Have you heard the latest about Republicans Jim Jordan, Steve Chabot, and Brad Wenstrup?
Dispatch:
Republicans
Jim Jordan of Urbana, and Steve Chabot and Brad Wenstrup of Cincinnati
were among 80 GOP lawmakers who urged House Speaker John Boehner to back
a bill that would halt federal spending to implement the 2010 health
care law, known as ObamaCare.
Although the lawmakers did not directly threaten to shut down the government if Boehner, R-West Chester, does not support a bill to kill it by withholding federal dollars, they wrote that “we look forward to collaborating to defund one of the largest grievances in our time.’’
Although ending federal money for the health law has become a pet favorite of conservatives and their allies in the Tea Party movement, most Republicans in the Senate and House are reluctant to provoke a government shutdown over the health law, much of which is scheduled to go into effect next year.
- See more at: http://dispatchpolitics.dispatch.com/content/blogs/the-daily-briefing/2013/08/jordan-8-23-2013.html#sthash.5lZGKFGS.dpuf
Republicans Jim Jordan of Urbana, and Steve Chabot and Brad Wenstrup
of Cincinnati were among 80 GOP lawmakers who urged House Speaker John
Boehner to back a bill that would halt federal spending to implement the
2010 health care law, known as ObamaCare.Although the lawmakers did not directly threaten to shut down the government if Boehner, R-West Chester, does not support a bill to kill it by withholding federal dollars, they wrote that “we look forward to collaborating to defund one of the largest grievances in our time.’’
Although ending federal money for the health law has become a pet favorite of conservatives and their allies in the Tea Party movement, most Republicans in the Senate and House are reluctant to provoke a government shutdown over the health law, much of which is scheduled to go into effect next year.
- See more at: http://dispatchpolitics.dispatch.com/content/blogs/the-daily-briefing/2013/08/jordan-8-23-2013.html#sthash.5lZGKFGS.dpuf
Although the lawmakers did not directly threaten to shut down the government if Boehner, R-West Chester, does not support a bill to kill it by withholding federal dollars, they wrote that “we look forward to collaborating to defund one of the largest grievances in our time.’’
Although ending federal money for the health law has become a pet favorite of conservatives and their allies in the Tea Party movement, most Republicans in the Senate and House are reluctant to provoke a government shutdown over the health law, much of which is scheduled to go into effect next year.....
Jim Jordan, Steve Chabot, and Brad Wenstrup don't care that you don't have health care, a pre-existing condition, or that you lost your health coverage after your last bout of cancer. Jordan, Chabot, and Wenstrup have government supplied health insurance even though they are part of the least productive House of Representatives ever. Ever. These guys have wasted hours and hours voting 40 times to repeal the Affordable Care Act. Do you know how many jobs Jordan, Chabot, and Wenstrup have created? Zero! The only people they care about are themselves--not you, not your sick kids, or your frail parents. Jordan, Chabot, Wenstrup, Boehner and the rest of the Tea Party-loving cohorts need to be voted out of office for their lack of a work effort.
In the next election, we need to tell these Republicans and their Tea Party friends--- you've been voted out!
Republicans
Jim Jordan of Urbana, and Steve Chabot and Brad Wenstrup of Cincinnati
were among 80 GOP lawmakers who urged House Speaker John Boehner to back
a bill that would halt federal spending to implement the 2010 health
care law, known as ObamaCare.
Although the lawmakers did not directly threaten to shut down the government if Boehner, R-West Chester, does not support a bill to kill it by withholding federal dollars, they wrote that “we look forward to collaborating to defund one of the largest grievances in our time.’’
Although ending federal money for the health law has become a pet favorite of conservatives and their allies in the Tea Party movement, most Republicans in the Senate and House are reluctant to provoke a government shutdown over the health law, much of which is scheduled to go into effect next year.
- See more at: http://dispatchpolitics.dispatch.com/content/blogs/the-daily-briefing/2013/08/jordan-8-23-2013.html#sthash.5lZGKFGS.dpuf
Although the lawmakers did not directly threaten to shut down the government if Boehner, R-West Chester, does not support a bill to kill it by withholding federal dollars, they wrote that “we look forward to collaborating to defund one of the largest grievances in our time.’’
Although ending federal money for the health law has become a pet favorite of conservatives and their allies in the Tea Party movement, most Republicans in the Senate and House are reluctant to provoke a government shutdown over the health law, much of which is scheduled to go into effect next year.
- See more at: http://dispatchpolitics.dispatch.com/content/blogs/the-daily-briefing/2013/08/jordan-8-23-2013.html#sthash.5lZGKFGS.dpuf
Republicans
Jim Jordan of Urbana, and Steve Chabot and Brad Wenstrup of Cincinnati
were among 80 GOP lawmakers who urged House Speaker John Boehner to back
a bill that would halt federal spending to implement the 2010 health
care law, known as ObamaCare.
Although the lawmakers did not directly threaten to shut down the government if Boehner, R-West Chester, does not support a bill to kill it by withholding federal dollars, they wrote that “we look forward to collaborating to defund one of the largest grievances in our time.’’
Although ending federal money for the health law has become a pet favorite of conservatives and their allies in the Tea Party movement, most Republicans in the Senate and House are reluctant to provoke a government shutdown over the health law, much of which is scheduled to go into effect next year.
- See more at: http://dispatchpolitics.dispatch.com/content/blogs/the-daily-briefing/2013/08/jordan-8-23-2013.html#sthash.5lZGKFGS.dpuf
Although the lawmakers did not directly threaten to shut down the government if Boehner, R-West Chester, does not support a bill to kill it by withholding federal dollars, they wrote that “we look forward to collaborating to defund one of the largest grievances in our time.’’
Although ending federal money for the health law has become a pet favorite of conservatives and their allies in the Tea Party movement, most Republicans in the Senate and House are reluctant to provoke a government shutdown over the health law, much of which is scheduled to go into effect next year.
- See more at: http://dispatchpolitics.dispatch.com/content/blogs/the-daily-briefing/2013/08/jordan-8-23-2013.html#sthash.5lZGKFGS.dpuf