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McCain Opposed Vital Funding For North Carolina Residents Last Year. Click On An Icon To See Projects McCain Opposed In Your Community.
Click On An Issue Above To See How Out of Touch Senator McCain Is On Issues Critical To North Carolina.John McCain believes “the fundamentals of the economy are strong” and he can deliver the change we need. But North Carolina knows McCain and his ties to special interests are more of the same.
Senator McCain has tried to sell himself as a "maverick" and a "straight talker" who will tell the truth no matter the consequences, but independent, non-partisan watchdog groups aren't buying it. But, since he wrapped up his party's nomination, John McCain has offered more of the same false attacks and smears.
To date, independent, nonpartisan fact checkers have published more than 100 fact checks debunking John McCain's lies and distortions. Count the lies here.
McCain vs. Economy
“It’s easy for me to go to Washington and frankly, be somewhat divorced from the day-to-day challenges people have.”
- John McCain on CNN, 9/11/08
McCain's Record: A Dangerous Lack of Oversight
Leadership in Washington has been preaching for years that deregulation was the solution. "But the implosion in financial services—until recently seen as the shining example of U.S-style free market capitalism—is the definitive sign that deregulation has lost its allure." [Business Week, 9/18/08]
McCain Mocked Obama's Proposal To Give Greater Supervisory Authority To The Fed, Now He's Turning To The Same Policies. "In a March speech, [Obama] called for giving the Federal Reserve greater supervisory authority when it acts as a lender of last resort...McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds said in a statement after Obama's speech that the Illinois senator is endorsing the 'failed liberal policies of the past.'In the current environment, though, those policies are looking more appealing, even to McCain who also called for streamlining regulation and appointing a central oversight agency." [Bloomberg, 9/17/08]
2008: Only Weeks Before The Bear Stearns Collapse, McCain Proclaimed Himself A “Deregulator” And Said “I’m Always for Less Regulation.” McCain told the Wall Street Journal “As far as a need for additional regulations are concerned...I am a fundamentally a deregulator. I'd like to see a lot of the unnecessary government regulations eliminated, not just a moratorium.” [Wall Street Journal, 3/3/08]
2003: McCain: “I Am A Deregulator. I Believe In Deregulation.” While speaking about the cable and satellite television during an appearance on CNN’s “On the Money,” John McCain said, “I am a deregulator. I believe in deregulation.” [CNN, “In the Money,” 7/13/03]
1993: McCain Spoke In Support of a Banking Bill Because It Eliminated “The Tremendous Regulatory Burden Imposed On Financial Institutions.” While speaking in favor of bank deregulation on the floor of the senate, John McCain said, “This legislation takes a small but important step toward eliminating the tremendous regulatory burden imposed on financial institutions… One principal reason banks are unable to make loans is the bewildering array of statutory and regulatory restrictions and paperwork requirements imposed by Congress and the regulatory agencies. [Congressional Record, 11/19/93]
McCain Doesn't Get It
McCain Said A Lot of Americans’ Economic Problems Are “Psychological.” [FOX News, “Your World With Neil Cavuto,” 4/16/08]
McCain: I Don’t Understand Economics “As Well As I Should.” [Boston Globe Political Intelligence, 12/18/2007]
McCain Admitted “It’s Easy For Me To Go To Washington And Frankly, Be Somewhat Divorced From The Day-To-Day Challenges People Have.” [CNN, 9/11/08]
North Carolina's Economy
North Carolina Foreclosures Are Up 32% Since August 2007. [Realty Trac Press Release, 9/12/08]
North Carolina Bankruptcies Rose 10% Between 2007 and 2008. [Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, Press Release, 8/27/08]
McCain vs. Jobs and Labor
North Carolina has lost almost 30% of its manufacturing jobs since 2000.
- AFL-CIO, accessed 9/13/08
McCain: Out of Touch
McCain Supports Unchecked Free Trade With Anyone. "I don’t believe in walls. I believe in freedom. If I were President, I would negotiate a free trade agreement with almost any country willing to negotiate fairly with us. Only risks to the security of our vital interests or egregious offenses to our most cherished political values should disqualify a nation from entering into a free trade agreement with us." [Speech to National Press Club, 5/20/99]
McCain Said “I Will Not Add Environmental Or Labor Conditions To Any Trade Agreements.” “McCain spoke to a number of issues yesterday, offering more specifics on foreign policy than domestic concerns. These included: - Trade: McCain described himself as ‘the most free-trade senator you will ever know.’ He took issue with the Clinton administration's effort to link other issues to trade pacts. ‘I will not add environmental or labor conditions to any trade agreements,’ McCain told the Rotary. But he pledged not to ignore working conditions or environmental pollution.” [Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 2/24/00]
McCain Acknowledges Trade Agreements Have Cost America Jobs, Still Believes Agreements Have “Been Very Successful.” “McCain has said the trade pacts have been a net positive. ‘Overall, the free-trade agreements have been very successful, and I can prove that with economic data on job creation,’ McCain said in an interview Monday with the Journal Sentinel. But he added, ‘It has left people behind, and we must give those people and others opportunities.’” [Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 4/16/08]
McCain's Voting Record
McCain Voted Against Prohibiting Countries From Weakening Their Labor Or Environmental Laws In Order To Facilitate Trade. McCain voted to kill the Dodd amendment to the bill renewing the president's fast-track trade authority that would clarify the principal negotiating objectives with respect to labor and the environmental standards. According to CQ, the measure "would have required trade agreements negotiated under fast track to include a central provision... which prohibits the countries from weakening their labor or environmental laws in order to facilitate trade." [HR 3009, Vote #115, 5/16/02, Passed 52-46: R 47-0 D 5-45 I 0-1; CQ Weekly, 5/17/02]
McCain Voted Against Job-Retraining for Workers Displaced by International Trade Agreements. McCain voted against a Moynihan amendment to maintain the worker retraining assistance part of the Trade Adjustment Assistance program, which provides job retraining for workers laid off as a direct result of an international trade program such as NAFTA. The amendment was to a bill that would repeal these training services but would retain the income assistance part of the program. The amendment was passed on a 52 to 45 vote. [S 143, Vote 482, 10/10/95; Passed 52-45: R 7-45; D 45-0]
McCain Voted Against Prioritizing Internationally-Recognized Human Rights During Trade Negotiations. McCain voted against an amendment that would insert a provision stating that principal negotiating objective regarding human rights and democracy is to obtain provisions in trade agreements that require parties to those agreements to strive to protect internationally recognized civil, political, and human rights. [2002 Senate Vote #129, 5/23/2002]
McCain Voted Against Placing Labor and Environmental Laws On Par With Trade Agreements. McCain voted against an amendment to the Baucus substitute amendment. The Durbin amendment would provide for a substitute of the trade negotiating authority in the underlying substitute. The amendment would require that preserving trade laws be the principal objective of U.S. negotiations. It also would provide equal status to the enforcement of labor and environmental provisions compared to all other provisions in the agreement, provide for a biennial review of negotiations and allow for an opportunity for a disapproval resolution once each Congress – giving Congress greater oversight power in the negotiation and review of the agreement. [2002 Senate Vote #113, 5/15/2002]
McCain Voted Against Repealing Tax Incentives For U.S. Companies That Outsource Manufacturing Jobs. This provision would repeal tax incentives for domestic companies that move their manufacturing plants to offshore locations; it would use the resulting revenue to reduce the federal deficit by 3.2 billion from 2006 to 2010. [SCR 18, vote 63, 3/17/05; Rejected 40-59: R 0-54; D 40-4 (ND 37-3, SD 3-1); I 0-1.]
Did You Know?
North Carolina Has Lost Almost 30% Of Its Manufacturing Jobs Since 2000. [AFL-CIO, accessed 9/13/08]
McCain vs. Veterans
"[McCain] appears to want to significantly narrow the number of veterans who can use VA, and that would alarm many veterans..."
- Paul Sullivan, Executive Director of Veterans for Common Sense
Did You Know?
774,000 Veterans Reside In North Carolina. [Veterans Affairs, 7/08]
More than 500,000 Veterans Used the GI Bill In North Carolina in 2007. [Veterans Affairs, 7/08]
McCain: Out of Touch
The Army Times Said That McCain’s Comments Have Raised “Questions About The Arizona Senator’s Commitment To Funding The Ailing VA System.” The Army Times reported, “Republican presidential candidate John McCain’s call to ‘concentrate’ veterans’ health care on those with combat injuries is raising questions about the Arizona senator’s commitment to funding the ailing VA system… Paul Sullivan, executive director of Veterans for Common Sense, said McCain ‘appears to want to significantly narrow the number of veterans who can use VA, and that would alarm many veterans.’ Sullivan said veterans “should be very concerned by any effort to restrict access to VA health care and benefits by excluding other veterans with medical conditions clearly linked with their military service, such as illnesses related to Agent Orange poisoning, injures incurred in the combat zone, injuries due to training, and the adverse side effects of vaccines and experimental drugs.” [Army Times, 7/23/08]
Disabled American Veterans Legislative Director Said That McCain’s Proposal Would Increase Costs For Veterans Because His Plan Relies On Private Hospitals Which Are More Expensive Which Could Also Lead To Further Rationing Of Care. “To help veterans who live far from VA hospitals or need specialized care the VA can’t provide, McCain proposed giving low-income veterans and those who incurred injury during their service a card they could use at private hospitals. The proposal is not an attempt to privatize the VA, as critics have alleged, but rather, an effort to improve care and access to it, he said. Joe Violanti, legislative director of the Disabled American Veterans, a nonpartisan organization, said the proposal would increase costs because private hospitals are more expensive. The increased cost could lead to further rationing of care, he said.” [Las Vegas Sun, 8/10/08]
McCain Claimed To Have A Perfect Record From Organizations Like The Veterans Of Foreign Wars and The American Legion. July 2008: McCain: “The reason why I have a perfect voting record from organizations like the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the American Legion and all the other veterans’ service organizations is because of my support of them.” [FactCheck.org, 8/9/08, YouTube]
The Veterans of Foreign Wars And The American Legion “Don’t Even Dole Out Ratings…” [FactCheck.org, 8/9/08]
IAVA (Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans for America) Has Given Sen. John McCain A“D” Rating. [Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans for America]
2006: McCain Received A 20% Rating From The “Disabled American Veterans.” In 2006, Obama supported the interests of the Disabled American Veterans 80% of the time and McCain supported their interests 20% of the time. [Project Vote Smart, accessed: 6/25/08]
McCain's Record On Veterans
McCain Refused To Support Bipartisan Legislation To Reform GI Bill. "On his campaign plane this afternoon, McCain said he and allies in the Senate are working on an alternative to the bill, but would only support something that included incentives to stay in the military. 'We are working on proposals of our own. I'm a consistent supporter of educational benefits for the men and women of the military,' McCain said. 'I want to make sure that we have incentives for people to remain in the military as well as for people to join the military.'" [ABC News, 4/14/08]
McCain Voted Against Increase Of $3.5 Billion Over President Bush’s VA Funding Request; Proposed Increase Would Cover Recommendations/Requests In Major Veterans Groups “Independent Budget.” In 2007, Obama twice voted for and McCain twice voted against the FY 2009 Democratic budget resolution, which provided for over $3.5 billion more in funding for Veterans than the Bush Administration’s proposal. [Vote 114, SCR 21, Adopted 52-47: R 2-47; D 48-0 (ND 43-0, SD 5-0); I 2-0, 3/23/07; Vote 181, HR 2206, Motion agreed to 80-14: R 42-3; D 37-10 (ND 32-10, SD 5-0); I 1-1, 5/24/07]
McCain Voted Against Increased Funding For Veterans; Readjustment Counseling Services. In 2005, Obama voted for and McCain voted against the Akaka amendment that would provide an additional $10 million for the Readjustment Counseling Service, offset with a $10 million reduction in the HealthVet account. [HR 2528, Vote 242, 9/22/05, Failed 48-50, D: 43-0, R:4-50, I:1-0]
McCain Voted For FY 2006 Budget Resolution That Cut VA Funding By Hundreds Of Millions Of Dollars. In 2005, Obama voted against cutting $10 billion from Medicaid and provided tax breaks while increasing the federal deficit. Stabenow, a leading proponent of mandatory funding for VA health care, said on the floor, “Unfortunately, this budget makes cuts in veterans health care programs. Unbelievably, at a time of war, when more and more people are coming home and changing one cap for another, this conference report does not provide the full funding for veterans health care. Even though more and more of our brave men and women are coming home with extensive medical needs, even though many veterans have to wait up to 6 months to get into certain hospital services, this budget still cuts veterans health care. I believe this is morally wrong.” [HCR 95, Vote 114, 4/29/05, Passed 52-47, D:0-43, R:52-3, I:0-1]
McCain Voted For VA Budget That The American Legion Called “Inconsistent With The Thanks Of A Grateful Nation” Because Of Its Cuts In Funding For Veterans Health Care. In 2005, Obama voted against and McCain voted for the adoption of the concurrent resolution that would set broad spending and revenue targets over the next five years. The resolution would allow up to $848.8 billion in discretionary spending for fiscal 2006 and call for $17 billion in cuts in mandatory spending over five years. [Vote 81, 3/17/05, Passed 51-49, D: 0-44, R: 51-4, I: 0-1; cbpp.org, 4/28/05]
McCain Voted Against An Amendment To Create A Reserve Fund To Allow For An Increase In Veterans’ Medical Care By $1.8 Billion By Eliminating Abusive Tax Loopholes. McCain voted against Nelson’s 2004 amendment that failed 46-51-3. [SCR 95, S 2745, Vote 40, 3/10/04, Failed 46-51-3, D: 45-1-2, R: 0-50-1, I: 1-0]
McCain vs. Women
McCain was one of only two Senators to miss an important vote on the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2007.
- Vote 110, H.R. 2831, 4/23/08
McCain’s Voting Record
McCain Skipped An Important Vote On Pay Discrimination To Attend Campaign Events; Later, He Said He Didn’t Support The Equal Pay Law. McCain was one of only two senators to miss an important vote on the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2007. On the campaign trail, McCain expressed his opposition to the bill. [H.R. 2831, Vote #110, 4/23/08; USA Today, 4/23/08]
McCain Voted Against Providing More Effective Remedies For Victims Of Wage Discrimination. In 2000, McCain voted against the Harkin amendment to “provide more effective remedies to victims of discrimination in the payment of wages on the basis of sex.” The amendment would have allowed workers who won their wage discrimination claims in court to collect punitive and compensatory damages in addition to back wages. [S.Amdt. 3847 to H.R. 4810, Vote #203, 7/17/00]
McCain Opposed Requiring Insurers To Provide The Same Level of Coverage For Birth Control That They Do For Other Prescription Drugs. McCain voted against requiring health insurers to provide the same level of coverage for contraception as they do for other prescription drugs. [Salon, 3/24/08; Vote 75, 3/17/05; Vote 45, 3/11/03; Vote 180, 5/16/03; Vote 231, 7/23/96; Vote 28, 2/8/94]
McCain: Out of Touch
Ledbetter Lost Supreme Court Case. Lilly Ledbetter worked at a Goodyear Tire Rubber Co. plant in Gadsden, Alabama, for 19 years. By the time Lilly retired as a supervisor, she was making $6,500 less than the lowest-paid male supervisor. When she made a claim for pay discrimination, the Supreme Court dismissed her case, telling her she should have filed her complaint within six months of the discrimination - even though she didn’t know she was being discriminated against at that point. [National Women’s Law Center]
Senator Obama and other Democrats in Congress supported the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act to allow women more time to make their claims. But John McCain supports the current regime: unless a woman makes a claim within 180 days of initially being discriminated against, she could go her whole career being paid less than her male counterparts with no legal recourse. When questioned about his opposition to the equal pay bill, he said women needed more “education and training.” Disagreeing with women’s organizations across the country, McCain later said the equal pay act wouldn’t do “anything to help the rights of women.” [USA Today, 4/23/08; National Committee on Pay Equity; Washington Post, 5/7/08]
McCain Brags About His Anti-Choice Record And Wants To Overturn Roe v. Wade. McCain has a long anti-choice record and he even bragged about the consistent “zero” score he had received from NARAL Pro-Choice America. His campaign website says he “believes Roe v. Wade is a flawed decision that must be overturned.” NARAL 8/11/08; McCain Website, "Human Dignity and the Sanctity of Life," 8/11/08]
Did You Know?
Women In North Carolina Earn 82 Cents For Every Dollar A Man Makes. In 2006, the median income for men in NC was $37,545, while for women it was only $30,600. Women only earned 81.5% of what men earned.
[Census, Table 6, 8/2007]
McCain vs. Middle Class Tax Cuts
Former Fed Chairman, Alan Greenspan, says the nation can't afford McCain's tax cuts for the wealthy.
[Jake Tapper, ABC News, 9/13/08]
McCain's Doublespeak on Taxes
McCain Vowed To Make Bush’s Tax Cuts Permanent. During a January 2008 GOP debate, McCain said: “I think it’s very important that we make the Bush tax cuts permanent.” [MSNBC/FAU GOP Debate, 1/24/2008]
FLASHBACK: McCain Lamented Bush's Tax Cuts, "I'd Like To See Much More Of This Tax Cut Shared By Working Americans...I Think It Still Devotes Too Much Of It To The Wealthiest Americans" [Washington Post, 4/25/08]
McCain Adviser Doug Holtz-Eakin Admitted, Contrary To What McCain Says, That They’re Going To Have To Raise Taxes. “And now, in a forthcoming book by Fortune columnist Matt Miller, he makes it clear that the next President is going to have to raise taxes....So why does tax-cutting mania persist among Republicans, I asked Holtz-Eakin, the McCain adviser--given...that, as Holtz-Eakin himself explain to me, taxes soon have to go up substantially in any event? ‘It's the brand,’ he said, ‘and you don't dilute the brand.’” [Joe Klein, Time Magazine, 9/12/08]
McCain Says He Would Treat Employer Sponsored Healthcare as Taxable Income. The Tax Policy Center wrote that McCain “says he would treat employer sponsored health benefits as taxable income, while giving individuals a tax credit for the insurance they buy. On its own, taxing employer insurance just like wages would be a huge tax increase—OMB estimates in the neighborhood of $1 trillion from 2009–2013. To many on the right, that alone would violate the no-tax pledge.” [Tax Policy Center, 2/19/08]
McCain's Record On Taxes
2007: McCain Voted To Extend Bush Tax Cuts.
[2007 Senate Vote # 85, 3/21/07]
FLASHBACK: McCain: “Sixty percent of the benefits from [Bush's] tax cuts go to the wealthiest 10% of Americans—and that’s not the kind of tax relief that Americans need.
[Los Angeles Times, 1/5/00]
FLASHBACK: 2001 and 2003, McCain Voted Against Bush’s Tax Cuts.
[Senate vote #170, 5/26/01; Senate vote #196, 5/23/03]
McCain vs. Energy Independence
McCain was the only Senator to miss a vote to end Big Oil tax breaks to invest in clean energy.
- HR 6, Vote #425, 12/13/07
McCain: Out of Touch
McCain Says He Would Veto The Farm Bill -- $300 Million in Renewable Biofuels Funding. The farm bill “provides $300 million in mandatory funding for payments to support production of advanced biofuels including cellulosic ethanol and biodiesel.” There is also “$250 million in grants and loan guarantees for renewable energy and energy efficiency systems for agriculture and rural small businesses.” [McCain Prepared Remarks, 5/19/08; Reuters, 5/15/2008]
Two McCain Campaign Officials Lobby For Oil Companies, Chevron and Hess. Wayne Berman, McCain’s national finance chair and John Green, one of McCain’s chief liaison to Congress lobbied for Chevron and Hess from 2005 to the present and was paid a total of $2.36 million by the companies. [TPM, 9/12/08]
McCain's Voting Record
McCain Voted At Least Eleven Times Against Tax Incentives For Renewable Or Alternative Energy. [2006 Senate Vote #42; 2005 Senate Vote #363, #213, #158; 2003 Senate Vote #317; 2002 Senate Vote #94, #77; 2001 Senate Vote #125; 1999 Senate Vote #246, #171; 1992 Senate Vote #150, 7/23/1992]
McCain Voted At Least Five Times Against Renewable Energy Mandates. [2005 Senate Vote #141, 6/16/2005; 2002 Senate Vote #59, 3/21/2002; 2002 Senate Vote #58, 3/21/2002; 2002 Senate Vote #55, 3/21/2002; 2002 Senate Vote #50, 3/14/2002]
McCain Voted At Least Seventeen Times Against Renewable And Alternative Fuel Mandates. [2005 Senate Vote #139, #138; 2004 Senate Vote #74, #73; 2003 Senate Vote #317, #209, #207, #206, #204, #203; 2002 Senate Vote #91, #88, #78; 1994 Senate Vote #255, 8/3/1994; 1992 Senate Vote #150, #27,#18]
McCain Voted Against And Obama Voted For Making Gasoline And Energy Price Gouging A Federal Crime. McCain voted against and Obama voted for the Cantwell, D-Wash. motion to waive the Budget Act with respect to the Stevens, R-Alaska, point of order against Cantwell amendment. The Cantwell makes price gouging on energy products, services or markets a federal crime. [S. 2020, vote 334, 11/17/05; Motion Rejected 57-42: R 13-42; D 43-0 (ND 39-0, SD 4-0); I 1-0.]
McCain Was The Only Senator To Miss A Vote To End Big Oil Tax Breaks To Invest In Clean Energy. In 2007, McCain was the only senator who failed to vote on a motion to invoke cloture (thus limiting debate) on the Energy Independence and Security Act. This vote was about whether to close $13 billion in tax breaks for major oil and gas companies to invest in new clean energy technologies such as wind and solar, and efficiency. ’In December [2007], he was the only senator to miss a vote on whether to funding extension of tax credits for renewable energy by eliminating billions of dollars in tax deductions for oil companies.” Sixty votes were required for passage. The motion was rejected 59-40. [HR 6, Vote #425, 12/13/07, Failed: 59-40: D 49-1; R: 9-39; I: 1-0; WSJ, 5/12/08]
Did You Know?
McCain’s Tax Breaks And Giveaways For Big Oil Would Cost North Carolina Residents $890 Million. [Center For American Progress, 9/13/08]
McCain vs. The Farm Bill
McCain repeatedly voted against funding for agriculture programs.
[Vote 108, 5/3/06; CQ, 5/3/06; Vote 66, 3/16/06; Vote 69, 3/17/05; CQ Today, 3/18/05; Gannett News Service, 3/18/05; Vote 345, 11/17/05; Vote 261, 7/31/01]
McCain's Voting Record
McCain Opposes The Farm Bill, Saying He Would Have Vetoed It Just As Bush Did. [Wall Street Journal, 6/2/08]
McCain Repeatedly Voted Against Funding For Agriculture Programs. [Vote 108, 5/3/06; CQ, 5/3/06; Vote 66, 3/16/06; Vote 69, 3/17/05; CQ Today, 3/18/05; Gannett News Service, 3/18/05; Vote 345, 11/17/05; Vote 261, 7/31/01]
McCain: Voted Against Capping Farm Subsidies. [Vote 290, 11/3/05; Wichita Eagle, 11/3/05; CongressDaily, 11/3/05; Des Moines Register, 11/3/05]
McCain: Repeatedly Voted Against A Packer Ban And Voted Against Limiting Eligibility For EQIP To Smaller Livestock Producers. [Vote 23, 2/12/02; Vote 367, 12/13/01; Des Moines Register; 12/15/01; S 1541, Vote 15, 2/7/96, Passed 57-39: R 17-33 D 40-6]
McCain Repeatedly Voted Against Country Of Origin Labeling. [Vote 443, 11/6/03; Vote 30, 2/13/02; Vote 103, 5/8/02; Des Moines Register, 2/14/02; Vote 267, 9/14/98]
McCain: Out of Touch with North Carolina Famers
"I would veto that bill, and all others like it that serve only the cause of special interests and corporate welfare." Senator John McCain, May 19, 2008, on the 2008 Farm Bill
"We've got to set some priorities in Washington and that means saying, 'No,' sometimes. Saying, 'No!' sometimes! That's what you have to do! And I might point out that Senator Obama supported the Farm Bill. So, and I didn't. And I won't." WATCH THE VIDEO
"If I were the president, I would veto that farm bill in a New. York. Minute." WATCH THE VIDEO
"So I'd like to start out by saying to you that I have to give you a little straight talk about the Farm Bill that is winding its way through Congress. I do not support it, I would veto it." WATCH THE VIDEO
"My friends, this bill deserves your condemnation, the president's vetoing it. To its everlasting shame, the congress of the United States, Republican and Democrat will override the veto. I will veto a farm bill and I will make 'em famous and I can tell you that we're not going to have business as usual in Washington when I'm president of the United States." WATCH THE VIDEO
Did You Know?
90% of North Carolina Farms Are Family Owned. [North Carolina Rural Economic Development Center, Inc., Accessed 9/12/08]
McCain vs. Sportsmen
“McCain was the only member of Congress to skip every single crucial environmental vote.”
- Sierra Club, 2/21/08
Did You Know?
1.4 Million Sportspersons Live In North Carolina. [US Census Bureau/US Fish and Wildlife Service, accessed 9/26/08]
McCain: Out Of Touch With North Carolina Sportsmen
McCain Received 0% Score From League Of Conservation Voters This Year. The League of Conservation Voters is a non-profit environmental advocacy group and grades members of Congress on their environmental voting records. McCain has failed to vote on any pieces of legislation in the 110th Congress regarding conservation issues, while his Republican counterparts in ME, Sen. Snowe and Sen. Collins, have an 80% and 100% score respectively. In 2007 McCain got a 0% rating from LCV. His lifetime rating is a mere 24%. [League of Conservation Voters on Presidential Candidates, 7/01/08]
Sierra Club: “McCain Was The Only Member of Congress To Skip Every Single Crucial Environmental Vote.” A Sierra Club press release stated: “In the 2007 National Environmental Scorecard released today by the League of Conservation Voters, John McCain receives a score of ZERO. McCain was the only member of Congress to skip every single crucial environmental vote scored by the organization, posting a score lower than Members of Congress who were out for much of the year due to serious illnesses--and even lower than some who died during the term. By contrast, the average Member of Congress scored a 53 in 2007. McCain posts a lifetime score of only 24.” [Sierra Club, 2/21/08]
Carl Pope, Executive Director Of The Sierra Club, Castigated McCain For Being The Only Senator To Skip A Crucial Vote For The Future Of Clean Energy In America. Pope stated, "We were appalled two weeks ago when John McCain was the only Senator who chose to skip a crucial vote on the future of clean energy in America-dooming the measure to fail by just a single vote. As it turns out, this was merely the most recent example of a clear pattern of missing the most important votes on energy and the environment--as his abysmal League of Conservation Voters score clearly demonstrates.” The Director of the Sierra Club added, “McCain missed votes to save his constituents $499 million dollars at the pump and at least $550 million on their energy bills, while creating more than 10,000 new clean energy jobs in his home state.” [Sierra Club, 2/21/08]
McCain's Voting Record
McCain Voted Against An Amendment That Would Increase Funding For Conservation Programs. The amendment would have increased support for Function 300 by $2.9 billion in budget authority in FY 2007. Function 300 includes a wide variety of programs whose primary purpose is to develop, manage, and maintain the nation’s natural resources and environment. The funding would have bolstered U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' civil works programs, Clean Water State Revolving Fund, National Park Service, NOAA, USDA Forest Service and conservation programs, and other natural resource needs. [2006 Senate Vote #60, S. Amdt. 3103 S. Con. Res. 83, 3/16/06]
McCain Voted For A Measure Which Would Reduce Funding For Land And Water Conservation. McCain Voted for a motion to waive the Budget Act in order to permit consideration for an amendment that would reduce funding for Land and Water Conservation Fund land acquisitions by $121 million. [2005 Senate Vote #159, S. Amdt. 1019, H.R. 2361 6/28/05]
McCain Missed A Vote That Would Have Helped Increase Funding For Multiple Conservation Programs. McCain missed a vote on a motion to table an amendment, which reduced a subsidy for a below-cost timber program administered by the Forest Service and increase funding for other National Forest programs. The following amounts became available for the following Forest Service programs: $33.7 million for wildlife habitat management, $22.1 million for inland fish habitat management, $24.3 million for fish habitat management, $29.5 million for threatened, endangered and sensitive species habitat management, $196.9 million for timber sales management, $86.9 million for road construction and $122.5 million for road maintenance. [1999 Senate Vote #272, S. Amdt. 1588, H.R. 2466, 9/14/99]
McCain Missed A Vote That Helped Outline Proposed Budget Levels For The National Park Centennial Fund. McCain missed a vote that outlined the proposed federal budget for next year, as well as proposed budget levels for Fiscal Year 2008 and Fiscal Years 2010 through 2013. Included in the Budget was a deficit neutral reserve fund for the National Park Centennial Fund. The Budget Resolution provides a fiscally responsible plan for funding critical national priorities, and reaches balance without raising taxes. [2008 Senate Vote #85, S. Con. Res. 70 3/14/08]
McCain Voted Against The NRA Marksmanship Program. In 1993, McCain voted to kill an amendment to the Fiscal Year 1994 Defense Appropriations bill (HR 3116) to kill the $2.5 million in funds for the Civilian Marksmanship Program to help the National Rifle Association and private gun clubs teach shooting skills to young people. This amendment was killed by a vote of 67 to 30. [Arizona Republic, 10/24/93; Senate CQ Vote# 325, 10/21/93]