Biden: Republicans Have Failed to Address Middle Class Issues

Speaking to a crowd of about 1,200 in Langhorne, PA, Joe Biden railed against the Republican party for failing to address issues such as decreasing real wages, job losses, and the increasing cost of gas, groceries, health care, and education. He referred to the Bush administration as “eight years of failure.”
Biden said that if he and Barack Obama are elected, they will seek to give families an extra $1,000 in tax incentives.
Obama and Biden have recently made middle class issues central to his campaign. But according to DelawareOnline, working Americans’ reactions to Biden’s appeals have been mixed. Especially in heavily Catholic areas, Biden’s pro-choice stance has cost him supporters.
Obama and McCain on Social Security Privatization
At a recent event hosted by AARP, Barack Obama has come out unequivocally against Social Security privatization.
McCain’s record is full of flip-flops. Originally, he spoke out in favor of President Bush’s privatization proposals. More recently, he has backed away from these statements, declaring that they “weren’t campaign promises” and even that he “never has been for privatizing Social Security.”
Check out the full article on Obama and McCain on Social Security privatization.
Vice President Sarah Palin: Will She Remember Her Middle Class Roots?

This year’s presidential election is between one man who’s lost track of how many houses he owns, and another who thinks average Americans have religious faith and are against their jobs being shipped overseas out of “bitterness.” The Democratic vice presidential candidate, having never worked anywhere other than on a city council and in the Senate, has never known what it’s like to have to work for a boss who demands productivity. These are three people who have no clue how average Americans think; or if they do, they’ve learned about it the same way you and I might learn about what life is like in Uzbekistan: either through books and documentaries, or by occasionally visiting what we perceive as a foreign land.
That leaves Sarah Palin.
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Feeling the Middle Class Blues? Tell the Star Tribune

In an era when there are still naysayers who deny the problems the middle class is facing, it’s important to get the truth out—by telling it.
The Minneapolis-St. Paul newspaper Star Tribune is planning a feature on the issue, and is looking for real-life stories of middle class hardships.
If you have one, please let reporter Jackie Crosby know at jcrosby [at] startribune.com.
For more information, check out this article in the Star Tribune.
The Candidates’ Tax Plans: Both Are Perhaps Unworkable, but McCain’s Is a Fraud

Taxes are a perennial hot campaign issue. It’s therefore no wonder that both Barack Obama and John McCain are seeking to use it to their own advantage.
The nonpartisan Tax Policy Center looked at the candidates’ plans, and stated that both may be unworkable since deficits are already astronomical. There’s not much room for a “tax cut” when current rates of taxation are already accompanied by enormous deficits.
McCain’s plan, however, is the more costly. McCain’s ads are deceptive, if not outright fraudulent. In them, he repeatedly invokes time-tested theme of “the-Democrats-are-out-to-raise-your-taxes” and claims that he alone can save working families from a higher tax burden. It’s a lie, pure and simple.
In reality, McCain is taking a page from the familiar George W. Bush playbook: give tiny, token tax relief to the middle class while reserving all the real goodies for the ultra-rich.
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