“A leader we can believe in” is John McCain new slogan? Well, that is John McCain’s latest speech titled “A Leader we can believe in”.
Here is what John McCain said:
“The American people didn’t get to know me yesterday, as they are just getting to know Senator Obama,” McCain said. “They know I have a long record of bipartisan problem-solving. They’ve seen me put our country before any president, before any party, before any special interest, before my own interest.”
“He is an impressive man who makes a great first impression,” McCain said. “But he hasn’t been willing to make the tough calls, to challenge his party, to risk criticism from his supporters, to bring real change to Washington. I have.”
“I opposed it because I know we won’t achieve energy independence by repeating the mistakes of the last half-century. That’s not change we can believe in,” McCain said, once again evoking Obama’s campaign theme, “Change we can believe in.”
More information on John McCain can be found at www.johnmccain.com
Popularity: 3% [?]
John McCain contradicts himself so often these days. His record is something the public wants to discuss, and yet the corporate media is doing NOTHING to present the truth.
YouTube will become a nightmare for McCain.
Do Something.. Check out this interesting web site : The Real John McCain.
Here is the video why “YouTube will become a nightmare for McCain”:
Read the rest of this entry
Popularity: 2% [?]
Ted Kennedy, 76 years old US Senator, aka Edward M. Kennedy, was flown by helicopter to Boston’s Massachusetts General Hospital on Saturday after suffering a seizure but was recovering well enough by afternoon to watch a Red Sox game from his hospital room.
Ted Kennedy did not suffer a stroke, as was first feared, and doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital said he is not in any immediate danger.
Read the rest of this entry
Popularity: 3% [?]
At Doernbecher Children’s Hospital, Hillary Clinton criticized Obama’s health care plan for promising universal coverage to children but not adults.
However, Barack Obama, Democratic frontrunner, seemed to stop running against Hillary Clinton, his primary opponent and has focused on John McCain, the Arizona senator.
He rebuked McCain for supporting Bush’s “tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans,” a temporary halt to the federal gasoline tax and continued heavy U.S. presence in Iraq.
However, Clinton refuses to give up hope or disappear, and she is pleading for time and donations. “Give me your votes. This is no way over yet,” she said.
While Barack Obama camp conceded he’ll lose to Clinton in Tuesday’s West Virginia primary, it is hedging its bets on Oregon to help it seal the nomination.
Popularity: 2% [?]