While the President may have
convinced himself the country is headed in the right direction, he's not
fooling America's working families. Two-thirds of voters say our country
is headed in the wrong direction on Iraq, good jobs, health care and
retirement security, among other issues.
The reality in America is that
working people are struggling to get by in an economy designed to benefit
Wall Street, not Main Street. Wages remain stagnant, personal debt is
skyrocketing, good jobs continue to be shipped overseas, health care costs
are out of control and the hope of a secure retirement is fading.
Corporate CEOs, on the other hand, are receiving record pay -- the average
CEO now makes 411 times more than the average worker.
Under this President, more
than 37 million Americans live in poverty. Since he took office, 3 million
good manufacturing jobs have disappeared. And it's a national disgrace
that 47 million Americans struggle to get their basic medical needs met
because they have no health insurance.
The President obstinately
refuses to put forth proposals that would address the health care crisis
in a meaningful way. Last year the President touted Health Savings
Accounts as the panacea for the nation's health care woes. Tonight Bush is
expected to tout tax deductions as a way to drastically reduce the number
of uninsured. Like previous proposals from this President, his tax
deduction plan would make things worse, not better -- and actually
increase the number of uninsured and underinsured.
We need universal health
coverage to ensure that every American has his or her basic medical needs
met.
And it's imperative the
President, and his military leaders, clearly articulate the path for rapid
withdrawal of American troops from Iraq. What is needed in Iraq is
an expansion of political and diplomatic efforts -- not military
escalation.
If the President refuses to
act on the issues most important to America's working families, Congress
must.
The House of Representatives
is off to a good start, voting to give low-wage workers absurdly-overdue
relief by raising the minimum wage, without more tax breaks for business.
We call on Senators -- Republicans and Democrats alike -- to reject
corporate poison pills and vote for a fair, long overdue raise in the
minimum wage to $7.25. Congress must also reform trade policy to stem the
flow of good jobs out of our country and pass the Employee Free Choice
Act, a crucial bill to strengthen workers' freedom to make their own
choice to form or join unions to improve their lives.
Last November working people
sent the Bush Administration a powerful message: It's time for our nation
to change direction. Now the President should listen to American voters
and work with lawmakers from both parties to put our nation back on track
instead of stubbornly continuing to drag us in the wrong direction.