McCain a Leader On the Economy
By The IntelligencerNo election in recent memory has occurred during a period when Americans were as concerned about the economy - about whether they will be able to put bread on the table next year or even next month - as they are now.
If your decision on how to cast your ballot for president is being made out of such concern, your vote should go to Sen. John McCain. His pledges for action to help American families promise real help - not just bigger, more expensive government. His record proves that he understands the economy.
In fact, it is clear that McCain understands economic issues far better than does his opponent for the presidency, Sen. Barack Obama. That was proven in 2005 and 2006 - when McCain and three other senators tried to avert the financial crisis that is occurring now.
McCain was one of just three co-sponsors of the Federal Housing Enterprise Regulatory Reform Act of 2005. The chief sponsor was Sen. Charles Hagel, R-Neb. Other co-sponsors were Sens. Elizabeth Dole, R-N.C., and John Sununu, R-N.H.
Their proposal was an attempt to curb the excesses of the mortgage giants "Fannie Mae" and "Freddie Mac."
In supporting the bill, McCain told his fellow lawmakers of outrageous abuses committed by "Fannie Mae" and "Freddie Mac" executives. He added, "If Congress does not act, American taxpayers will continue to be exposed to the enormous risk that 'Fannie Mae' and 'Freddie Mac' pose to the housing market, the overall financial system, and the economy as a whole."
But few listened. Obama, then beginning his term in the Senate, joined with other liberals in rejecting any consideration of the bill.
For the quarter-century that he has served in Congress, McCain has been a staunch, active proponent of the idea that the cost of government ought to be reduced - and that Americans ought to be able to keep more of their hard-earned dollars instead of sending them to Washington, D.C.
McCain wants a temporary freeze on increases in government spending, except for national security and the care of our veterans. While it is in effect, McCain wants to go through the federal budget, item by item, slashing away at waste. Tens of billions of dollars a year can be saved.
Obama's economic policies can be summed up in two points:
First, he wants to expand the size of government tremendously. Despite his populist promises, that will mean higher taxes for most Americans. "The rich" simply don't have enough money, even if Obama took it all, to fund his expansion.
Second, Obama's view of the current crisis is flawed. He refuses to blame the laws, passed by liberals in Congress, that encouraged abuses regarding mortgages. His idea is simply to impose more bureaucratic regulations on financial institutions without addressing the root cause of the problem.
McCain, as we have seen, attempted to forestall the crisis in 2005 and 2006. Obama and other liberals blocked him. In effect, they deserve a major share of the blame for the crisis.
By reining in irresponsible financial institutions, cutting the size of government, and providing relief for all taxpayers, McCain will provide a shot in the arm for the economy.
Though there are many reasons to vote for McCain, that one alone ought to be enough. We urge thoughtful, concerned area residents to vote for McCain for president, in an attempt to get the economy moving again.
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Russell1959
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10-29-08 7:39 PM
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WVEXPAT: was it now? I heard newt gingrich on faux news blaming it on bill clinton, but I swear my eyes are 20/20 and my hearing is OK too and that was George W. Bush on youtube saying in 2003 that "he" instructed fannie mae/freddie mac too make homeownership easier for people who normally wouldn't qualify to get a loan...but besides all that...fannie/freddie was only a small part of it...exaggerated but the right wingers and scapegoating minorities to shift focus away from the private bankers who really went apesh*t with this subprime thing. During the civil war poor white folks in the south fought to defend slavery.., an intitution that kept THEIR wages low by having to compete for work against slave labor...they fought to the death for 'old dixie' against their own best interests..THAT is the mentality of working people who vote republican.
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Russell1959
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10-29-08 7:22 PM
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honesty: NAFTA was Bush Sr.'s baby and was promoted by none other than the patron saint of conservatism Ronald Reagan...
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Marotta
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10-18-08 11:15 AM
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So, your editorial board says we should vote for McCain because he tried to do something about the current economic crisis as a co-sponsor of one Senate bill, the Federal Housing Enterprise Regulatory Reform Act of 2005. Your endorsement states, "Obama, then beginning his term in the Senate, joined with other liberals in rejecting any consideration of the bill." Apparently you missed the fact that the bill went to the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, which in 2005 was controlled by the GOP. Richard Shelby (Alabama R) was chairman. Your summary and criticism of "Obama's plan" is both vague and disingenuous, respectively. And your endorsement is sloppy. You say McCain "attempted to forestall the crisis in 2005 and 2006," but only mention a bill that didn't make the grade in 2005. What did McCain try to do that the "liberals" blocked in 2006? I suppose we would just have to trust you know what you're talking about.
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WVEXPAT
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10-18-08 10:14 AM
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Russell, In your post you mention "Hooray for no oversight"? Don't the names Chris Dodd (D) or Barney Frank (D) ring a bell? Aside from taking hundreds of thousands of dollars from Fannie/Freddie, I'm sure their names were on the Community Reinvestment Act. Which was a big part of "regulation" that allowed this mess to happen! Your post is "wrong from start to finish".
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wonderwhy
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10-18-08 6:29 AM
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the Chicago Tribune, a newspaper that has not endorsed a Democrat for president since it was founded in 1847, followed suit. From their editorial: Many Americans say they're uneasy about Obama. He's pretty new to them. We can provide some assurance. We have known Obama since he entered politics a dozen years ago. We have watched him, worked with him, argued with him as he rose from an effective state senator to an inspiring U.S. senator to the Democratic Party's nominee for president. We have tremendous confidence in his intellectual rigor, his moral compass and his ability to make sound, thoughtful, careful decisions. He is ready
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givemeabreak
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10-17-08 1:55 PM
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To even suggest that McCain has a clue about the economy, is an insult to the intelligence of voters. This paper will print anything.
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cory1978
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10-17-08 12:24 PM
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I will discontinue my subscription of the Wheeling UNintelligencer after the election. I need a good laugh from time to time. I hate liers!
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cory1978
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10-17-08 9:08 AM
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Is this editorial a joke? McCain's campaign even said if we can't get off the economy....."WE LOSE!"....this paper is about a pathetic as Fox False News.
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wonderwhy
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10-17-08 6:24 AM
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the title of this article makes one think it could be on the comic page section. Mccain himself has said he wasn't good on economic issues. he just wants to be the comander in chief for the war, you know, so he can misdudge everything from crashing a plane to picking his vp.
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wonderwhy
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10-17-08 12:13 AM
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honesty- what do you think NAFTA stands for? china? russia? india?
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Honesty
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10-17-08 12:09 AM
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What a shame the people don't know that Nafta was the result of Clinton not Bush.We cannot elect a president that misses 45 of his only 143 days in the Senate. With all his experience in the Senate he can't know what is going on. He couldn't be manager of Burrger King in that amount of time. Be careful,you dems may get what you want . Then count you taxes. Ha Ha
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Russell1959
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10-16-08 7:43 PM
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this editorial is wrong from start to finish.. people need to realize that it wasn't fannie mae or freddie mac who wrote the VAST MAJORITY of sub prime mortgages...but private lenders (hooray for deregulation!!! hoorah for no oversight!!! 3 cheers for dis-information!!)
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mattyc8833
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10-16-08 6:18 PM
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The writer of this editorial should read this week's "Business Week." It has a wonderful issue on who the people were that tried to warn government, us, etc. I did not see any mention of Mr. McCain.
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wonderwhy
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10-16-08 4:19 PM
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thanks gardner and otto! great info and posts
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Gardner
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10-16-08 2:52 PM
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So long as we have pork-barrel politicians on the take we'll never be as strong as we could be. John McCain doesn't endorse pork spending. Why should he? He's an American oxymoron, being that he's an old white guy who's kept by his obscenely rich wife. The kickbacks and/or naming rights that most politicians get for their unfair considerations aren't necessary for McCain. Because my home state is Arizona I can tell you that McCain is severely out of touch. Ask him if you ever get an invitation to his sprawling ranch in the exclusive area known as Sedona. Remember that he dodged a bullet as one of the Keating Five.
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Ottothewise
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10-16-08 2:12 PM
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The White House says that they will veto the DEMS plan to make steel and build bridges because the vote is scheduled for after the election. VOTE A LANDSLIDE FOR OBAMA and let the president know we want to put America back to work. Bush says, the $700 billion bailout is enough and it will TRICKLE DOWN. VOTE OBAMA in 08.
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Ottothewise
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10-16-08 2:08 PM
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McCain's has NO CLUE on the economy. Whomever wrote the lead story must be one of the ones to receive the $700K payoff for those making $2.8 million. HIS OWN WORDS are that he doesnt understand the economy. As recently as two weeks ago, he said the fundamentals of the economy are strong. McCain is all bluff and no sense. He doesnt have a CLUE. Obama will put people to work making steel and building bridges.
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reasoh
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10-16-08 1:47 PM
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If Jay Rockefeller says so it must be true since Obama's.records at Columbia and Harvard are lost locked away or whatever reason they give that no one can see them
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Destroyallmonsters
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10-16-08 1:40 PM
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JMorgan wrote:This paper endorsed Bush in 2000 and 2004. Does the writer think his/her judgment, influence and credibility on this topic deserve the readers consideration? What an excellent point. I agree 100% with this statement.
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reasoh
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10-16-08 1:37 PM
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Cut the federal budget just quit funding non-profit organisations let them live or die on private donations.Too many do little except talk how much they do for everyone but only pay large salaries to 3-4 people that run them.Stop my taxes going to ACORN PETA AARP NRA and all the rest
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atoddh
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10-16-08 12:59 PM
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The NR opposes earmarks - as does McCain - yet supports wasteful Wheeling Federal earmark programs.
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atoddh
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10-16-08 12:56 PM
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Large tax increases will be necessary regardless of who wins due to the bailouts and war spending by the Bush Administration.Upper income households will bear the most cost under Obama.
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Lorenzo
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10-16-08 11:23 AM
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It will be a tough times ahead for the next president, very tough. We don't need another terrible president, or his "news bunny" VP waiting in the wings.
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NancySI
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10-16-08 11:22 AM
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I love this quote: "McCain had one answer to almost every economic question: cut taxes and government spending. Unfortunately, what Mr. McCain means is to cut taxes for the richest Americans and, inevitably, to reduce the kinds of government services that working Americans need more than ever." Have a great day.
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TruthSeeker
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10-16-08 11:16 AM
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That should have been 'hear' not 'here'.
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