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Tag Archive for '1st Congressional District'

Savannah Daily News Endorses Barrow and Gillespie for Congress!

The Savannah Daily News has made its endorsements for Congress in the 1st and 12th District. Their selections:

Bill Gillespie for the 1st District.

John Barrow for the 12th District.

This is the first time SDN has not endorsed Jack Kingston. The edorsement explains why:

……It is painful to no longer endorse our friend, Jack Kingston. Many of us know Jack and his family personally and cherish their friendship and their public service. Jack Kingston is a good man, personally, but he has never had a viable or credible Democratic opponent to truly consider.

And these times force us to step back, and take a hard look at his actual voting record on critical issues including fighting all measures to set a timeline to get out of Iraq, his failure to fight runaway Federal spending as a member of the House Appropriations committee that develops the budget, his leadership in defense of Tom Delay and President Bush as well as Republican party smear campaigns this election cycle, and his failure to file his personal financial disclosure information due last May 15 even though he was up for re-election. These votes and others lead us to believe that it is time for a change in 1st District representation.

Frankly, Jack began to lose our support last Feb. 27 when he appeared on the Dan Abrams show and said it was okay to “question Sen. Barack Obama’s patriotism because he doesn’t regularly wear an American flag lapel pin.”

Problem was, sitting there on the TV set with the cameras rolling, Jack wasn’t wearing a flag pin. These types of smear tactics are repugnant and demean elected officials in an era when voters are begging for straight talk on the issues versus old-style personal attack politics.

Yet, he continues to try to use such tactics, seeking to smear his opponent Bill Gillespie in this race, accusing him of lying about his educational degrees and other achievements, despite two news organizations having confirmed that Gillespie’s resume is accurate………

And its reasons for endorsing John Barrow are:

John Barrow deserves our support for another term as the Congressman from Georgia’s 12th District.

While his voting patterns may not be liberal enough for some in the 12th District, particularly in the Savannah area, his legal mind continues to serve us well, demonstrating a pattern of pulling apart legislation and voting on the quality of a bill and its intention versus just following a straight political party line.

He voted against the bailout bill because there was “too much downside for the taxpayer. There were specific areas of fraud and abuse that were skillfully manipulated out of the final product,” he says. That approach to in-depth study is what we depend on from our elected representatives.

And we must send representatives to Congress who will take tough stands on the legislative issues ahead for the 111th congress, issues in addition to current financial crisis matters. One of those issues for the 12th Congressional District is needed reform of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation, up for renewal in the next session. Improving public schools and developing a more qualified work force are seismic issues for the district.

Barrow shares our views, believing that NCLB was a good idea that “got hijacked from how it was designed. There is nothing wrong with standards, nothing wrong with being sure that Georgia is getting the same bang for its educational buck as Texas, but the Bush administration failed from the beginning to fund the bill, which is exactly what they promised they would not do if it was enacted,” he states. “So we’re raiding the local tax base to continue to fund federally mandated educational programs.” We couldn’t make these important points any more succinctly than John’s own words.

A 2008 study from the U.S. Department of Education, in the recently released “Reading First Impact Study: Interim Report,” states that the performance of students in 12 states who were in grades one to three during the 2004-5 and 2005-6 school years and completed the Reading First Program, a major billion dollar a year NCLB effort, had proven “ineffective.” A final report on the impacts from 2004-2007 (three school years with Reading First funding) and on the relationships between changes in instructional practice and student reading comprehension is expected in late 2008. It’s an issue ahead that needs tough analysis, and tough stands to ensure funding in a time when there will be little money to spare.

His opponent, John Stone (R), represents the old school party politics of big lobbyists and insider power players. He has spoken out on few issues in this campaign with the exception of his recent one-day media event in Savannah to propose his solution to the U.S. economic crisis, including ideas that cannot be enacted, such as imposing a moratorium on home mortgage foreclosures.

Barrow has high marks and endorsements from business organizations such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. And his position on immigration is realistic in light of the needs of Georgia and the 12th District. He supports securing the borders and enforcing the laws we have but without dramatic measures supported by many.

Most importantly, John Barrow is accessible and in the district often, spending endless weekends in its small towns, meeting face-to-face with voters, versus leaving all the constituent work to paid staffers.

John Barrow is a Blue Dog, fiscal conservative Democrat in an era when we’re all feeling pretty blue about the economy, and we need his take on the solutions

Bill Gillespie, Candidate for Congress GA-1st

Bill Gillespie is a Democrat seeking to replace Jack Kingston in Congress on behalf of the 1st District.

What might be impossible in normal times (unseating an incumbent), just might be possible this year. Obama has energized a lot of people. There are 45,000 newly registered Democrats in the 1st District. And then there is the economy, which has certainly proven that Republicans must be doing something wrong.

Bill Agrees reluctantly with Congress’ decision to baleout Wall Street.

The 1st District has lost a lot of its manufacturing business. In 19 of the 25 counties in the 1st the county government is the largest employer. Bill is ready to ready bring alternative energy business and jobs to Georgia and the 1st District.

According to Bill, Jack Kingston is more concerned about supporting the agendas of the oil companies, like Chevron, rather than promoting alternative energy businesses.

Bill is dissatisfied with the way the Iraq War has been handled. He points out that America has trained 800,000 Iraqi soldiers and 200,000 Iraqi police, and still they are not able to provide the security Iraq needs. Something is wrong here.

Bill also doesn’t like the prevalence in Iraq of the private security forces, like Blackwater, that operate outside of the normal chains of command and control. Who would have thought that American would have ever used mercenaries!

As a veteran who is 30% disabled himself, Bill thinks we need to do a better job of taking care of our veterans. It seems the spresent ystem tries to make it harder, not easier, for veterans to receive good, available health care. Veterans aren’t like the rest of us. They can’t go to the local doctor. Instead they have to make an appointment at a VA facility which may be hundreds of miles away. Bill supports giving veterans the right to be treated by local doctors and hospitals and the government pick up the tab.

Listen to Bill’s interview and see if he fits your idea of the kind of Congressman the 1st District needs in Washington

 
 Bill Gillespie, Candidate for Congress, GA 1st [30:44m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (367)

Meet Bill Gillespie, Iraq Vet and Candidate for Congress (1st-GA)

One thing the Iraq war is accomplishing, in addition to giving us all something to have an opinion about, is, it seems, more and more veterans are getting involved in politics. Bill Gillespie served his country in the Army for 23 years, but the Iraq War and the policies of the Bush Administration gave him pause to consider whether or not he needed to serve in another way. He’s running for Congress in Georgia’s 1st Congressional District which has been Republican since Jack Kingston’s election in 1994.

It is early in the campaign and there are still a lot of issues and positions for Bill to fully develop, but as he notes, he’s represented America in uniform all over the world and has a pretty good foundation for understanding our foreign policy and how we are perceived as a country and as a people. Whether it is the Iraq War, immigration or healthcar, Bill believes that it is time for good, honest men, who will tell us the truth, to step forward and serve.

By the way, you remember 1994 don’t you! That was the year Newt Gingrich first fooled America with his Contract with America. That’s the year Jack Kingston got elected promoting term limits, and now his term has been 14 years. In fact, I probably voted for Jack, since I believe Toombs County was in his district at that time. (Could be wrong!)

What happened to the Contract that was supposed to change things?

Turns out it wasn’t a contract with America, but a contract with Jack Abramoff, Halliburton, and lobbyists in general.

Do you remember that contract? Well, if you were Republican then (like I was), you need to go back and read it and realize how utterly stupid we were to believe that things were going to change.

Here’s what the contract promised:

FIRST, require all laws that apply to the rest of the country also apply equally to the Congress;
SECOND, select a major, independent auditing firm to conduct a comprehensive audit of Congress for waste, fraud or abuse;
THIRD, cut the number of House committees, and cut committee staff by one-third;
FOURTH, limit the terms of all committee chairs;
FIFTH, ban the casting of proxy votes in committee;
SIXTH, require committee meetings to be open to the public;
SEVENTH, require a three-fifths majority vote to pass a tax increase;
EIGHTH, guarantee an honest accounting of our Federal Budget by implementing zero base-line budgeting.

Now, they may have passed this crap in the House, but as far as I know, that is about as far as it went. I do know that nothing in that list solved any problem, because all of them still exist. I dare say there was not one substantive change in American government as a result of the Contract, only a change in who sold us the goods.

I do know that as a Republican in 1994, I bit, hook, line and sinker, for Newt’s Contract with America. Over the next 6 years I enjoyed the wars of conservatives versus liberals. I trusted the Jack Kingstons of the Congress to bring true morality to government, not just radical, partisan morality that suited their base. I even voted for Bush in 2000, not yet realizing the depths to which the Republicans could sink when they controlled both houses of Congress and the Presidency.

We need a new breed of politician. We don’t need representatives in Congress that are unwilling to oppose their own party and offer “rubber-stamp” support, no matter what the issue. We need politicians that can get above the partisan debate and actually solve something. We need politicians that don’t really want to get re-elected. We need politicians who will do what is right, even if we don’t like it every now and then.

2008 is going to be a landmark election year. Don’t miss it. Get involved. VOTE!!

 
 Bill Gillespie, Democratic Candidate, 1st GA [28:33m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (416)