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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: D. Long who wrote (235435)1/22/2008 1:18:23 AM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793958
 
Dems do blasting GWB best, can't do anything else Democrat rivals lash Bush as global stocks tumble

{Any Repub who thinks they are going to vote single issue, and choose to vote for a Dem or a RINO Repub, had just better do some research and see WHERE and WHEN this mess started, and is a WORLDWIDE mess.... And after the research, better fold your tent, and go into the dole line....the Dems will make SURE you do otherwise.....}


Jan 22 01:22 AM US/Eastern


Democrats Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama roasted President George W. Bush on the economy Monday, as world stock markets plummeted for a second day on fears of a US recession.

"This is the number one issue," New York Senator Clinton said, in a high-stakes debate just five days before the next party nominating contest, the South Carolina primary.

Clinton accused President George W. Bush, who last week unveiled plans for an economic stimulus package, of not taking a mortgage foreclosure crisis "seriously enough."

"Everything we know about President Bush's plans would leave 50 to 70 million Americans out," Clinton said.
"The President's proposed stimulus package is inadequate, it is too little, too late."

Obama, who has a double digit lead in most polls in the southern state, warned of dire economic times ahead.
"We could be sliding into an extraordinary recession unless we stimulate the economy," the Illinois senator said, and also hit out at the current president's stewardship of the economy.
"George Bush has made it worse, George Bush has consistently skewed our tax code to the wealthy."

"He has squandered billions of dollars in a war that should have never been authorized and never should have been waged," he said referring to the Iraq war, which is fiercely unpopular with Democratic voters.

Obama said Clinton had erred by her initial support for the North American Free Trade deal with Canada and Mexico implemented during her husband's administration, and hit out at another rival John Edwards for backing Permanent Normal Trade Relations for China.

breitbart.com