Kerry Touts New Technology in Rust Belt
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, April 28, 2004
CLEVELAND Democrat John Kerry is wrapping up a three-day
tour of industrial communities with a call for new technology
investments to revitalize the downtrodden Rust Belt.
"The bottom line: I believe that the best days of the Rust Belt
aren't behind us, they're ahead of us," Kerry said in the prepared
text of an economic speech he was giving Wednesday at Washtenaw
Community College in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Kerry's bus tour took him by the mines of West Virginia, the
steel communities of Pennsylvania and Ohio and the auto plants of
Michigan. All four states have lost manufacturing jobs under
President Bush, and all four are up for grabs in the presidential
race.
Kerry promises voters that if he is elected, he would create 10
million jobs during his first term.
Among the initiatives Kerry was proposing Wednesday is a
guarantee program that would help small and medium-sized
manufacturers get credit to invest in new technology. He also said
he would increase funding for military research and direct the
Defense Department to invest in broadband, biotechnology,
nanotechnology and energy independence. To prepare the work force,
Kerry pledged to improve math and science education and enhance job
training.
The Kerry campaign had not calculated how much all the new
proposals would cost. Kerry had said earlier this month that he
would explain how he would finance his new ideas without raising
the deficit or middle-class taxes.
Kerry economic policy director Jason Furman said the plans Kerry
was announcing Wednesday would be a small part of the overall
budget and could be funded by making small shifts from other federal
programs.
During the bus tour, Kerry's criticism of Bush's economic
stewardship was coupled with his questioning of Bush's military
record during the Vietnam War. Kerry questioned whether Bush always
reported for duty in the Texas Air National Guard in response to
questions about his own anti-war activities after returning from
battle in Vietnam.
"I think a lot of veterans are going to be very angry at a
president who can't account for his own service in the National
Guard, and a vice president who got every deferment in the world
and decided he had better things to do, criticizing somebody who
fought for their country and served," Kerry told the Dayton Daily
News.
Bush and Cheney personally have not commented on Kerry's
military service or his anti-war protests, but Bush adviser Karen
Hughes said Kerry misled Americans by "pretending" to throw his
medals away after returning from Vietnam.
Bush campaign spokeswoman Nicolle Devenish said Kerry is
attacking Bush to avoid explaining his Senate record on defense and
security measures. Cheney also questioned this week whether the
Democrat was fit to serve as president in a time of war, prompting a
rebuttal from Kerry on Tuesday night.
"The vice president is running around, finding so much time to
be destructive," Kerry said at a Cleveland fund-raiser that raised
about $700,000, according to his campaign. "In 1992, he was
secretary of defense and he bragged and led the effort to cut the
military." Kerry also met privately with former Vice President Al
Gore, the Democrat presidential nominee in 2000, said a Kerry
aide, who would not characterize the meeting.
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