Dennis Hastert

Dennis Hastert
John Dennis "Denny" Hastertis a former politician from Illinois, the 51st Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, serving from 1999 to 2007, and an admitted serial child molester. He represented Illinois's 14th congressional district in the House for twenty years, 1987 to 2007. He is the longest-serving Republican Speaker of the House in history. In 2015, Hastert pleaded guilty to federal criminal charges of structuring financial transactions to conceal payments to an individual whom he had sexually abused...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionPolitician
Date of Birth2 January 1942
CityAurora, IL
CountryUnited States of America
The American people want us to go to work. They want us to produce good policy, ... The ability for us to save Social Security and Medicare in the future, the ability to give American workers and working families more of their money so that they can keep it in their pocket instead of giving it to the tax collectors.
Taxpayers need relief, ... Consumer confidence is down, energy prices are up, and economic growth is stagnant. The economy needs a boost, and this tax relief will provide that boost.
As a fiscal conservative, I cannot support a base closing that does not provide taxpayer savings,
provides for common sense tax relief in the future. We have the largest surplus in history, which means the taxpayers are being overcharged.
The Kerry plan is simple: Add more money to our national deficit, spend more money here in Washington, raise taxes on job creation,
This is one of the toughest, most complex pieces of legislation that we've tried to put together in our lifetime,
I've never run a plantation before. I'm not even sure what kind of association she's trying to make. If she's trying to be racist, I think that's unfortunate.
I know that the news of dismal economic forecasts and the layoffs in the technology sector has some people in the industry worried,
It is important that when we rebuild this historic city that we consider the safety of the citizens first.
He will come up to the Capitol, as far as we know right now, by a procession probably Wednesday morning and lie in state at the Capitol Rotunda on Wednesday and Thursday, and, we think, a funeral at the National Cathedral on Friday,
have been here 20, 25 years, are integrated into the system, have children who are American citizens and, quite frankly, don't have a home to go back to in another country.
If you want to be effective in this town, you need to get over it to get things done.
I think Tom Reynolds may have been talking about what his feelings are,
It's estimated for every $1 billion we spend on road construction, nearly 48,000 jobs are created.