Ryan Inc. Central, Paul Ryan's Cousin's Construction Business, Benefits From Federal Spending Candidate Wants To Cut

Family Time At The Ryans Could Be #AWKWARD
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Republican vice presidential candidate, Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., pauses while speaking at a rally at Oakland University in Rochester, Mich., Monday, Oct. 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

Paul Ryan is in favor of major cuts to federal spending, but his cousin's construction company has pulled in big bucks from government funded projects.

Ryan Inc. Central, a construction company owned by Ryan's cousin where he also used to work, may get hurt by the vice presidential candidate's plan to slash government spending should Romney win the election come November, Bloomberg reports.

While Paul Ryan's cousin Adam says that most of his company's business comes from private clients, the company has won several government-funded projects over the years. Most recently, Ryan Inc. Central was awarded a $4.9 million Illinois highway interchange project partially funded by the federal government. Likewise, the firm built Andrews Air Force Bases’ third golf course back in 1995, a project that constituted 24 transactions with the government, according to Bloomberg.

Meanwhile, Congressman Ryan has been outspoken about his plan to drastically cut government spending. Known as a deficit hawk on Capitol Hill, Ryan has even been at odds with his own running mate over defense spending cuts, a measure Mitt Romney has said he doesn’t support.

Evidence of Ryan's frugal approach to spending was also seen Thursday night during the Vice Presidential debate.

"We can't keep spending and borrowing like this," Ryan said regarding the possibility of debt crisis due to too much government spending. "We can't just keep spending money we don't have."

Indeed, Paul Ryan’s budget plan, "The Path To Prosperity," also calls for big cuts to education, heath care and transportation spending, the last of which will have at least some effect on his cousin’s business. Of course, when his own Wisconsin district was in need of stimulus funding, he had no problem reaching out for help, as noted by Vice President Joe Biden on Thursday.

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Before You Go

Fact Checking The Vice Presidential Debate's Economic Claims
Ryan: The Problem With Taxing The Rich? There Aren’t Enough Of Them(01 of10)
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Paul Ryan slammed Biden: “There aren't enough rich people and small businesses to tax to pay for all their spending.” As much as liberals talk about a level playing field, Ryan has a solid point here. A Third Way study found that popping the rich without seriously cutting spending would still leave a massive deficit for decades to come.(Hat Tip: The Washington Post ) (credit:AP)
Biden: Auto Bailout Saved A Million Jobs(02 of10)
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Actually Biden might have sold himself short. According to the non-partisan Center for Automotive Research, the $80 billion bailout saved 1.45 million jobs. Conservative have argued that it’s impossible to know what would have happened if the companies were allowed to restructure after bankruptcy and the bailout was a sop to coddled union workers. (credit:AP)
Ryan: Six Studies Have Verified That Tax Math Adds Up(03 of10)
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During the vice presidential debate, Republican nominee Paul Ryan claimed that six studies confirm that the math for the Romney/Ryan tax plan adds up. That's not exactly true; some studies claimed that you could make their tax plan work, but only by monkeying with the definition of middle class or subjecting some investment income to taxes, according to the Washington Post.
Ryan: Stimulus Is Worth $831 Billion(04 of10)
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During the Vice Presidential debate Paul Ryan overstated the cost of the stimulus package, saying that it cost $831 billion. In fact, the stimulus plan that President Obama passed in 2009 was worth $787 billion, according to The New York Times. (credit:AP)
Ryan: Biden Blew Stimulus on “Green Pork”(05 of10)
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In accusing the vice president of wasting stimulus money on “green pork,” Ryan asked "was it a good idea to spend taxpayer dollars on electric cars in Finland, or on windmills in China?" Sounds like an awful idea. Luckily it didn’t happen, according to Politifact. The government did loan money to an American carmaker to build green cars in Finland, but it wasn’t stimulus money and it predated Obama. As for those windmills, less than $3 million might have gone to China, but the vast majority of wind energy investment was spent here. (credit:AP)
Biden: Romney-Ryan Tax Plan Will Hurt Middle Class(06 of10)
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Vice President Joe Biden slammed the Republican nominees' tax plan, saying that it would cost the middle-class more than the wealthy. "The only way you can find $5 trillion in loopholes is cut the mortgage deduction for middle-class people, cut the health care deduction for middle-class people, take away their ability to get a tax break to send their kids to college," he said. According to a study by The Tax Policy Center, the math for the Romney/Ryan tax plan only really works if popular middle class tax cuts are eliminated. Still, the study has come under scrutiny because it was based on a variety of assumptions about the plan that the Romney campaign has yet to specify. (credit:AP)
Ryan: Social Security And Medicare Going Bankrupt(07 of10)
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During the vice presidential debate, Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan said that "Medicare and Social Security are going bankrupt. These are indisputable facts." Ryan's right that the picture for social security and Medicare look pretty grim, but Ryan's position may be a bit extreme. It will be decades before Social Security's trust fund is completely depleted and it will be even longer before Medicare completely runs out, according to an April government report cited by The Washington Post. (credit:AP)
Ryan: Obamacare Will Force 20 Million Workers Off Health Insurance(08 of10)
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Paul Ryan repeated a claim often made by the Romney campaign that about 20 million workers will lose health insurance because of Obamacare. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that between three and five million workers will switch from employer-based plans to other forms of healthcare. (credit:AP)
Biden: 14 Million Underwater Homeowners Haven't Missed A Payment(09 of10)
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Joe Biden claimed that there are 14 million underwater homeowners that have "never missed a mortgage payment." Biden's claim about the size of the problem is about right -- there are around 13.5 million American homeowners that are underwater, according to economists Joe Stiglitz and Mark Zandi. But it's unlikely that all of those homeowners have "never missed a mortgage payment." (credit:AP)
Ryan: Job Growth Is Slowing(10 of10)
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Paul Ryan claimed "we're headed in the wrong direction" when it comes to job growth. "Job growth in September was slower than it was in August, and August was slower than it was in July," he said. In fact, the unemployment rate is going down. It's fallen from 9 percent last September to 7.8 percent last month -- the lowest level since President Obama took office. (credit:AP)