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Rapid Response | Senate
  • Sam Drzymala
  • Oct 22, 2012 at 2:39 pm

Scott Brown’s Terrible, Horrible, No-Good, Very Bad Day

After accusing the families of cancer victims in Elizabeth Warren’s campaign ad of being paid actors, Scott Brown was forced to apologize. The coverage of this exchange in Massachusetts press was brutal.

Rapid Response | Senate
  • Derek Pearce
  • Jun 28, 2012 at 1:55 pm

MEMO: Remember Scott Brown 41?

Now that the Supreme Court’s majority has chosen legal precedent over Republican talking points, voters of Massachusetts should be reminded that despite his claims of bipartisanship, Brown took office on a promise to be the 41st vote against health care reform. Brown’s efforts – to drive young adults off their parent’s health insurance coverage, to allow insurance companies to deny coverage for a pre-existing condition or to cancel your coverage after you get sick – have been frustrated. And the people of Massachusetts have learned that their Senator is more concerned about standing with his party’s leaders than taking real action to address the problems that plague our nation.

Background:

 

Brown Spoke Out against Health Care Bill. At a press conference at the headquarters of the Massachusetts Republican Party in Boston, Scott Brown spoke out against the health care reform bill. He said, “I could be the 41st senator that could stop the Obama proposal that’s being pushed right now through Congress. I could stop it and they could bring it back to the drawing board.” According to the Boston Globe, “Brown said this afternoon that everyone should have some form of health care coverage, but much of that should be done on a state-by-state basis. And while he supports the landmark health care proposal that Massachusetts approved in 2006, he said, he doesn’t see any benefit to the Bay State that the federal legislation would provide. ‘My primary responsibility is to ensure that the people of Massachusetts get the best value for their dollar,’ Brown said. ‘I’m not concerned about subsidizing South Dakota or North Dakota or Idaho or other states.’” The article also noted that Brown has filed a bill to ease requirements for insurance companies which, he said, would bring down costs. He believes that they should not be required to cover some medical procedures, like in vitro fertilization. [Boston Globe, 12/28/09]

Rapid Response | Senate
  • Audrey Kubetin
  • May 2, 2012 at 2:24 pm

This Is What Hypocrisy Looks Like

Research | Senate
  • Sam Drzymala
  • Apr 20, 2012 at 9:24 am

Scott Brown: #1 Fan Of The Foxborough Red Sox

Recently Scott Brown’s Senate re-election campaign released a radio ad saying that replacing Fenway Park would have been “a mistake.” But in 2001, Massachusetts State Representative Scott Brown supported moving the Red Sox to Foxborough. Good thing Brown struck out!

Rapid Response | Senate
  • Sam Drzymala
  • Apr 10, 2012 at 12:44 pm

Scott Brown Reveals His True Priorities

Tax Day is almost here, which means another opportunity for Scott Brown to trot out stale Republican talking points and reveal where his true priorities are. In his recent radio report, Brown tries to tell us, “Americans pay more today in taxes than they spend on groceries, clothing, and shelter combined.”

The statement, taken from an RNC email sent around this time last year, may be technically true in the aggregate, but the fact that Brown cites the statistic indicates a deeply distorted set of principles guiding his legislative priorities. The numbers are distorted by the super wealthy, who though they might not pay their fair share in taxes, still can spend only so much on groceries or their designer clothes.

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