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9/9/10

Onorato Accepts Endorsement From Conservation Voters of Pennsylvania
Onorato joins environmental leaders to describe how Corbett’s Marcellus shale plan will cost taxpayers billions

PHILADELPHIA: Democratic gubernatorial nominee Dan Onorato today accepted the endorsement of Conservation Voters of Pennsylvania, the statewide political arm of the environmental movement. Onorato and Conservation Voters described how Harrisburg Republican Tom Corbett is protecting big oil and gas corporations at the expense of the water Pennsylvanians drink and the safety of the state’s families.

            “The Marcellus shale presents a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for Pennsylvania – but it must be done right,” said Onorato. “I am proud to stand with the Conservation Voters of Pennsylvania to emphasize the importance of this issue. My plan will create jobs for Pennsylvanians, enable the industry to grow and protect the environment.

“Tom Corbett wants taxpayers to foot the bill for protecting the environment, while I want the drillers to pay for it. He has made clear that his single goal is to prevent the oil and gas companies that are making hundreds of millions of dollars a year drilling in Pennsylvania from paying their fair share. That’s the difference between us.”

            For 40 years, the League of Conservation Voters (LCV) has filled a unique niche in the environmental community – working to pass laws that will protect the environment and to elect environmental candidates to support such policies. In September 2009, LCV began to help build a new state-based partner organization, Conservation Voters of Pennsylvania (CVPA). CVPA brings the same accountability to PA, strengthening the political power of the environmental community and creating a cleaner, safer Keystone State.

“Our next Governor will be responsible for the health, safety and prosperity of millions of Pennsylvanians during a time of economic and environmental upheaval,” said CVPA Executive Director Josh McNeil.  “We believe that Dan Onorato will make the right choices, harnessing the economic potential of clean energy while defending our air and water from corporate polluters.”

            Onorato has issued a detailed policy paper calling for the successful and safe development of Marcellus shale resources in order to create jobs for Pennsylvanians, foster economic development and protect the environment. His plan includes environmental safeguards and a workforce development strategy to ensure that Pennsylvanians are ready for Marcellus shale-related employment.

Onorato backs a competitive severance tax on Marcellus shale drilling – just like all other major gas-producing states – and he would use the proceeds to fund enforcement by the Department of Environmental Protection, to help local communities address the impact of drilling on their roads and other services, and to pay for the renewal of Growing Greener – the state’s major environmental conservation and preservation programs.


A May report by Common Cause Pennsylvania revealed that Corbett is the #1 Pennsylvania recipient of contributions from the gas industry over the last decade. The oil and gas industry also helped save Corbett’s political career during his initial tight race for Attorney General in 2004. At the time, Corbett refused to reveal the source of nearly a half-million dollars funneled through the Republican State Leadership Committee, but campaign finance filings later made clear that the bulk of it was from the CEO of an Oklahoma oil-and-gas company.

            Corbett opposes a severance tax, so that the oil and gas industry can evade its responsibility to taxpayers and force residents and other businesses to bear the costs of drilling. Even Corbett’s allies in the Senate Republican caucus have agreed to enact a severance tax, putting Corbett in the extreme wing of his party.

            “Tom Corbett is taking an extreme stance against Pennsylvania taxpayers,” Onorato said. “He opposes policies that even the State Republicans and all of the major gas-producing states already support, just to help his major campaign contributors.”

Corbett has also called for “voluntary drilling standards” [Pittsburgh Post Gazette, 6/23/2010] based on “consensus” with the industry [Corbett public statement, 6/23/2010] – which would likely mean environmental regulations are even weaker than they are today.

And Corbett is against limits on new drilling in State Forests. [Associated Press, 5/12/2010]

“I will ensure that the Marcellus shale leads to new jobs for Pennsylvanians at the same time as we protect our environment, while Tom Corbett only cares about one side: the industry’s side,” said Onorato. “Tom Corbett is saying ‘no’ to oversight, ‘no’ to help for local communities and ‘no’ to environmental protection.”

            Corbett has consistently chosen sides against average Pennsylvanians. His repeated comments that “the jobs are there” but unemployed Pennsylvanians would rather just “sit there” than go back to work has received broad criticism.

            “Dan Onorato has a record of helping businesses grow while supporting good-paying private-sector jobs for workers,” said Onorato Communications Director Brian Herman. “Dan has proposed making business taxes more competitive and making the state more business-friendly, which he knows will make the state attractive for companies and for workers. Tom Corbett doesn’t have any experience turning around the economy – and it shows.”

9/9/10

The Corbett Plan: Billions in Costs for Pennsylvania Taxpayers
GOP nominee’s major donors will reap the rewards while taxpayers are left to clean up the mess


EASTON: Democratic gubernatorial nominee Dan Onorato said today that Harrisburg Republican Tom Corbett is protecting big oil and gas corporations at the expense of the water Pennsylvanians drink and the safety of the state’s families.

            “The Marcellus shale presents a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for Pennsylvania – but it must be done right,” said Onorato. “My plan will create jobs for Pennsylvanians, enable the industry to grow and protect the environment.

“Tom Corbett wants taxpayers to foot the bill for protecting the environment, while I want the drillers to pay for it. He has made clear that his single goal is to prevent the oil and gas companies that are making hundreds of millions of dollars a year drilling in Pennsylvania from paying their fair share. That’s the difference between us.”

            Onorato has issued a detailed policy paper calling for the successful and safe development of Marcellus shale resources in order to create jobs for Pennsylvanians, foster economic development and protect the environment. His plan includes environmental safeguards and a workforce development strategy to ensure that Pennsylvanians are ready for Marcellus shale-related employment.

Onorato backs a competitive severance tax on Marcellus shale drilling – just like all other major gas-producing states – and he would use the proceeds to fund enforcement by the Department of Environmental Protection, to help local communities address the impact of drilling on their roads and other services, and to pay for the renewal of Growing Greener – the state’s major environmental conservation and preservation programs.

A May report by Common Cause Pennsylvania revealed that Corbett is the #1 Pennsylvania recipient of contributions from the gas industry over the last decade. The oil and gas industry also helped save Corbett’s political career during his initial tight race for Attorney General in 2004. At the time, Corbett refused to reveal the source of nearly a half-million dollars funneled through the Republican State Leadership Committee, but campaign finance filings later made clear that the bulk of it was from the CEO of an Oklahoma oil-and-gas company.

            Corbett opposes a severance tax, so that the oil and gas industry can evade its responsibility to taxpayers and force residents and other businesses to bear the costs of drilling. Even Corbett’s allies in the Senate Republican caucus have agreed to enact a severance tax, putting Corbett in the extreme wing of his party.

            “Tom Corbett is taking an extreme stance against Pennsylvania taxpayers,” Onorato said. “He opposes policies that even the State Republicans and all of the major gas-producing states already support, just to help his major campaign contributors.”

Corbett has also called for “voluntary drilling standards” [Pittsburgh Post Gazette, 6/23/2010] based on “consensus” with the industry [Corbett public statement, 6/23/2010] – which would likely mean environmental regulations are even weaker than they are today.

And Corbett is against limits on new drilling in State Forests. [Associated Press, 5/12/2010]

“I will ensure that the Marcellus shale leads to new jobs for Pennsylvanians at the same time as we protect our environment, while Tom Corbett only cares about one side: the industry’s side,” said Onorato. “Tom Corbett is saying ‘no’ to oversight, ‘no’ to help for local communities and ‘no’ to environmental protection.”

            Corbett has consistently chosen sides against average Pennsylvanians. His repeated comments that “the jobs are there” but unemployed Pennsylvanians would rather just “sit there” than go back to work has received broad criticism.

            “Dan Onorato has a record of helping businesses grow while supporting good-paying private-sector jobs for workers,” said Onorato Communications Director Brian Herman. “Dan has proposed making business taxes more competitive and making the state more business-friendly, which he knows will make the state attractive for companies and for workers. Tom Corbett doesn’t have any experience turning around the economy – and it shows.”

9/8/10
Corbett Investigating Opponent of Ally -- But Won't Investigate Ally?
Corbett Continues Pattern as He Investigates Independent Candidate Who Demanded Action on Alleged GOP Petition Fraud

PITTSBURGH: Harrisburg Republican Tom Corbett added to the long list of political actions made by his Attorney General’s office today when his office announced it had opened an investigation into Jim Schneller, independent candidate for Congress in the 7th District.

Yesterday, Schneller filed a lawsuit against Corbett and acting Secretary of State Basil Merenda that sought to compel Corbett’s office to complete an investigation into the alleged fraud contained in the nominating petitions of Schneller’s Republican opponent, Pat Meehan.  Instead of intensifying his pursuit of the charge against Meehan, Corbett is instead investigating Schneller for alleged petition irregularities of his own.

             On March 29, the Attorney General’s official spokesman said that Corbett would take over a Delaware County case alleging that GOP Congressional candidate Pat Meehan’s nomination petitions contained fraudulent signatures. Meehan has endorsed Corbett for Governor and made a $2,000 contribution to Corbett’s campaign, and the same Republican officials who circulated petitions in Delaware County for Meehan also did so for Corbett.  Despite this apparent conflict of interest, Corbett’s Attorney General’s office accepted the case – and has remained silent ever since.

The Attorney General’s office under Tom Corbett has exhibited a pattern of looking the other way when potential election abuses by his Republican allies are discovered, while unleashing the power of his office on his critics.

While Corbett claims to be concerned with Schneller’s petitions, he has refused to investigate similar charges of forgery and fraud within the Philadelphia Republican party, where party chairman Vito Canuso Jr. and general counsel Michael P. Meehan filed dozens of legal challenges to GOP ward leaders they did not personally select – challenges fraught with multiple potential legal violations that have prompted calls for a criminal investigation.

According to the Philadelphia Daily News, “the City Committee's challenges were filled with apparent forgeries. Attorney Matthew Wolfe, the Republican leader in University City's 27th Ward, tried to contact all the challengers and documented 30 situations in which individuals said they hadn't signed the legal documents that carried their names. One of the "challengers" was a Wynnefield woman who had died a year earlier.” [Philadelphia Daily News, 8/11/2010]

Michael Meehan and Canuso actually admitted that they submitted fraudulent challenges when they blamed the bogus signatures on “overzealous ward leaders whom they declined to identify.”

Nevertheless, despite entreaties from dissident Philadelphia Republicans, Corbett has refused to take any action at all in the case, which could prove embarrassing to his gubernatorial campaign.  According to the Daily News, “(Local Republicans) expect the state party to try to minimize the Philadelphia friction through November, fearing that it could hurt their candidate for governor…Corbett, state attorney general, is said to be petrified about being drawn into Philadelphia warfare.”

The founder of one independent Republican organization said he pleaded with Corbett to investigate the fraudulent petition challenges by city Republican leaders. “I said, 'Mr. Corbett, I have some grave concerns about these guys. They're criminals.' He looked me right in the eye and said, 'I'm looking forward, not backward.'” [Philadelphia Daily News, 8/11/2010]

             Corbett’s long history of questionable election law judgment dates back to his first days in office.  Weeks before the November 2004 election, Corbett collected $480,000 from the Republican State Leadership Committee for his tight race for Attorney General. Corbett refused to reveal the source of the money – his attorney at one point argued that “the fungibility of money” made it impossible. The month after Corbett won office as Attorney General, campaign finance filings were released that revealed that the bulk of the money was from Aubrey K. McClendon, the chief executive of an Oklahoma based oil and gas company [Associated Press, 10/30/2004 and 12/4/2004].  The Pennsylvania Attorney General’s office exonerated Corbett days after he was elected. [Associated Press State & Local Wire, “AG’s office clears $480K donation to candidate,” November 6, 2004]

            In addition, Corbett’s use of his office to intimidate critics is well-documented.  In May, Corbett subpoenaed Twitter to expose the identities of two anonymous users who had been posting criticism of the Attorney General.   And, the Philadelphia Daily News reported that earlier this year, after state Representative John Galloway was critical of Corbett’s politicization of his office, Corbett confronted the Representative at a budget hearing and after exchanging “sharp words”, sent agents to the Representative’s office demanding Galloway “produce evidence of corruption that [the Bonusgate] investigation had missed.” [4/9/10]

            “Tom Corbett continues to brazenly misuse his office for political purposes.  Today’s revelations are just the latest example in a pattern of behavior that includes investigating political opponents and intimidating his critics, while repeatedly looking the other way when an investigation might embarrass him or complicate his own political aspirations,” said Brian Herman, Onorato Communications Director.

“All of these actions – or inaction – fundamentally call into question Tom Corbett’s judgment.  Pennsylvania voters deserve better from the state’s highest law enforcement official – and certainly from anyone who aspires to be governor.” Herman said.

 
9/7/2010
Tom Corbett’s Not-Very-Good Summer
The more voters get to know the Harrisburg Republican, the less he seems up to the job of Pennsylvania Governor

PITTSBURGH: Pennsylvania voters got a taste this summer of their two gubernatorial nominees, with Dan Onorato showing that he knows how to turn around the economy and has experience balancing the budget and reforming government, while Harrisburg Republican Tom Corbett defined himself as an insider who doesn’t have the experience or ability to lead Pennsylvania.

“Pennsylvania is facing a multi-billion dollar deficit and a Harrisburg culture dedicated to the special interests instead of the taxpayers,” said Onorato Communications Director Brian Herman. “Dan Onorato spent the summer connecting with voters and talking about how to create jobs and make government live within its means, while Tom Corbett proved that he is not up to the challenges facing Pennsylvania.”


1.) Tom Corbett still doesn’t understand the economy.

            In July, Corbett told WITF public radio that “the jobs are there” but Pennsylvanians would rather just “sit there” and collect unemployment than go back to work.

Corbett clearly meant what he said – after all, he said essentially the same thing in March – but quickly became flustered by the facts trying to explain himself. Corbett first indicated that he got his information from a candy company and then, when the candy company contradicted him, told reporters that his economic information came from newspaper job listings.



2.) Tom Corbett cannot connect with the average Pennsylvania voter, and he has trouble finding solutions to their problems.

In addition to Corbett’s comments on the unemployed, Capitolwire recounted a story typical of his interaction with voters, during which Corbett failed to appreciate the real-world impact of the state’s troubled economy.

After an employee at a local factory that Corbett was touring attempted to relay his personal experience of being affected by the economy, “Corbett acted like the guy had a communicable disease… It was a chance for Corbett to show he got how workers are faring in this economy, but instead of connecting to the worker, he swiftly followed his employer to another part of the tour.” [Capitolwire, 8/27/2010].



3.) Tom Corbett still hasn’t figured out how to separate his official duties from his political activities.

            Throughout the summer, Corbett took heat for mixing politics with his taxpayer-funded office – leading to calls for his resignation as Attorney General. In July, Corbett joined other Attorneys General in opposing the federal government’s attempt to block portions of Arizona’s politically potent illegal immigration law. As the Philadelphia Inquirer’s editorial board noted: “It’s nearly impossible lately for the public to separate Corbett’s law enforcement duties from his role as the GOP nominee for governor.” [7/21/2010]

Later in the month, PA2010.com reported that Corbett campaign materials were found at the Attorney General’s official booth at a county fair. Neither the Corbett campaign nor his taxpayer-funded office could offer a serious explanation.



4.) Tom Corbett still doesn’t understand the state budget or, apparently, his own policies.


            Last winter, Corbett told reporters that he could not rule out raising taxes. Then, in February, he signed a no-tax pledge. The next month, Corbett told a KDKA-TV political analyst that his pledge prohibited fee increases. But by July, Corbett was telling reporters that fee increases were OK. Last month, Corbett apologized if his conflicting remarks caused any “misunderstanding.”

            Before the summer, Corbett swore off stimulus funding as well as new debt. Around Memorial Day, he backed an application for $400 million in education stimulus funding. And in July, he said that: “There are going to be places where we need to use debt to build things.” [Capitolwire, 7/9/2010]

In June, Corbett – who has asked for an increase in his budget every year that he has served as Attorney General – called for broad spending cuts, saying that: “‘Everyone is going to have to feel that cut,’ which he said would be ‘across the board,’ from vehicle fleets to reducing Medicaid abuse.” [Harrisburg Patriot-News, 6/11/2010]

But in August, when Corbett was asked to take a 1.9% cut in his own discretionary spending, along with other state agencies, to help balance the current year’s budget, he refused to agree. “I am not making any pledge” to take that cut. [PoliticsPA, 8/27/2010] According to Sunday’s Harrisburg Patriot-News, the Attorney General’s Office is “continuing to review the budget and look for ways to economize.”


It’s no wonder that even Corbett’s Republican allies doubt his ability to keep his budget promises. In June, Senate Republican Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi said: “I don’t see how he can do it, frankly.” [Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 6/28/2010] And last month, Senate Republican Transportation Committee Chairman John Rafferty agreed.

5.) Dan Onorato has the experience, record and plan necessary to turn around Pennsylvania’s economy.

Democratic gubernatorial nominee Dan Onorato has balanced six consecutive budgets without ever raising property taxes. Running Pennsylvania’s second-largest county, he reformed government, cut waste and patronage, and insisted on efficiency.

Under Onorato’s leadership, Allegheny County has withstood the national recession far better than much of the country, and its unemployment rate is significantly lower than both the nation’s and the state’s.

“We need real leadership and cannot take a risk on a Harrisburg insider like Tom Corbett, who doesn’t have experience and doesn’t seem to understand what his policies are or why what he says about them matters,” said Herman.
Dan Onorato Issues Labor Day Statement


PITTSBURGH: Today Democratic gubernatorial nominee Dan Onorato issued the following statement in commemoration of Labor Day:

            “Throughout our history, Pennsylvania’s workforce has helped lead our nation to economic prosperity – from the industrial age to today’s innovation economy.  Our workforce will continue to be the key to our economic growth, and on Labor Day we recognize the hard-working men and women of Pennsylvania.

As we celebrate Labor Day with our friends and family this weekend, we also think of the hard-working Pennsylvanians who are struggling to make ends meet during these tough economic times.  I know that by working together, we can get our state back on track and create a stronger future for all Pennsylvanians.”
9/1/10
Has a Magic Extraction Process Been Discovered by Corbett Campaign?

PITTSBURGH: As part of their defense of Tom Corbett’s refusal to back a commonsense levy on the extraction of natural gas, his campaign argued that he opposed it because, the Associated Press reported, “a new tax might drive the industry out of Pennsylvania.”

That would be pretty impressive given that the natural gas deposits are located in Pennsylvania.

Where would the drillers who have literally invested hundreds of millions, if not billions, in Pennsylvania Marcellus shale go and still be able to get at the underground natural gas?   

And wouldn’t they have problems drilling from another state – since every other major gas-producing state has an allegedly industry-chasing extraction tax in place already?

The Corbett campaign has yet to reveal their secret extraction process – perhaps they’re keeping the secret stored with the list of cuts Corbett will make to the Attorney General’s office budget this year – something requested by the Governor and that other independent agencies have agreed to, yet Corbett refuses to commit to?

But perhaps the Corbett campaign does not have a magic extraction process at all.

Maybe Corbett’s opposition is linked to the simple fact that Corbett is the state’s number one leader in accepting cash from the natural gas industry.


While it’s not quite as impressive as a magic extraction process, making taxes disappear for your benefactors is certainly a kind of magic.

9/1/10

The Corbett Plan: Billions in Costs for Pennsylvania Taxpayers
GOP nominee’s major donors will reap the rewards while taxpayers are left to clean up the mess

HARRISBURG: Democratic gubernatorial nominee Dan Onorato said today that Harrisburg Republican Tom Corbett is protecting big oil and gas corporations at the expense of the water Pennsylvanians drink and the safety of the state’s families.

            Click here to see the web video.

            “The Marcellus shale presents a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for Pennsylvania – but it must be done right,” said Onorato. “My plan will create jobs for Pennsylvanians, enable the industry to grow and protect the environment.

“Tom Corbett wants taxpayers to foot the bill for protecting the environment, while I want the drillers to pay for it. He has made clear that his single goal is to prevent the oil and gas companies that are making hundreds of millions of dollars a year drilling in Pennsylvania from paying their fair share. That’s the difference between us.”

            Onorato has issued a detailed policy paper calling for the successful and safe development of Marcellus shale resources in order to create jobs for Pennsylvanians, foster economic development and protect the environment. His plan includes environmental safeguards and a workforce development strategy to ensure that Pennsylvanians are ready for Marcellus shale-related employment.

Onorato backs a competitive severance tax on Marcellus shale drilling – just like all other major gas-producing states – and he would use the proceeds to fund enforcement by the Department of Environmental Protection, to help local communities address the impact of drilling on their roads and other services, and to pay for the renewal of Growing Greener – the state’s major environmental conservation and preservation programs.

A May report by Common Cause Pennsylvania revealed that Corbett is the #1 Pennsylvania recipient of contributions from the gas industry over the last decade. The oil and gas industry also helped save Corbett’s political career during his initial tight race for Attorney General in 2004. At the time, Corbett refused to reveal the source of nearly a half-million dollars funneled through the Republican State Leadership Committee, but campaign finance filings later made clear that the bulk of it was from the CEO of an Oklahoma oil-and-gas company.

            Corbett opposes a severance tax, so that the oil and gas industry can evade its responsibility to taxpayers and force residents and other businesses to bear the costs of drilling. Even Corbett’s allies in the Senate Republican caucus have agreed to enact a severance tax, putting Corbett in the extreme wing of his party.


            “Tom Corbett is taking an extreme stance against Pennsylvania taxpayers,” Onorato said. “He opposes policies that even the State Republicans and all of the major gas-producing states already support, just to help his major campaign contributors.”

Corbett has also called for “voluntary drilling standards” [Pittsburgh Post Gazette, 6/23/2010] based on “consensus” with the industry [Corbett public statement, 6/23/2010] – which would likely mean environmental regulations are even weaker than they are today.

And Corbett is against limits on new drilling in State Forests. [Associated Press, 5/12/2010]

 
“I will ensure that the Marcellus shale leads to new jobs for Pennsylvanians at the same time as we protect our environment, while Tom Corbett only cares about one side: the industry’s side,” said Onorato. “Tom Corbett is saying ‘no’ to oversight, ‘no’ to help for local communities and ‘no’ to environmental protection.”

            Corbett has consistently chosen sides against average Pennsylvanians. His repeated comments that “the jobs are there” but unemployed Pennsylvanians would rather just “sit there” than go back to work has received broad criticism.

            “Dan Onorato has a record of helping businesses grow while supporting good-paying private-sector jobs for workers,” said Onorato Communications Director Brian Herman. “Dan has proposed making business taxes more competitive and making the state more business-friendly, which he knows will make the state attractive for companies and for workers. Tom Corbett doesn’t have any experience turning around the economy – and it shows.”

 9/1/10

Corbett TV Ad Slammed For Misleading Voters on His Capability, Record
How can the Harrisburg Republican ‘shore up his credibility’ when he’s not up to the challenges facing PA?

PITTSBURGH: Harrisburg Republican Tom Corbett’s first television ad of the General Election is reinforcing what Pennsylvania voters are quickly learning: that the GOP nominee doesn’t know what he’s talking about.

            Here’s what independent observers are saying:

    * “Attorney General Tom Corbett, the Republican nominee, seems to contradict someone surprising – himself, twice – in his first commercial…. Corbett touts in his ad the pledge he signed to not raise state taxes….  But Corbett last week said that that pledge does not apply to state fees, contradicting what he told a Pittsburgh radio station in March, when he said that the pledge counted for all taxes and fees.” – Philadelphia Daily News [9/1/2010]

    * “[Corbett’s assertion about Onorato is] not true….  Corbett’s on-the-defensive TV spot about taxes comes just a week after Onorato blasted him for voting to raises Shaler Township property taxes by 20% back in 1988.” – WTAE-Pittsburgh [8/31/2010]

    * It’s “an effort by front-runner Corbett to shore up his credibility after Onorato pointed out that Corbett had made contradictory statements about the scope of his no-new-taxes pledge.” – The Associated Press [8/31/2010]

    * “The ad ignores two Senate Republicans who have also doubted if [Corbett’s budget] pledge can be kept: Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi, R-Delaware, and Senate Transportation Committee Chairman John Rafferty, R-Montgomery.” – Capitolwire [8/31/2010]

    * “What the ad doesn’t mention is that Corbett’s no-tax pledge has also been derided by Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi (R-Delaware)….” [PoliticsPA, 8/31/2010]

“Pennsylvania is facing a budget crisis, a deep recession and a Harrisburg culture that looks out for the special interests at the expense of the taxpayers,” said Onorato Communications Director Brian Herman. “We need real leadership and cannot take a risk on a Harrisburg insider like Tom Corbett, who doesn’t have experience and doesn’t seem to understand what his policies are or why what he says about them matters.”

The latest criticism is nothing new for Corbett, whose loose grasp of the issues has allowed him to make a stunning array of contradictory policy statements throughout the campaign.

            Corbett – who cast one budget vote in his life and used it to hike property taxes by 20 percent – has tried hard to attack Democratic gubernatorial nominee Dan Onorato on taxes, even though Onorato has balanced six budgets in a row without ever raising property taxes.

But asked by reporters to name a single tax that Onorato favors besides a severance tax on gas drillers like other states have (and which Corbett opposes on behalf of his major campaign donors, although even the Senate Republicans have agreed to enact one this fall), Corbett “struggled….. ‘I have to go look at my notes,’ he said. ‘I don’t have my notes here in front of me.’” [PoliticsPA, 8/27/2010]

And it has now been 2 weeks since Corbett was asked to take a 1.9% cut in his own discretionary spending, along with other state agencies, to help balance the current year’s budget. But “I am not making any pledge” to take that cut, said the candidate who had no trouble taking a no-tax pledge when it was politically convenient to do so. [PoliticsPA, 8/27/2010]

Corbett told reporters in January that raising taxes should be “a last resort” but that “you can’t rule anything in or out.” [Capitolwire, 1/9/2010] The next month, Corbett signed a strict no-tax pledge, which he has bragged about ever since.

Then, in March, KDKA-TV political analyst Jon Delano asked Corbett if the pledge prohibited him from raising fees. Corbett answered: “That’s right.” [3/8/2010] But now Corbett is saying that fees are not covered by the pledge. He told reporters on Friday: “…if there’s a misunderstanding, we apologize for that.” [Capitol Ideas, 8/27/2010]

Corbett has even called for a long list of tax cuts, from business taxes to the inheritance tax, without specifying how he would pay for them when the state is facing a multi-billion-dollar deficit. “Asked how many hundreds of millions of dollars it would cost to make his proposed tax cuts, Corbett declined to answer,” according to Capitolwire. [8/30/2010]

Earlier in the campaign, Corbett said that he “agrees” that “Pennsylvania should not incur additional debt.” [Commonwealth Foundation questionnaire] But Corbett then said: “There are going to be places where we need to use debt to build things.” [Capitolwire, 7/9/2010]

Corbett once said he wouldn’t have accepted any of the stimulus money when he was courting conservatives in the primary, but later backed Pennsylvania’s application for $400 million in stimulus funds for the education competition “Race to the Top.”

Corbett has requested an increase in his office’s budget every year that he has served as Attorney General – despite calling for “across the board” spending cuts for everyone else. [Harrisburg Patriot-News, 6/11/2010]  He also says in a campaign policy paper that he will cut state administrative spending in all agencies by 10 percent if elected Governor. [Capitolwire, 3/22/2010] This year alone, Corbett requested a 12% spending hike – even as the state was facing a massive budget crisis.

It’s no wonder that experienced Republican leaders – like GOP Sens. Pileggi and Rafferty – are increasingly questioning Corbett's budget promises. As Corbett ally Majority Leader Pileggi said: “I don’t see how he can do it, frankly.” [Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 6/28/2010]

8/30/10

Tom Corbett: Lost Without His Talking Points
The more the Harrisburg Republican campaigns, the less credibility he has


PITTSBURGH: Tom Corbett, who has repeatedly made conflicting statements and policy reversals when discussing his own plans, last week proved he has no idea what he’s talking about when he’s discussing Dan Onorato’s record either.

            On Friday, Corbett – who cast one budget vote in his life and used it to hike property taxes by 20 percent – launched his now-standard attack against Democratic gubernatorial nominee Dan Onorato, who has balanced six budgets in a row without ever raising property taxes.

            Speaking in Palmyra, Corbett falsely alleged that Onorato supports raising taxes. But asked by reporters to name a single tax that Onorato favors besides a severance tax on gas drillers like other states have (and which Corbett opposes on behalf of his major campaign donors, although even the Senate Republicans have agreed to enact one this fall), Corbett couldn’t.

            According to PoliticsPA’s Alex Roarty: “The attorney general struggled to name another tax Onorato supports. ‘I have to go look at my notes,’ he said. ‘I don’t have my notes here in front of me.’”

Corbett also whiffed at what should be a softball for a candidate who claims he’s committed to deep budget cuts. Asked by reporters whether he will agree to the 1.9% cut in discretionary spending to his own budget that Gov. Rendell has requested of all independent agencies in order to address the state’s current budget mess, Corbett “at first misunderstood” the question. [Capitolwire, 7/30/2010]

In fact, it has been nearly 2 weeks since Corbett was asked to take a 1.9% cut in his own discretionary spending. But “I am not making any pledge” to take that cut, said the candidate who had no trouble taking a no-tax pledge when it was politically convenient to do so.

Corbett’s loose grasp of the issues has allowed him to make a stunning array of contradictory policy statements throughout the campaign:

    * Corbett told reporters in January that raising taxes should be “a last resort” but that “you can’t rule anything in or out.” [Capitolwire, 1/9/2010] The next month, Corbett signed a strict no-tax pledge, which he has bragged about ever since.

    * Then, in March, KDKA-TV political analyst Jon Delano asked Corbett if the pledge prohibited him from raising fees. Corbett answered: “That’s right.” [3/8/2010] But now Corbett is saying that fees are not covered by the pledge. He told reporters on Friday: “…if there’s a misunderstanding, we apologize for that.” [Capitol Ideas, 8/27/2010]

    * Corbett has even called for a long list of tax cuts, from business taxes to the inheritance tax, without specifying how he would pay for them when the state is facing a multi-billion-dollar deficit. “Asked how many hundreds of millions of dollars it would cost to make his proposed tax cuts, Corbett declined to answer,” according to Capitolwire. [8/30/2010]

    * Earlier in the campaign, Corbett said that he “agrees” that “Pennsylvania should not incur additional debt.” [Commonwealth Foundation questionnaire] But Corbett then said: “There are going to be places where we need to use debt to build things.” [Capitolwire, 7/9/2010]

    * Corbett once said he wouldn’t have accepted any of the stimulus money when he was courting conservatives in the primary, but later backed Pennsylvania’s application for $400 million in stimulus funds for the education competition “Race to the Top.”

    * Corbett has requested an increase in his office’s budget every year that he has served as Attorney General – despite calling for “across the board” spending cuts for everyone else. [Harrisburg Patriot-News, 6/11/2010]  He also says in a campaign policy paper that he will cut state administrative spending in all agencies by 10 percent if elected Governor. [Capitolwire, 3/22/2010] This year alone, Corbett requested a 12% spending hike – even as the state was facing a massive budget crisis.

It’s no wonder that experienced Republican leaders are increasingly questioning Corbett's budget promises. As Corbett ally Senate Republican Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi said: “I don’t see how he can do it, frankly.” [Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 6/28/2010] And Republican State Senator John Rafferty made similar comments just last week.

“We need real leadership and cannot take a risk on someone who doesn’t have experience and doesn’t seem to understand what his policies are or why what he says about them matters,” said Onorato Communications Director Brian Herman.

8/27/10

Shifting Positions, Scant Record Undermine Tom Corbett’s Tough Talk
As the campaign goes on, Harrisburg Republican’s budget credibility is further questioned


PITTSBURGH: With less than 70 days until the General Election, a portrait is emerging of Harrisburg Republican Tom Corbett as a candidate who says what the audience in front of him wants to hear, but whose experience and ability to deliver do not match his rhetoric.

            Experienced Republican leaders are increasingly questioning Corbett's budget promises. As Corbett ally Senate Republican Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi said: “I don’t see how he can do it, frankly.” [Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 6/28/2010] This week, Republican State Senator John Rafferty made similar comments.

            Consider:

    * Corbett told reporters in January that raising taxes should be “a last resort” but that “you can’t rule anything in or out.” [Capitolwire, 1/9/2010] The next month, Corbett signed a strict no-tax pledge, which he has bragged about ever since.


    * Then, in March, KDKA-TV political analyst Jon Delano asked Corbett if the pledge prohibited him from raising fees. Corbett answered: “That’s right.” [3/8/2010] But now Corbett’s spokesman is telling reporters that “fees are not included in that.” [Capitolwire, 8/25/2010]

    * Corbett has even called for a long list of tax cuts, from business taxes to the inheritance tax, without specifying how he would pay for them when the state is facing a multi-billion-dollar deficit.

    * Corbett’s own fiscal experience is extremely limited, consisting of a single budget vote in 1988 as a Shaler Township Commissioner. The one time he had the responsibility of enacting a budget, Corbett cast the deciding vote in favor a 20% property tax hike instead of cutting spending.

    * And while Corbett has called for “across-the-board” budget cuts [Harrisburg Patriot-News, 6/11/2010] and said as recently as last weekend on the campaign trail that “We are going to have to cut and reduce our spending,” [Wilkes-Barre Times-Leader, 8/22/2010] he has been publicly silent about whether he will agree to a 1.9% cut in discretionary spending to his own budget that Gov. Rendell has requested of all independent agencies in order to address the state’s current budget mess.

            So it should come as no surprise that as Attorney General, Corbett has asked for more money for his own office every single year, and on the campaign trail he has proposed tens of millions of dollars in new spending for a range of state programs.

            “The fact that Corbett constantly changes his positions lets us know a lot about him and his qualifications,” said Onorato Communications Director Brian Herman. “Our state faces major challenges – from a fiscal crisis to a disillusioned citizenry – and voters can’t afford to take the risk on a candidate who doesn’t have experience and doesn’t seem to understand what his policies are.”

            Democratic gubernatorial nominee Dan Onorato has balanced six consecutive budgets without ever raising property taxes. Running Pennsylvania’s second-largest county, he reformed government, cut waste and patronage, and insisted on efficiency.

Under Onorato’s leadership, Allegheny County has withstood the national recession far better than much of the country, and its unemployment rate is significantly lower than both the nation’s and the state’s.

“It’s easy for a candidate to make a promise on the campaign trail, but voters need to take a look at our records,” said Onorato. “I have the experience to make the state live within its means and to grow our economy.”

Onorato Marks 20th Anniversary of Americans with Disabilities Act

7/26/10
Onorato Marks 20th Anniversary of Americans with Disabilities Act
Campaign releases policy paper emphasizing economic opportunity, independence for people with disabilities


PITTSBURGH: Democratic gubernatorial nominee Dan Onorato marked the 20th anniversary of the nation’s landmark law ensuring the rights of people with disabilities by releasing his plan to promote independent living, enable people to obtain employment and support Pennsylvanians with disabilities in their homes and communities.

            “I am committed to the inclusion of people with disabilities,” Onorato said. “The 20th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act is an important reminder of the strides our nation has made and the work that remains in order to ensure that people with disabilities can thrive in the workplace and in society.”

            As Allegheny County Executive, Onorato emphasized the importance of effective human service programs to meet the needs of people with disabilities; made Allegheny County the first in Pennsylvania to negotiate the placement of voting machine at every precinct with “sip and puff” technology to enable voters with limited or no arm or hand mobility to cast ballots unassisted; and appointed a representative to the Workforce Investment Board who had experience with the challenges faced by people with disabilities.

            Onorato will ensure that state government understands and addresses the needs of people with cross-disabilities and recognizes their contributions to strengthening our communities. The Onorato Policy Statement on Disabilities Issues calls for:

    * Expanding economic opportunity for persons with disabilities;
    * Promoting independent living; and
    * Advocating for persons with disabilities.

“Pennsylvanians with disabilities play a crucial role throughout the Commonwealth,” Onorato said. “As Allegheny County Executive, I have made government work better on behalf of residents with disabilities, and as Governor, I will champion the needs of people living with disabilities.”

            Onorato’s plan also calls for maximizing resources that enable people with disabilities to live independently and receive home- and community-based services and to recognize the importance of meeting the needs of people with disabilities in housing, workforce development, transportation and other areas.  His proposals include:

    * Providing job training opportunities for people with disabilities;
    * Promoting affordable and accessible housing;
    * Continuing to work toward the goal of 50/50 rebalancing for home and community-based care;
    * Emphasizing consumer-driven health care services; and
    * Making the Office of People with Disabilities permanent.

            The Onorato Policy Statement on Disabilities Issues is available at www.voteonorato.com, which has been certified as accessible for people with disabilities.

The impact of the national health care reform law is only one part of the health and human services issues that face the next Governor.  Onorato will also pursue policies that:

    * Enhance the state’s ability to improve care and reduce costs;
    * Improve children’s health and well-being;
    * Meet the long-term living needs of Pennsylvania residents;
    * Address health disparities; and
    * Meet the demand for a highly skilled health care workforce.
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dan_onorato: Excited to announce President Bill Clinton will join me for a rally in Philadelphia this Monday. RSVP here: http://bit.ly/a2cmSn
dan_onorato: Honored to accept the endorsement of the Conservation Voters of Pennsylvania. As Governor, I'll work to ensure our environment is protected.
dan_onorato: This article does a great job explaining why we need a severance tax on Marcellus shale drilling: http://bit.ly/9mLBnR
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