Author Topic: Harry Reid: Dirtbag, Liar, Snake, Thief, and soon to be Minority Leader in 2012  (Read 4194 times)

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Reid says government jobs must take priority over private-sector jobs
By Pete Kasperowicz - 10/19/11 10:16 AM ET
   

http://thehill.com/blogs/floor-action/house/188443-reid-says-public-sector-jobs-must-take-priority-over-private-sector-jobs






Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) on Wednesday said Congress needs to worry about government jobs more than private-sector jobs, and that this is why Senate Democrats are pushing a bill aimed at shoring up teachers and first-responders.

"It's very clear that private-sector jobs have been doing just fine; it's the public-sector jobs where we've lost huge numbers, and that's what this legislation is all about," Reid said on the Senate floor.


Reid was responding to recent comments from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who accused Democrats of purposefully pursuing higher taxes as part of the teacher/first-responder bill, S. 1723, so that Republicans would oppose it. McConnell said the bill was meant to fail in order to give Democrats an issue to run on in the 2012 election, but Reid said the Republicans are simply trying to defeat President Obama any way they can.

The legislation Reid is defending is part of Obama's jobs package. Vice President Biden was in Pennsylvania, an important election state, on Tuesday to push for the administration's plan on increasing the number of teachers.


Reid reiterated his emphasis on creating government jobs by saying Democrats are looking to "put hundreds of thousands of people back to work teaching children, have more police patrolling our streets, firefighters fighting our fires, doing the rescue work that they do so well … that's our priority." He said Republicans are calling the bill a "failure" because they are "using a different benchmark for success than we are."

Private-sector jobs have increased over the last 19 months, while government jobs have lagged. They've also seen cuts in several states that are struggling to balanced their books.

Reid also said a majority of people polled support the bill, and that the tax hike needed to fund the $35 billion spending program is minimal.

"My friend, the Republican leader … is complaining about a tax of one-half of 1 percent … on people who make more than $1 million a year to pay for a program that would stop teachers from being laid off and rehire some of the teachers that have been laid off," Reid said.

Democrats who support the bill have said it would help save 400,000 teacher jobs and thousands of first-responder jobs that have either been cut or could soon be cut. Reid said Wednesday that these layoffs are "rooted in the last administration," but did not explain further.

Senate Democrats are hoping to pass S. 1723 as early as this week, although votes could be delayed until early November, depending on the progress made on passing a 2012 spending bill.

Reid also dismissed efforts by the Republican House to ease environmental regulations as a way to create jobs.

"The Republican response has been cutting back environmental health safeguards, I guess hoping that a sicker, more polluted country is a better place to create jobs, and it's not," Reid said.

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Sen. Harry Reid is wrong about public v. private sector job loss
Capitol Confidential ^ | 10/20/2011 | Tom Gantert




U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, said Wednesday that Congress needs to be more concerned about public-sector jobs than private-sector jobs.

"It's very clear that private-sector jobs have been doing just fine; it's the public-sector jobs where we've lost huge numbers, and that's what this legislation is all about," Reid said while promoting President Obama’s jobs bill.

But James Hohman, assistant director for fiscal policy at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, disagrees. He said private-sector jobs have been hit harder than public-sector jobs since the recession started in December 2007.

The private sector has lost 6.3 million jobs, a 5.4 percent drop, since December 2007, while the public sector has only lost 1.8 percent, or 392,000 jobs, in that same time, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The public sector had 22.3 million jobs in December 2007 and dropped to 21.2 million in September 2011. The private sector had 115.6 million jobs in December 2007 and it dropped to 109.3 million as of September 2011.

Hohman said the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act of 2009 protected many government jobs.

“The private sector is still way down and they should not be asked to support government jobs that have been protected from a recession,” Hohman said.


andreisdaman

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I'm disappointed......when I saw the words "liar, dirtbag, snake, and thief" in your thread title I thought you were talking about yourself :(

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In Harry Reid's world, 'Private sector jobs are doing just fine'
IBD Editorials ^ | October 20, 2011 | Andrew Malcom Political News& Commentary

Posted on Thursday, October 20, 2011 1:19:18 PM by Kaslin

This just in from Harry Reid's planet:

The Democrat believes, "It's very clear that private sector jobs are doing just fine."

This from the five-term senator from Nevada, where current unemployment is 13.4%. Nevada, the state with the nation's highest foreclosure rate.

Reid, who turns 72 in a few weeks, was speaking on the floor of the U.S. Senate Wednesday.

He was talking about President Obama's $447 billion jobs bill. Oh, no, wait, the Democrat-controlled Senate shot down the Democratic president's jobs bill that was so urgent it had to await the end of POTUS' island vacation for presentation to Congress.

Reid was talking about just part of the president's jobs bill, the most important part, of course, because the $35 billion would re-hire or maintain union teacher jobs and other public workers.

The president has been riding all over North Carolina and Virginia in his black bus this week blaming the other party because that's what presidents do 383 days before American voters rule on their White House lease renewal.


(Excerpt) Read more at investors.com ...


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Dos Equis

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Reid says government jobs must take priority over private-sector jobs
"It's very clear that private-sector jobs have been doing just fine; it's the public-sector jobs where we've lost huge numbers, and that's what this legislation is all about," Reid said on the Senate floor.


What an idiot.  That's someone who is really out of touch with Main Street.  


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Who’s ‘doing just fine?’
By Boston Herald Editorial Staff
Friday, October 21, 2011 - Updated 10 hours ago




Call it the ludicrous claim heard ’round the nation — or at least, the nation’s exceedingly crowded unemployment offices.

Senate majority leader Harry Reid this week essentially confessed that he and fellow Democrats in Congress have little interest in juicing the private sector economy (maybe a good thing, since they’re so terrible at it). They’re interested in producing more government jobs.

In particular, more union dues-paying government jobs, perhaps so they can groom their future political support team.

“It’s very clear that private-sector jobs have been doing just fine,” Reid said on the floor of the Senate on Wednesday, as he pushed for a Democratic plan to spend another $35 billion to support states in hiring teachers and first responders. “It’s the public-sector jobs where we’ve lost huge numbers, and that’s what this legislation is all about.”

“Very clear” . . .  to whom?

Yes, government employment is trending downward with the drying up of stimulus dollars — local government employment has fallen by 535,000 since 2008.

But it’s hardly going gangbusters in the private sector, where employment is still down 2.5 million jobs from 2008.

To Reid, though, this is “doing just fine” and sufficiently compelling to support another $35 billion so states can hire more teachers, cops and firefighters. Not to be confused with the billions spent in 2009 to help states hire  teachers, cops and firefighters.

Perhaps he would argue that government job losses are felt more acutely by the middle class. But if he wanted to make the preposterous claim that everything’s just peachy in the private sector perhaps he shouldn’t have picked the same day that Washington, D.C. officially overtook Silicon Valley as the nation’s wealthiest metropolitan area.

If you think that’s just because of lawyers and lobbyists, think again. The area is packed with federal workers, whose average salary and benefits now exceed $126,000 a year. Now that’s a crowd that’s “doing just fine.”


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Reid Statement on Nevada's Unemployment Rate
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid ^ | October 21, 2011 | Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
Posted on October 21, 2011 6:09:20 PM EDT by mdittmar

Washington, D.C. – Nevada Senator Harry Reid made the following statement on Nevada's unemployment rate in September:

“The unemployment rate remains far too high in Nevada.  We must continue our efforts to create good-paying jobs that can't be shipped overseas, such as the 300 jobs APAC yesterday announced it will bring to our state.

“Last night, Republicans continued their obstruction by blocking a jobs bill that would support thousands of teachers and first responders in Nevada. These tactics for political gain are not going to help Nevada's economy recover, and I call on my Republican colleagues to put partisan politics aside to support President Obama's jobs agenda that will put Nevadans back to work.”

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clownbaby

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reid is a real piece of shit who only got re-elected because he had the backings of Harrah's Gaming Enterprises.  He is known as Harrah Reid.

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whork25

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Only in politics can a retard like him hold office