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John McCain Chooses...
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John McCain Chooses Campaign Cash Over Wisconsin’s Families
Friday, March 14, 2008
John McCain Chooses Campaign Cash
Over Wisconsin’s
Families
Today on
the campaign trail, John McCain promised
to help law enforcement officials
combat crime, help retrain displaced workers,
and end the long lines at the
Veterans Administration facilities. But as is
so often the case with
John McCain, his rhetoric doesn’t match
his record.
Just last night when
he had the opportunity to vote on those very
issues in the Senate, John McCain once again put his
campaign ahead of Wisconsin’s families for his
own political gain.
Yesterday,
after voting to extend Bush’s tax cuts for the
wealthy, John McCain headed out
to a $1,000 a plate fundraiser in Philadelphia. McCain ducked out long
enough to miss
important votes on amendments that fund many
of the priorities he talks about
on the campaign trail.
McCain chose a
fundraiser over making Wisconsin’s
communities safer by increasing funding for
the COPS program and helping
families struggling to deal with skyrocketing
home heating costs. He put big
campaign donors ahead of helping get
manufacturing workers the job training
they need, finding the cause of autism, and
giving Wisconsin
veterans the care they deserve. [2008
Senate Amendments to S.Con.Res.70, # 4164,
4154, 4155, 4254, 4194]
But playing
hooky is nothing new to John McCain. Last
month, McCain was the only senator to
miss a critical vote to give tax rebates to
America’s
seniors and veterans
because of his campaign. [AP, 2/6/08; Politico.com, 2/6/08;
2008
Senate Vote #8]
"John
McCain’s values are not Wisconsin’s
values" Democratic Party of Wisconsin Chairman
Joe
Wineke said.
"Yesterday, when he had the opportunity
to help working families,
veterans, and communities in Wisconsin deal
with the challenges facing them
every day, McCain chose to raise campaign cash
instead. That’s not
the kind of leadership Wisconsinites
want, and that’s why they will reject McCain
in November. After
seven years of a president who puts his
own interests ahead of Wisconsin’s
families, voters have had enough."
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