John
McCain's Dishonest Campaign Ad
By: Ironside
John McCain's new campaign ad claims
that he "has always supported our troops" but after researching his voting record on veteran's and troop issues since the invasion of
Iraq began, we find that he's voted against veterans and the troops far more often than for them.
The ad also claims that Barack Obama would rather play basketball than visit the wounded troops in Germany, but while it's mentions this false statement it's showing Obama playing basketball with the
soldiers in Kuwait, not in Germany as insinuated. This game was filmed by the
Department of Defense and not the media. John McCain has not been running a "straight talk"
campaign as he's been promising for years.
McCain's
Negative Campaign Ad LIES When it Claims:
"John
McCain has always
supported our troops."
HERE
ARE THE FACTS:
In
mid-2007, John McCain showed up for only four out of fourteen Senate
votes on Iraq.
In 2008 John McCain didn't show up for any votes on Iraq or veteran
issues.
McCain‘s
voting record of supporting the troops since the war in Iraq began:
April
2003, McCain "tabled the motion" to provide over $1 billion of National Guard
and Reserve equipment.
October
2003, McCain "tabled" an amendment to provide an additional $322
million for safety equipment for U.S. troops in Iraq.
March
2004, McCain voted against eliminating abusive tax loopholes that would
have increased veterans‘ medical care by $1.8 billion.
March
2006, McCain voted against closing corporate tax loopholes that would have
increased veteran medical services by $1.5 billion.
April
2006, McCain voted against providing an extra $430 million for veteran
outpatient care.
May 2006, McCain voted against $20 million for veteran health care
facilities.
March
2007, McCain was a 'no show' on a resolution to start redeploying troops from
Iraq by March 2008.
September
2007, McCain voted against Senator Webb‘s amendment that would put into
place rest periods for troops in between deployments.
May
2008, McCain opposed Senator Webb‘s GI bill and was a 'no
show' when the bill was voted on.
In
2008 McCain was a 'no show' for the resolution honoring the
sacrifice made by the fallen.
McCain
- Supported Disabled American Veterans 20 percent of the time in 2006.
Obama
- Supported Disabled American Veterans 80 percent of the time
in 2006.
McCain
- Supported Disabled American
Veterans 25 percent of the time in 2005.
Obama
- Supported Disabled American
Veterans 92 percent of the time in 2005.
McCain
- In 2006 Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America gave Senator McCain a
grade of D.
Obama
- In 2006 Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America gave Senator Obama a
grade of B+.
McCain
is the Candidate Who Snubs Our Troops, Not Obama
By:
Jill
Richardson
John
McCain seems to be turning a classic Rovian tactic on its head. In the
past, Republican candidates under Rove's influence attacked their
opponents on the opponents' strengths. For example, George W. Bush and his
surrogates went after John Kerry, a war hero, for his service, mocking him
with purple band-aids. McCain seems to be attacking Barack Obama on his
own (McCain's) weaknesses.
McCain's
strong opposition to the new GI bill is still fresh in my memory.
Senator Jim Webb's work in securing educational benefits for veterans was
nothing less than heroic, and in an election year, few Senators dared vote
against it. But McCain claimed that expanded benefits for vets was too
nice, arguing it might encourage too many troops to leave the military to
cash in on their benefits--despite research showing that the GI bill would
balance any losses from troops leaving the military with the new recruits
it attracted.
First,
McCain and two co-sponsors (Senators Graham and Burr) proposed a weakened
version of the GI bill to undermine Webb's more generous version
(co-sponsored by 51 Senators). When the Senate chose Webb's bill over his,
McCain did not show up to vote. Webb's bill passed 92-6 with only 2
Senators not voting. Senator Ted Kennedy was in treatment for a
brain tumor at the time of the vote.
No
sooner than Jim Webb's bill became law with no help from John McCain or
George W. Bush, both McCain and Bush began taking credit for it. As Bush
signed the bill, which he had threatened to veto before it passed with a
veto-proof majority, he said, "The bill is a result of close
collaboration between my administration and members of both parties on
Capitol Hill. I want to thank members who worked hard for the GI Bill
expansion, especially Senators Webb and Warner, Graham, Burr,
McCain."
Does McCain have a weakness on veterans' issues? "Absolutely he
does," says Brandon Friedman, vice chairman of VoteVets.org and
author of The War I Always Wanted. "McCain
has voted against VA healthcare funding time and again, he opposed Webb's
GI Bill, and he opposed the Dwell Time Amendment--a bill which would have
mandated that troops get equal time at home as they are deployed. And
these decisions on McCain's part all have one thing in common: They keep
our military in a weakened state and drive potential recruits away. McCain
is terrible on defense and veterans' issues." So now McCain
has begun attacking Obama's support for the troops. If I hadn't just lived
through the most surreal eight years of my lifetime, I'm not sure I would
even believe my eyes.
Prior to Obama's trip to the Middle East, McCain taunted him for not
visiting the region. Once he went, McCain criticized him for going, saying
"Everything about this trip indicates it is about promoting his
candidacy, and it has nothing to do with the security of the American
people." Really? Seems to me that Obama (who IS a sitting United
States Senator) had a productive meeting with Iraqi Prime Minster Maliki.
In an interview, Maliki said, "US presidential candidate Barack Obama
is right when he talks about 16 months. Assuming that positive
developments continue, this is about the same time period that corresponds
to our wishes."
McCain's critiques metastasized once Obama reached Germany, when he
charged Obama with going to the gym instead of visiting wounded troops
because he was not allowed to bring cameras along. This is a blatant lie. A
Pentagon policy prohibited Obama from going as it would be viewed as a
campaign trip, and reports say there was no evidence Obama intended to
bring cameras. What's more, McCain was denied visiting a military base
under the same rule in April.
Now,
BusinessWeek reports that the McCain campaign had an alternate plan ready
to go if Obama had visited wounded troops in Germany. According to a GOP
strategist, they had an ad script already written, charging Obama with
using wounded troops as props. In light of the last week's negative
ads (and particularly considering McCain's hostile voting record on
veterans benefits), I believe that it is actually McCain who is using our
troops as props.
It
looks like a McCain presidency would be a continuation of the Bush
administration, with troops and first responders used for photo ops and
then forgotten about--as all but the top 1% wealthiest Americans
are forgotten about--once the cameras disappear. I am sick of living in a
country that serves only the "haves" and the "have
mores" and I am afraid that McCain (with his seven houses and $520
shoes) will not have the interests of the American people in mind should
he make it to the Oval Office.
Read More and discuss it here.