Isn't It Time?
We here in South Carolina have been holding down the bottom of rankings for education, wages and employment, and health care for a long time now. We have heard a lot of catchy phrases about "job creators" and we have people in political office that are doing well for themselves, while the people of the state continue to struggle to keep our heads above water.
We need to elect people to represent us who really speak for us. We need people who are listening to us, and not their wealthy corporate backers. We need people who are not being bought by out-of-state big money.
Bobbie Rose is running to represent us in the US House of Representatives for District 1. Her opponent, Tim Scott, has spent two years fighting to keep tax dollars from going to education and jobs. He is going to continue to insist that we let the people with the big pockets who fund his campaign continue to dictate the way we live here in South Carolina. He truly, truly believes that we all should be on our own, without the help of the government, and votes consistently against the government programs that have ensured that we all have equal opportunity.
Bobbie will fight for dollars for education, for jobs for teachers, police and firefighters, for good roads and bridges and public transportation. She will fight to guarantee that seniors will not have to fight for health care, and that children will go to school in safe, well-equipped buildings. Call her liberal, if what you mean is someone who is not stingy with opportunity for all.
Carol Tempel is the candidate to beat incumbent Peter McCoy as representative in South Carolina House #115. McCoy has gotten comfortable in the last two years supporting programs for wealthy and corporate interests. He supports tax deductions for parents sending their children to private schools, broadcasting it as a $4,000 deduction, but he doesn't advertise that this deduction would only give back $280 -- not much help when tuitions at the best private schools run over $16,000.
Carol's background and expertise is in education. She knows what's needed to bring the best education to the classroom. She knows what children need to thrive. And she is going to go to the South Carolina House of Representatives to fight for that quality education.
Let's put these women in the House where they belong.
We need to elect people to represent us who really speak for us. We need people who are listening to us, and not their wealthy corporate backers. We need people who are not being bought by out-of-state big money.
Bobbie Rose is running to represent us in the US House of Representatives for District 1. Her opponent, Tim Scott, has spent two years fighting to keep tax dollars from going to education and jobs. He is going to continue to insist that we let the people with the big pockets who fund his campaign continue to dictate the way we live here in South Carolina. He truly, truly believes that we all should be on our own, without the help of the government, and votes consistently against the government programs that have ensured that we all have equal opportunity.
Bobbie will fight for dollars for education, for jobs for teachers, police and firefighters, for good roads and bridges and public transportation. She will fight to guarantee that seniors will not have to fight for health care, and that children will go to school in safe, well-equipped buildings. Call her liberal, if what you mean is someone who is not stingy with opportunity for all.
Carol Tempel is the candidate to beat incumbent Peter McCoy as representative in South Carolina House #115. McCoy has gotten comfortable in the last two years supporting programs for wealthy and corporate interests. He supports tax deductions for parents sending their children to private schools, broadcasting it as a $4,000 deduction, but he doesn't advertise that this deduction would only give back $280 -- not much help when tuitions at the best private schools run over $16,000.
Carol's background and expertise is in education. She knows what's needed to bring the best education to the classroom. She knows what children need to thrive. And she is going to go to the South Carolina House of Representatives to fight for that quality education.
Let's put these women in the House where they belong.