The 11-Point Plan to Rescue America, often referred to as the Rescue America plan, is a policy outline released by United States Senator Rick Scott. It has been described as conservative.
The plan contains a number of controversial proposals, including the mass-firing of federal workers, setting a five year sunset provision on all federal laws, drastically reducing the funding of the Internal Revenue Service, eliminating the ability of the federal government to collect statistics on race and ethnicity, expanding qualified immunity, and raising taxes on the lowest 50% of Americans by income (Scott denies the plan proposes this). It also contains several unconstitutional proposals, including requiring students to say the Pledge of Allegiance and instituting the line-item veto.
The plan contains 11 items: [1]
Scott proposes requiring students to say the Pledge of Allegiance and stand for the national anthem. He also promotes school choice, abolishing the Department of Education and eliminating tenure in public schools.
The 11-Point Plan to Rescue America, often referred to as the Rescue America plan, is a policy outline released by United States Senator Rick Scott. It has been described as conservative.
The plan contains a number of controversial proposals, including the mass-firing of federal workers, setting a five year sunset provision on all federal laws, drastically reducing the funding of the Internal Revenue Service, eliminating the ability of the federal government to collect statistics on race and ethnicity, expanding qualified immunity, and raising taxes on the lowest 50% of Americans by income (Scott denies the plan proposes this). It also contains several unconstitutional proposals, including requiring students to say the Pledge of Allegiance and instituting the line-item veto.
The plan contains 11 items: [1]
Scott proposes requiring students to say the Pledge of Allegiance and stand for the national anthem. He also promotes school choice, abolishing the Department of Education and eliminating tenure in public schools.