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Now that Republicans control the government, here’s what we can expect
Now that Republicans control the government, here’s what we can expect
Nov 23, 2025 7:03 AM

Because of the recent election, Republicans now control the White House, the U.S. Senate (51 percent), the House of Representatives (54 percent), 31 of the 50 state governorships (62 percent), and a record 67 of the 98 partisan state legislative chambers in the nation (68 percent).

What will they do with all that power and influence?

To predict what policies the GOP will champion over the next two to four years we can turn to the most recent party platform. Although the document is not binding on the presidential nominee or any other politicians,political scientists have foundthat over the past 30 years lawmakers in Congress tend to vote in line with their party’s platform: 89 percent of the time for Republicans.

Here are the agenda items that are related to issues covered by the Acton Institute. (Note: This level of government that would handle each item is not designated, so some issues may be handled at the state level and others by the U.S. Congress.)

Conscience rights

Allow all organizations to “provide, purchase, or enroll in healthcare coverage consistent with their religious, moral, or ethical convictions without discrimination or penalty.”

Provide parents the right to determine the proper medical treatment and therapy for their minor children.

Criminal Justice Reform

Limitthe creation of new “crimes” and a create a bipartisan mission to purge the Code and the body of regulations of old “crimes.”

Require mens rea elements in the definition of any new crimes to protect Americans who, in violating a law, act unknowingly or without criminal intent.

Codify the Common Law’s Rule of Lenity, which requires courts to interpret unclear statutes in favor of a defendant.

Require mandatory prison time for all assaults involving serious injury to law enforcement officers.

Allow victims of crime and their families to be told all relevant information about their case, allowed to be present for its trial, assured a voice in sentencing and parole hearings, given access to social and legal services, and benefit from the Crime Victims Fund.

Implement legislation to protect prisoners against cruel or degrading treatment by other inmates.

Provide incentives for states to encourageopportunities for literacy and vocational education to prepare prisoners for release to munity.

Education

Propose a constitutional amendment to protect parental rights “from interference by states, the federal government, or international bodies such as the United Nations.”

Allowschool choice for all students.

Havethe bulk of federal money through Title I go e children and “through IDEA for children with special needs should follow the child to whatever school the family thinks will work best for them.”

Refuse any newimpositions of national standards and assessments.

State legislatures to propose offering the Bible in a literature curriculum as an elective in America’s high schools.

Requirebackground checks for all personnel who interact with school children

Support options for learning, including home-schooling, career and technical education, private or parochial schools, magnet schools, charter schools, online learning, and early-college high schools.

Require investigations by civil authorities and prosecution in a courtroom of sexual assault claims, rather than having them adjudicated in the “faculty lounge” of colleges. Such convictions for sexual assault wouldbe punished to the full extent of the law.

Federal Budget and Debt

Propose aconstitutional amendmentfor a federal balanced budget.

Reduction and ultimately elimination the system of conditioned grants to states.

Imposefirm caps on future debt and accelerate the repayment of current debt.

The Federal Reserve

Audit the Federal Reserve’s activities every year.

Create acommission to investigate ways to set a fixed value for the dollar.

Financial Markets

Removing regulations that prevent access to capital munity banks.

Abolish the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau or, if that cannot be done, subject it to congressional appropriation.

Requirethat settlements arising from statutory violations by financial institutions must be used to make whole the harmed consumers, with any remaining proceeds given to the general Treasury.

Introducelegislation to ensure that the problems of any financial institution can be resolved through the Bankruptcy Code

Propose regulations that willensure that FDIC-regulated banks are “properly capitalized and taxpayers are protected against bailouts.”

Rejectthe use of disparate impact theory in enforcing anti-discrimination laws with regard to lending.

Human Trafficking

Usethe full force of the law against those who engage mercial sexual exploitation and forced or bonded labor of men, women, or children; involuntary domestic servitude; trafficking in persons for the purpose of organ removal; and the illegal recruitment and use of child soldiers.

Increasediplomatic efforts and accountability for foreign governments to prosecute traffickers, including “penalties for any public officials who may plicit in this devastating crime.”

Implement legislation tostop slave labor by “taking steps to prevent overseas labor contractors who exploit foreign workers from supporting military bases abroad or exporting goods to the United States.”

Innovation and Entrepreneurship

Introduce legislation toreduce or repeal occupational licensing laws.

Labor

Introduce legislation to allowall workers, including union members, to be free to accept raises and rewards without veto power from union officials.

Introduce federal legislation allowing all right of states to enact Right-to-Work laws.

Poverty

Evaluate, modify, and/or repealpoverty programs that do notactually reduce poverty or that do notincrease the personal independence of program participants.

Includework requirements for all poverty programs.

Allow states and localities to have greaterresponsibility for, and control over, public assistance programs.

Private Property and Intellectual Property Rights

Have state legislatures nullify the impact of the Supreme Court’s Kelo decision within their jurisdiction by legislation or state constitutional amendments declaring that private property may be taken only for true public use.

Pass the Private Property Rights Protection Act.

Require by law that any money for the takings of private property for public e from the budget of the agency performing the taking.

Enact reforms to protect law-abiding citizens against abusive asset forfeiture tactics.

Introduce legislation to enforce intellectual property laws against all infringers, whether foreign or domestic.

Regulations

Requirethat major new federal regulations be approved by Congress before they can take effect.

Revisitexisting laws that “delegate too much authority to regulatory agencies” and review all current regulations for possible reform or repeal.

Requireapproval by both houses of Congress for any rule or regulation that would impose significant costs on the American people

Religious Liberty

Implement legislation preventing government discriminationagainst businesses or entities which decline to sell items or services to individuals for activities that go against their religious views about such activities.

Reject all legislation that attemptsto tax religious organizations.

Repeal the Johnson Amendment.

Passthe First Amendment Defense Act, legislation in the House and Senate which will bar government discrimination against individuals and businesses for acting on the belief that marriage is the union of one man and one woman: “This Act would protect the non-profit tax status of faith-based adoption agencies, the accreditation of religious educational institutions, the grants and contracts of faith-based charities and small businesses, and the licensing of religious professions — all of which are under assault by elements of the Democratic Party.”

Pass legislation similar to the First Amendment Defense Act at the state level.

Passlaws to confirm the “longstanding American tradition that religious individuals and institutions can educate young people, receive government benefits, and participate in public debates without having to check their religious beliefs at the door.”

Implement legislation allowingthe public display of the Ten Commandments.

Empowerthe U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.

Restoring “advocacy of religious liberty” to its “central place” in diplomacy.

Have the State Department designate the systematic killing of religious and ethnic minorities as genocide.

Taxation

Lower the tax rates, curb corporate welfare, and eliminate special interest provisions and loopholes.

Change the tax code to make is simpler and clearer.

Oppose all retroactive taxation.

Prevent legislation that would tax religious organizations, charities, and fraternal benevolent societies.

Lower the corporate tax rate to be on a par with, or below, the rates of other industrial nations.

Switchto a territorial system of taxation so that “profits earned and taxed abroad may be repatriated for job-creating investment here at home.”

Reduce tax barriers so that panies are headquartered in America.

Technology and Electricity

Increase funding for scientific missions in space.

Expedite siting processes and the expansion of the electric grid.

Transportation

Removefrom the Highway Trust Fund programs that “should not be the business of the federal government.”

Phase out the federal transit program and reform provisions of the National Environmental Policy Act.

Repeal of the Davis-Bacon law, which “limits employment and drives up construction and maintenance costs for the benefit of unions.”

Refuse allincreases in the federal gas tax.

Prevent unionization of the Transportation Security Administration (TSA).

Defund Amtrak.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Let’s thank American city dwellers for their workaday commute
It’s time we “salute” the large group of American workers whose mute to their jobs in the city takes as long as 60 minutes or more. For those living in New York City, San Francisco, or Washington D.C., mute to and from work is often burdensome. The many city dwellers who help to drive America’s economic output deserve thanks. James Bruce, associate professor of philosophy at John Brown University and Acton University faculty memberrecently wrote a piece in the Wall...
Families pay more in taxes than for food, clothing, and housing combined: Study
The necessities of life include food, water, clothing, and shelter … but should the government cost more than all of them put together? A new study has found that politicians extract more in taxes than working families pay for their basic human needs. Canadian families paid more to the tax collectorthan they did to the farmer, the grocer, the landlord, and the seamstress to sustain life itself, according to a new study from the Fraser Institute, a free market think...
How economic enterprise can revitalize rural churches
Churches in America are closing at an alarming rate, with an estimated 3,400 to 4,000 singing their final hymns and closing their doors each year. The majority of these churches are almost certainly in rural areas that are seeing unprecedented declines in population. Over the last 40 years, most munities have experienced high rates of out-migration to urban areas, leaving behind an aging populace that is slowly dying off. A study by the Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service shows...
Should religious publications accept government funding to promote the EU?
The government of Poland recently funded media outlets that agreed to cover the EU’s international wealth redistribution program, the EU Structural Funds. The fact that one of the recipients was a Catholic weekly raises numerous moral and ethical questions. Marcin Rzegocki, who lives in Poland, describes the “omnipresent” propaganda, funded by taxpayer funds, intended to promote the public perception of the European Union. In a new essay forReligion & Liberty Transatlantic, he reveals the extent of the issue. The government...
The balance of industries and creative destruction
Note: This is post #46 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. Why are price signals and petition so important to a market economy? When prices accurately signal costs and benefits and markets petitive, the Invisible Hand ensures that costs are minimized and production is maximized, explains Alex Tabarrok. If these conditions aren’t met, market inefficiencies arise and the Invisible Hand cannot do its work. In this video by Marginal Revolution University, Tabarrok shows how two major processes, creative...
Thinking about the ethics and economics of ‘price gouging’
A reporter posted a picture on Twitter yesterday that showed a Best Buy in Houston charging $42 for a case of Dasani water. The picture also showed a case of Smartwater for $29, with a sign noting there was a “limited supply.” Not surprisingly, the outrage on social media prodded Best Buy to quickly respond by claiming it was a mistake. “As pany we are focused on helping, not hurting affected people,” pany said in a statement. “We’re sorry, and...
New Issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality (Vol. 20, No. 1)
The newest issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality, vol. 20, no. 1, has been published online and print copies are in the mail. This issue is a special issue on “Morality, Neoclassical Economics, and John Maynard Keynes.” Guest editors Victor V. Claar and Greg Forster describe the issue as follows in their editorial: [A]s this special issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality will help illuminate, our need to sort issues into separate “economic” and “cultural” categories...
Toward an economics of neighborly love
As a child growing up in rural poverty, Tom Nelson was constantly confronted by material lack and the social shame that es with it, instilling an acute sense that economics mattered. Yet years later, as a seminary student hoping to e a pastor, he quickly lost sight of that basic intuition, taking a dualistic approach to “full-time ministry” that relegated economic life to the sidelines. “Economics was for economists; theology was for pastors. There were no points of intersection —...
Reason, faith, and the struggle for Western civilization
“President Trump’s outspoken defense of Western civilization in his July 2017 Warsaw speech was a pointed reminder that one troubling characteristic of our time is the ongoing assault on the very idea of the West,” says Samuel Gregg in this week’s Acton Commentary. “This is most vividly manifested in the relentless use of physical violence by jihadists determined to terrorize us first into acquiescence and, eventually, submission.” Nor, however, is there a shortage of efforts to dismantle Western culture from...
Radio Free Acton: Victor Claar on price gouging and Hurricane Harvey; Upstream on progressive rock; and Mailbag with Rev. Robert Sirico
This week’s edition of Radio Free Acton features a chat with economist Victor Claar about the outrage surrounding price gouging and Hurricane Harvey. Is it immoral to ratchet up prices in the face of disasters? On Upstream, host Bruce Edward Walker talks about the politics and culture of progressive rock with guest Sam Karnick. And on Acton Mailbag, Rev. Robert A. Sirico, co-founder and president of the Acton Institute, fields questions from summer interns. Check out these additional resources on...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved