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Congressman: Focus on economy
Official holds town hall meeting here
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U.S. Rep. Tom Graves addressed a capacity crowd during a town hall meeting Wednesday night at the Forsyth County Administration Building. - photo by Autumn McBride

Meeting with residents who packed the Forsyth County Administration Building Wednesday night, U.S. Rep. Tom Graves said jobs and the economy are the top issues government should be dealing with.

"That’s where we should be putting all our time, all our emphasis," said Graves, who represents District 9.

"And how do we get jobs and the economy back on track? Get government out of the way. That’s the only answer that’s out there."

The Ranger Republican explained that solving the nation’s financial crisis would take more than increasing taxes and would require making revenue and spending match.

"You can raise taxes as much as you want today and you’ll never catch the spending line," he said. "It is rising too fast and taxes cannot catch it, so you’ve got to bring that line down."

Graves noted the best way to improve revenue is job creation. He also supports bringing companies back from overseas instead of increasing taxes on individuals.

Wednesday’s visit was part of a summer town hall tour for Graves, who under Georgia’s proposed congressional map likely will not represent Forsyth much longer.

Based on U.S. Census 2010 figures, the redrawn district lines will place Graves in District 14, while reshaping District 9 and making it an open seat.

Most of northern Forsyth would be in District 9, with south Forsyth in District 7.

During Wednesday’s gathering, Resident Mark Andrews suggested kicking lobbyists out of Washington, D.C., and asked Graves about the Fair Tax and why existing immigration laws are not enforced.

Graves said he’s a co-sponsor of the Fair Tax and that it will take time to explain the proposal to other constituencies.

The Fair Tax plan is a comprehensive proposal that replaces all federal income and payroll based taxes with an integrated approach including a progressive national retail sales tax, according to its supporters’ Web site.

"When you get that Fair Tax code -- you get rid of 60,000 pages of income tax code and all the compliance costs that go with it and all the embedded taxes that go with it and the loopholes -- you’re going to get the economy moving again," Graves said.

He noted that he supports enforcing existing immigration laws and the protection of federal borders.

Bob Morrison, a local certified financial planner, said 10,000 bankers went to jail for fraud as a result of the savings and loan crisis of 1989. Morrision questioned how the nation’s most recent financial calamity has been handled.

"The fraud this time is 100 times what it was in 1989 and not one banker has been even investigated," he said.

Graves said while he doesn’t serve on the financial services committee, he agreed the issue should be followed up on.

"That’s something we can certainly ask about," Graves said. "Now you look at who’s being held responsible or who’s being constrained and it’s the community bankers who had nothing to do with it."

Graves was limited in addressing another resident’s question about what’s being done in the nation’s capital to keep Lake Lanier full.

He said the state’s delegation is working closely with the governor’s office on the issue, but couldn’t go into detail about it because of ongoing litigation.

As part of his summer town hall tour, Graves held meetings Thursday in Lumpkin and Fannin counties.