Obama: McCain Will Leave Cities Poor
By Caren Bohan
MIAMI (Reuters) – White House hopeful Barack Obama on Saturday accused his rival John McCain of favoring budget policies that would leave cities unable to pay for critical projects like flood-prevention systems and highways.
The Republican candidate’s campaign shot back that Obama’s attack was “beyond the pale†and said the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee had opposed a move to put crucial flood-protection projects on a fast track over other spending.
“When it comes to rebuilding America’s essential but crumbling infrastructure, we need to do more, not less,†Obama, an Illinois senator, told the U.S. Conference of Mayors.
“Cities across the Midwest are under water right now or courting disaster not just because of the weather, but because we’ve failed to protect them.â€
The U.S. Midwest has seen its worst flooding in 15 years, with Iowa at the disaster’s epicenter. A rush of water from the Mississippi River overcame more than two dozen levees this week, leaving towns and vast stretches of prime farmland submerged or at risk of flooding from Iowa to Missouri.
The storms and flooding, which have caused 24 deaths, recalled Hurricane Katrina of 2005 and the Minnesota bridge collapse of 2007 and have prompted calls for more infrastructure spending.
‘Pork’
Obama said McCain’s budget policies would not leave enough room to help cities and states fund infrastructure needs. Obama and McCain are running as their party’s standard-bearers in the November election.
“Both Senator McCain and I have traveled to the areas that have been devastated by floods. I know that Senator McCain felt as strongly as I did, feeling enormous sympathy for the victims of the recent flooding,†Obama said.
“I’m sure they appreciated the sentiment, but they probably would have appreciated it even more if Senator McCain hadn’t opposed legislation to fund for levees and flood control programs, which he seems to consider pork,†Obama said.
“At a time when you’re facing budget deficits and looking to Washington for the support you need, he isn’t proposing a strategy for America’s cities,†he told the mayors.
McCain, who has long been an outspoken critic of what he considers wasteful government spending, has pledged to take aim at special-project spending known as “pork†that lawmakers often add to budget bills.
“It is beyond the pale that Barack Obama would attack John McCain for actually trying to fix the problem and change the way Washington works,†said McCain spokesman Tucker Bounds.
The Arizona senator’s campaign hammered Obama for opposing a bipartisan legislative amendment to establish a process to ensure that levees and other water projects with the most life-saving potential got the highest priority in funding.
McCain’s camp noted that the effort had the support of Wisconsin Sen. Russ Feingold and Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill, both Democrats.
“The process is broken,†said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, McCain’s top economic adviser. “McCain was reaching across the aisle to Feingold and McCaskill to fix the problem.â€
(Editing by Xavier Briand)
2008
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