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John McCain: Consistently wrong

I write this in response to a front page post asking which of John McCain's policy positions has he been consistent over the last 10 years?

Try phasing out Social Security.  John McCain can call it whatever he wants, but he has been consistent -- consistently wrong -- on that issue over the last 10 years. 

How about the use of military force to spread democracy?  On that McCain has clearly been consistent and consistently wrong.

The federal government's role in providing relief to the uninsured?  Again, McCain -- like our current President -- has been consistent and consistently wrong on that issue. 

Increasing the federal minimum wage?  McCain has consistently voted against that, and even voted last year to repeal the landmark law.  Again, consistent like Bush, and consistently wrong. 

So, yeah, on some significant policy issues John McCain has been consistent -- consistently wrong, too.

John McCain on Gun-Control: Another Flip-Flop

Here's John McCain's record on gun control, and it's anything but consistent:

In 1993, John McCain voted against the Brady Bill and the Assault Weapons Ban.

In 1999, John McCain voted against closing the gun show loophole -- only a year later to cut a commercial supporting the Colorado ballot initiative to close the gun show loophole.

In 2004, John McCain voted against the Feinstein amendment extending the assault weapons ban another 10 years.

That's the McCain record. Flip-flop.


Hillary Opposed Gas Tax Repeal As Senate Candiate in 2000

In her 2000 New York Senate race, then-Rep. Rick Lazio (R-Long Island) proposed a temporary suspension of the gas tax.  Here is what then-first lady Hillary Clinton had to say in June 2000:


Campaigning in the Hudson Valley, Lazio continued a two-day assault on Clinton's support of maintaining the 18-cent federal gas tax and then used tough rhetoric to declare that "trust" and "character" were campaign issues during an evening fundraiser in Manhattan that raised more that $1 million.

Clinton, meanwhile, lashed out at Lazio's plan to repeal 4.3 cents of the gas tax, calling it "a bad deal for New York and a potential bonanza for the oil companies."

During a visit to a shopping mall in the Buffalo suburbs, Clinton said that "the gas tax is one of the few exceptions where we actually get more money back than we send to Washington."

While New York sends $300 million a year to Washington in gas taxes, Clinton said, it gets back $477 million in highway funding.


Below is Sen. Hillary Clinton today:


My opponent, Senator Obama, opposes giving consumers a break," Clinton said, campaigning in North Carolina. "I understand the American people need some relief."

Clinton said she would make up the difference in revenue by imposing a "windfall profits tax" on oil companies.


"If we suspended it and made up the lost revenues, that's the best of both worlds," she said.



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