Showing posts with label Charlie Melancon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlie Melancon. Show all posts

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Louisiana: Support Charlie Melancon For U.S. Senate

So Louisianians know why they should vote against their current incumbent Republican U.S. Senator. But why vote for his Democratic opponent, Charlie Melancon? I have made the case for him already, but not in particularly good detail
Well, why don't I flesh out some of Mr. Melancon's stands on some of the issues? As a U.S. House member, he has seen too much federal spending go to various projects through out the country that aren't needed - how about that bridge to nowhere in Alaska? while Louisiana has gotten the short end of the the baton. Mr. Melancon has stood for lower taxes and less spending but believes in giving tax cuts to the people who need it - Louisiana's middle class. He wants to provide tax breaks and credit for businesses to create jobs, not to enrich the wealthy.
Mr. Melancon believes in federal spending - but the kind of federal spending that will make a difference. Ha wants get more federal aid for restoring coastal wetlands and preventing the erosion that has left properties and property values in the state sink.
While Republicans talk about cutting the deficit, Mr. Melancon has consistently supported balancing the budget. He has also been consistent on health care reform, keeping a hybrid private-public system in place but supporting regulations on insurance companies to keep them from denying insurance to those with pre-existing conditions.
Mr. Melancon has a principled stand on abortion - he's pro-life - and supports the right to bear arms, and while I do not personally agree with him on those issues, many Louisianians do, and this puts him in sync with the state's voters. Louisianians can trust him. Mr. Melancon - unlike his opponent has lived family values. He talks the talk and walks the walk.
That's why I am endorsing Mr. Charles Joseph Melancon for United States Senate.
Please note that the name of his opponent never came up in this post.
(More on Charlie: http://www.charliemelancon.com/ .)

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Charlie Melancon For U.S. Senate From Louisiana

I am taking this opportunity to declare that this blog endorses Charlie Melancon for the Untied States Senator from Louisiana. And this blog does so wholeheartedly, enthusiastically, and unreservedly.
Why so early. Because even though I gave Louisiana readers of this blog several reasons to vote against David Vitter, I haven't explained why they should vote for Charlie Melancon.And ideally, people should have someone to vote for rather than just someone to vote against.
Charlie Melancon is a small businessman who has run a chain of ice cream parlors and an insurance agency, and so he's connected to the lives of everyday Louisianians far more than Vitter is. He was elected to the U.S House of Representatives in 2004, where he has developed a strong reputation for reaching across the aisle to pass necessary legislation. He has supported more health care funding for Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans, he is strongly in favor of a balanced budget (something Republicans like Vitter have had trouble doing more than paying lip service to). Mr. Melancon's efforts to accomplish things for the good of the nation have earned him a rating from the nonpartisan group Knowlegis as one of the most effective members of Congress.
Mr. Melancon has also been at the forefront to get BP to clean up the oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico and be held fully accountable for the disaster. He cares about Louisiana and the country, and he is a Democrat who works for and with the people.
I can't say it often enough - Charlie Melancon is a man to vote for, and the fact that voting for him is voting against David Vitter is merely a benefit to casting such a ballot. Mr. Melancon deserves to be in the United States Senate no matter who is Republican opponent is.
Vote for Charlie Melancon on November 2, Louisiana. :-)

Saturday, August 28, 2010

David Vitter Must Go

I hate David Vitter.
I mean, I just don't dislike Louisiana's junior U.S. Senator. I detest him. I loathe him. I really, really hate him.
Hatred is a feeling normally reserved for places and things rather than people. But in the case of David Vitter, it's justified. He is without question the sorriest excuse for a U.S. Senator right now. James Carville, a veteran Democratic political consultant and a Louisiana native, knows of what he speaks when he calls Vitter the slimiest man in the U.S. Senate.
Here's the rundown. Vitter, a former House member, was elected the first Republican senator from Louisiana since Reconstruction in 2004 when he ran in a nonpartisan state primary. Louisiana had all interested candidates for office run in a primary, and a general election is held in November only if no candidate gets a majority. Vitter won the primary with 51 percent of the vote, getting elected to the U.S. Senate and replacing retiring Democrat John Breaux. Vitter was one of seven freshman Republicans elected to Congress in 2004, all but one of them replacing Democrats and whose victories were fueled by fears of gay marriage and terrorism (thank you, Ken Mehlman!).
As a senator, Vitter has been a more vocal apologist for the oil industry than his Democratic colleague Mary Landrieu. In fact, about a month after the BP oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico began, Vitter asked for unanimous consent to pass legislation that would have limited BP's financial liabilities for oil spills (and coincidentally, the liabilities of other oil companies) to $150 million or the total of its last four quarters of profit, whichever would be higher. Under this proposal, guess who would have been primarily responsible for cleaning up the oil leak? The taxpayers!
Vitter's record in the House is equally offensive. While a House member, he proposed a bill limiting criminal liability of corporations responsible for oil spills and exempting oil companies except those specifically cover by the Oil Pollution Act, which was passed in 1990. For the record, neither of these odious bills were passed, and had Vitter's proposed legislation in the Senate made it to President Obama's desk, the President would most assuredly have vetoed it. It was, as many agreed, a BP bailout bill.
If Vitter were just another stooge for Big Oil, he'd wouldn't be worth hating. However, Vitter has a lot of problems with his record, both personal and professional, regarding women. In 2007, he was revealed to be involved in a Washington prostitution ring when his phone number surfaced in its records. Vitter -a defender of "family values" - was also accused by a former New Orleans prostitute of having conducted an affair with her. Vitter apologized with his wife standing by his side, but rather than suffering political damage from it, he got applauded by fellow Republicans - who apparently believed the scandal was a smear campaign by the "liberal media" - at a subsequent public appearance.
Can someone tell me what kind of a country we live in where a man of the people like Eliot Spitzer gets caught in a prostitution ring and is forced to resign the governorship of New York but a defender of the privileged and the powerful like David Vitter gets caught in a prostitution ring but keeps his Senate seat and gets a standing ovation?
But wait - there's more! Apparently Brent Furer, a Vitter aide, held a woman hostage, threatened to kill her, and slashed her neck with a knife. The senator continued to keep Furer on his payroll for more than two years after the incident.
Did I happen to mention that Furer is the senator's women's outreach coordinator?
What's really depressing about all this is that Vitter is still a favorite for re-election. The reasons for this are numerous. First, it's likely to be a good night for Republicans on Election Day. Secondly, Louisiana is identified as having the tenth largest base of conservative voters in the nation. Thirdly, Vitter has spun his support for the oil industry as an effort to preserve jobs in Louisiana and is likely to be rewarded for his distortion of the facts. Fourth, he's from Louisiana. The former Louisiana House member Billy Tauzin may very well have been right when he said that half of the state is under water and the other half is under indictment, but you know what? Louisianians love roguishness in their politicians. This is what allowed them to elect flamboyantly corrupt politicians like Edwin Edwards as governor, and they love libidinous politicians as well - as the movie Blaze (about governor Earl Long and his mistress) made clear.
Oh yeah, Vitter just won his party's primary for a second Senate term. Fortunately Charlie Melancon, a Louisiana congressman won the Democratic primary for the Senate. Melancon, whose district has been adversely affected by the BP oil spill, has been fighting the petroleum monolith since the leak began and hasn't let up. He has a strong reputation for bipartisanship and fairness, and although Louisianians have been disappointed with Washington's handling of the crisis - good grief, a recent poll suggest that Louisiana voters were more satisfied with Bush's handling of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina than Obama's handling of the BP disaster! - such cynicism can hardly be applied to Melancon. He's bee across the state, talking to the people, and listening to their concerns. And he sure has hack hasn't been supporting any lawsuits brought against Preisdent Obama to show his birth certificate, as Vitter has. The choice is clear: Charlie Melancon should be Louisiana's next U.S. Senator.
I have to take a nice long shower after having posted this. Writing about David Vitter at length makes me feel so unclean. Maybe that's why I put it off for so long.
Go to Mr. Melancon's campaign Web site for more information. Please.