Political Hotsheet
March 2, 2009 5:49 PM

McCain Criticizes Obama On The Senate Floor

(AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
Sen. John McCain harshly criticized President Obama on the Senator floor today, reports CBS News’ John Nolen.

McCain noted his former opponent’s campaign promise to reduce pork barrel spending and then pointed to the omnibus spending bill signed by the president and now before Congress, which he said is loaded with earmarks.

“So much for the promise of change,” McCain said. “During the campaign President Obama said he would work to limit earmarks and make them more transparent.”

“It is the president of the United States' business to do what he said,” McCain added, specifically citing a September presidential debate where Mr. Obama said he would eliminate earmarks.

McCain quoted President Obama saying this: "We need earmark reform. And when I'm president, I will go line by line to make sure we're not spending money unwisely."

McCain also said it was “insulting” to the American people for President Obama’s economic advisor, Peter Orzag, to say that the White House wants to move on from the omnibus bill and characterize it as last year’s business.

Later on the Senate floor, Senator McCain offered his amendment to the $410 billion dollar omnibus bill. McCain’s plan “adopts a long term Continuing resolution (CR) which would fund the government at last year’s levels and do away with the earmarks and eliminate ‘7.7 billion’ in wasteful spending,” Nolen reports.

"While I want to say it is time to put a halt to business as usual, I find myself thinking this level of funding defies that description,” McCain said. “It’s beyond anything I have ever witnessed and is extremely alarming."

In addition to listing specific earmarks he finds the most reprehensible, McCain said he has been twittering the “top ten” most egregious and that at this rate it would take him “almost three years” to list all of the 9,000 pork projects present in the bill.

“I have been through some of them before but they make you laugh and they make you cry,” he said.

Tags:
John McCain ,
omnibus ,
spending ,
Barack Obama
Topics:
John McCain
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by Iran-Contra March 3, 2009 6:34 PM EST
Sweet. Thing is there's something of a tradition in this country where after you get your ass kicked at the polls, like good old Walnuts did, you shut the hell up for a little while and let some of the other distinguished leaders of your party, Limbaugh, Steele, Jindal (where do you find these people, anyway?) make the case for the opposition. Whatever. Stay classy, guys.
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by mattcat25 March 3, 2009 9:35 AM EST
Earmarks and/or "Pork $pending" is something that has plagued Washington and should be concluded but, it has been all members of Congress that covet Federal Capital for home grown projects.

Where was Senator McCain when his Republican Party was stuffing the Pork on an unnecessary War on Iraq to alleviate Saddam Hussein?s Weapons of Mass Destruction?

I'm against Earmarks but, in contrast to the last 8 years our unfettered Republican $pending it is better to spend it over here instead of spending it over there!
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by wvu74621 March 3, 2009 9:32 AM EST
Ya see Wal-mart even has a flash ad on this page. Shows you that Wal-mart knows the deal. I hope everyone likes Starter Jackets , $4.99 Wilson shorts and Pony tennis shoes. Buy Wal-mart stock now!
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by tbuckl March 3, 2009 9:26 AM EST
What a jerk!
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by wvu74621 March 3, 2009 9:09 AM EST
McCain criticizes Obama. OH NO!!!!!!! what are we going to do? Was there some by-law in the election process that stated that Obama is not to be criticized? I think they sell baby pacifiers at wal-mart for a $1.50. Might as well get used to making Wal-mart richer because that is the only place most Americans will be able to afford to shop over the next 4 years.
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by andie52 March 3, 2009 8:42 AM EST
Well McCain if you were so astute and analytical earlier you wouldn?t have lost the election although you did have some help from Palin-so get over it already.
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by wvu74621 March 3, 2009 8:29 AM EST
Quote Detail/Dow
Change -299.64 Open 7,056.48
Change % -4.24% Previous Close 7,062.93
Today's High 7,058.95 52 Week High 13,136.69
Today's Low 6,755.17 52 Week Low 6,755.17

Down 6,381 points fro this day a year ago????????????????
Reply to this comment
by endurorob March 3, 2009 7:35 AM EST
I used to have a lot of respect for John McCain. And then he tried to obstruct the Federal investigation of his top financial supporter who ended up in prison. Then he caved in to the Limbaugh wing of his party (who he despises). And then he offered us Sarah Palin! It is time for him to retire. The pain and anguish of his envy of Obama is just too much for him to bear. Sadly, he won't be able to retire with dignity.

Posted by CromwellKY at 3:54 AM : Mar 3, 2009


Due to your inability to defend the lies of Obama you attack McCain. Good lefty.
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by CromwellKY March 3, 2009 6:54 AM EST
I used to have a lot of respect for John McCain. And then he tried to obstruct the Federal investigation of his top financial supporter who ended up in prison. Then he caved in to the Limbaugh wing of his party (who he despises). And then he offered us Sarah Palin! It is time for him to retire. The pain and anguish of his envy of Obama is just too much for him to bear. Sadly, he won't be able to retire with dignity.
Reply to this comment
by ioweign March 3, 2009 4:39 AM EST
For all you Obama zombies, totally brain dead lemmings, by the time his first term is over, if this country survives that long, he will have made Jimmy Carter look like a genius on the economy. For all you Democrats, the majority of which are draft dodging coke snorting morons, you will be so sorry you ever elected this guy. Wait and see.
Posted by harper2008-2009 at 8:40 PM : Mar 2, 2009

National Debt History : White House data show the gross national debt hit a 47 year low just as President Reagan was taking office. It climbed steadily under Reagan and G. H. W. Bush, declined under Clinton and made a quick U-turn under G. W. Bush.

The Gross Deficit vs. the political Deficit Lite The real deficit remains near its peak and over half a trillion $ per year.

National Debt Clocks: The Gross National Debt is over $10 trillion and climbing. More than $1.5 trillion of the debt is owed to the Social Security trust fund and indirectly to those who have paid their FICA taxes.

Presidential Contributions to the Gross National Debt: The gross federal debt now stands at 63.5% of GDP. Of that, 33.5 percentage points were contributed by Reagan-Bush, 6 points by G. W. Bush, and 6.1 points by printing money. The remaining 18 points are left over from WWII.
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by wvu74621 March 3, 2009 1:54 AM EST
Since Bush is'nt around to bash anymore is'nt it just natural to continue with the next one to replace him. Libs quit crying because people are bashing Obama, you act like he cured cancer or something. Obama policies have not proven out yet and it does'nt look too promising that they will. I did'nt like the last Prez and this new one certainly never ceases to be dumbfounded. I wonder why it was OK to call Bush a chimp?
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by bluenomas March 3, 2009 12:24 AM EST
For all you Democrats, the majority of which are draft dodging coke snorting morons, you will be so sorry you ever elected this guy. Wait and see.
Posted by harper2008-2009 at 8:40 PM : Mar 2, 2009 ......................

you must be from planet Stereotype. I guess you attend the Limbarff sermons regularly too...a devout brainwashed follower perhaps?
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by nearl451 March 3, 2009 12:11 AM EST
Yeah, well I guess what John says is important because......what fix is he proposing again? Oh yeah: none.
Reply to this comment
by ioweign March 2, 2009 11:54 PM EST
For all you Obama zombies, totally brain dead lemmings, by the time his first term is over, if this country survives that long, he will have made Jimmy Carter look like a genius on the economy. For all you Democrats, the majority of which are draft dodging coke snorting morons, you will be so sorry you ever elected this guy. Wait and see.
Posted by harper2008-2009 at 8:40 PM : Mar 2, 2009

"He knows less about the budget than any president in my lifetime. He can't even carry on a conversation about the budget. It's an absolute and utter disgrace."
--House Speaker Tip O'Neill, after a meeting with Reagan, November 23, 1981

"For the last 30 years he's been in a dream world.... I think he actually believes that giving more to rich people will make them work harder, whereas the only way to make poor people work is to tax their unemployment benefits."
--NAACP executive director Benjamin Hooks commenting on Reagan's economic policies, January 25, 1983

"At his seventh press conference, President Reagan...responds to a question about the 17% black unemployment rate by pointing out that 'in this time of great unemployment,' Sunday's paper had '24 full pages of...employers looking for employees,' though most of the jobs available--computer operator, for example, or cellular immunologist--require special training, for which his administration has cut funds by over 30%."
--Paul Slansky, The Clothes have no Emperor

"What we have found in this country, and maybe we're more aware of it now, is one problem that we've had, even in the best of times, and that is the people who are sleeping on the grates, the homeless who are homeless, you might say, by choice."
--President Reagan, defending himself against charges of callousness on Good Morning America, January 31, 1984

"The Agriculture Department [under Reagan proposes] cutting the size of school lunches.... In addition, condiments such as ketchup and pickle relish would be reclassified as vegetables."
--Paul Slansky, The Clothes have no Emperor

"The epitaph of the Reagan presidency will be: 'When Ronald Reagan became President, the United States was the largest creditor nation. When he left the presidency, we were the world's largest debtor nation.'"
--Lester Thurow, MIT professor of economics

"[A] lapse into fiscal indiscipline on a scale never before experienced in peacetime."
--David Stockman (Reagan's budget director) describing the 1980's, The Triumph of Politics: Why the Reagan Revolution Failed

"In the Reagan years, more federal debt was added than in the entire prior history of the United States."
--Richard Darman (Reagan advisor), Who's in Control? Polar Politics and the Sensible Center

"Reagan's theory was really 'trickle down' economics borrowed from the Republican 1920s (Harding-Coolidge-Hoover) and renamed 'supply side.' Cut tax rates for the wealthy; everyone else will benefit. As Reagan's budget director David Stockman confided to me at the time, the supply-side rhetoric 'was always a Trojan horse to bring down the top rate.' Many middle-class and poor citizens figured it out, even if reporters did not."
--William Greider, magazine article, "The Gipper's Economy"

"America has a strong economy and a surplus.... Now is the time to reform the tax code and share some of the surplus with the people who pay the bills."
--George W. Bush, nomination acceptance speech, 3 August 2000

After the election of 2000, Bush and a Republican-led Congress reduced income taxes, with the majority of the tax cuts going to America's wealthiest individuals. With the introduction of Bush's tax cuts, the budget surplus immediately disappeared and deficits resumed, so that by the end of Bush's eight-year term, the national debt had doubled from $5 trillion to $10 trillion.
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by harper2008-2009 March 2, 2009 11:40 PM EST
For all you Obama zombies, totally brain dead lemmings, by the time his first term is over, if this country survives that long, he will have made Jimmy Carter look like a genius on the economy. For all you Democrats, the majority of which are draft dodging coke snorting morons, you will be so sorry you ever elected this guy. Wait and see.
Reply to this comment
by lucasnico March 2, 2009 11:07 PM EST
this from the guy who profited more than any other politician from the Lincoln Financial scandal...... maybe we can send John some really sweet grapes.....he seems to have enough of the sour ones.
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by bumpedoff March 2, 2009 10:28 PM EST
At least he did not vote present and he called obama on
his campaign promise
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by mrzerato March 2, 2009 10:08 PM EST
Well John you can keep the senate floor as long as you want and make the people famous that are supporting the earmarks. You should start with your best bud, lindsay graham. He is porking it up to a tune just less than 200 million. I am sure you would like to do that since you said you would during the campaign. Or are you a hypocrite
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by captainkona March 2, 2009 9:27 PM EST
sudduthr1:

Ewwwwww!

The single most dreadful mental picture all week.

:D
Reply to this comment
by captainkona March 2, 2009 9:25 PM EST
Between McLoser, Palin and the Rushtards I see many decades of Progressive leadership in our future.

Thanx be to God.

;-]_~
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