At a craft brewery in Hampton, New Hampshire, Hillary Clinton called out her Republican pretender opponents
for sacrificing American jobs to appease the billionaire Koch Brothers
and talk radio Tea Party extremists. In particular, Clinton criticized
Republicans who want to dismantle the Export-Import Bank, which supplies
loans and provides insurance to facilitate the sale of U.S. exports to
international buyers.
A number of Republican pretender contenders have
gone on record in favor of killing the Export-Import Bank, a move that
could potentially eliminate a significant number of American jobs in the
process. Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz have pledged to shut down the Export-Import Bank.
Scott Walker and Jeb Bush
also have publicly expressed opposition to the Export-Import Bank.
Clinton argued at the Smuttynose Brewery that the
Republican hopefuls were pursuing a job killing policy simply to placate
extremists in their party, from the wealthy Koch Brothers to the loud
voices on right-wing AM talk radio.
She contended that the Republican candidates were afraid to stand up to the teabaggers and hate speech radio. She added:
It is wrong that candidates for president, who really should know better, are jumping on this bandwagon. It’s embarrassing.
Texas Republican Jeb Hensarling dismissed Clinton’s comments
by arguing that if she cared about small businesses and jobs she would
be a supporter of “trade promotion authority, pro-growth tax reform, the
Keystone pipeline and real regulatory relief”.
Whatever one thinks of the Import-Export Bank,
Hillary Clinton hit upon a theme that will probably become a defining
motif during her campaign. Republican presidential candidates are
so busy pandering to wealthy donors or vocal Tea Party activists, that
they refuse to enact common sense policies that benefit ordinary
American workers.
Republican
candidates are so fearful of losing support on their right flanks that
they cower in submission to the dictates of their billionaire backers,
or to the angry voices on talk radio. Presidential candidates who are
afraid to do the right thing, because it might offend the “wrong
people”, probably should seek another line of work. America needs a
President who can lead, not one who only knows how to follow.
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