Posted: October 24, 2012 at 8:48 pm
Mitt Romney and John Kerry, Rolled Into One
Here are 45 seconds of video that everybody who lives in Montana needs to watch. I’ll let it speak for itself. Please discuss.

Posted: October 24, 2012 at 8:48 pm
Here are 45 seconds of video that everybody who lives in Montana needs to watch. I’ll let it speak for itself. Please discuss.
Posted: July 31, 2012 at 7:44 am
Say No To Congressman Hill’s Sales Tax
That’s the name of the new Facebook page against Rick Hill’s public support for the sales tax. The new page (which has an associated Twitter account called @HillSalesTax), highlights the increased cost that people would have to pay on goods and services under Hill’s proposal. The sales tax is the most regressive option for raising revenue available to the state, and the Congressman wants to create one to pay for big tax giveaways to out-of-state corporations. People will find themselves spending more on groceries, utilities, cars, and even a new home, while the wealthiest enjoy the tax code favors one of their fellow plutocrats bestows upon them. Hill calls this “job creation.” It’s another recycled GOP trick that Republicans have been using for years: raise taxes on the most vulnerable to help pay for tax breaks for those that don’t need them. I’m glad someone is spreading the word about the cost of Hill’s unpopular policy proposals. He’s been failing to get this passed for 20 years, but he might finally get his way if he’s elected.
Still a Market for Racism
First it was the “Don’t Re-nigg in 2012″ bumper sticker found for sale in a Columbia Falls pawn shop. Then it was the bullet-ridden outhouse labled “Obama Presidential Library” at the Republican State Convention.
Now there is this item, a “Presidential Bottle Holder” that a Cowgirl tipster came across in a tourist store/restaurant west of West Glacier the other day. Apparently, there are people out there who would actually part with money to demonstrate their view that Obama is a wino. It’s disappointing that a product like this is being sold here in Montana.
Posted: June 11, 2012 at 12:18 pm
Now that Rick Hill is the Republican nominee for Governor of Montana, it’s a good time to take a closer look at his record. It isn’t good.
The Democratic party has already pointed out that Hill led the effort to create a new 4% sales tax. He supported the privatization of Social Security, voted against increasing the minimum wage, and backed special tax breaks for big corporations. As head of the workers compensation board, he set up the most expensive worker’s compensation system in the U.S.
Democrats aren’t the only people with concerns about Hill’s abysmal record. Here’s how members of Hill’s own party explained why Hill would make a terrible Governor.
Corey Stapleton first pointed out in a campaign ad (which was later backed up by the Associated Press) that Rick Hill not only made a king’s ransom renting office space to the Montana state government in the 1990s and 2000s, but that his wife Betti used her job in Governor Judy Martz’s office to steer business his way. Thus did Rick and Betti Hill become very wealthy people. Stapleton also pointed out the sales tax Hill proposed.
Ken Miller raised concerns about how much time Rick Hill spends in California, saying “perhaps Congressman Hill should have spent more time enjoying what Montana has to offer,” instead.
Neil Livingstone said Hill failed with Montana’s work comp system, “I think a lot of the problems that we have today we can attribute to Rick and his tenure there […] he really didn’t get his arms around the problem. Today there are 19 people working in the State Fund that make more than the governor […] and they give each other big bonuses of several hundred thousand dollars a year”
Bob Fanning expressed concerns at a GOP forum about Hill’s support in Congress for the de-regulation of banks and the management of the U.S. economy:
“Mr. Hill, during your tenure in the 106th congress, I pointed out that there were four (4) sectional charges placed underneath the American economy that blew it up. Number one (1), The Community Reinvestment Act and the expansion of Fannie Mae between 1993-2001. Number two (2), the continued de-regulation of credit default swaps, which are the instruments that blew up the economy. Number three (3), the repeal of the Glass-Stegal Act, which ultimately turned our banks into securitization mills and blew up the economy. And, number four (4), the Commodity Modernization Act. With three million people out of their homes, and 14 million people out of their jobs, do you feel any reason that you should be held to account for our financial crisis because your votes were all yea [in favor of these measures]?”
Now that the primary is over Montanans will start to look deeper in to Rick Hill’s background. Given what’s known already, its unlikely they’ll like what they see.
Posted: October 14, 2010 at 12:45 pm
Republicans are always saying they’re opposed to raising taxes, Roy Brown says it on his own website.
But apparantly that’s not the only thing he’s been saying. Roy Brown also says he wants to put a tax on everything we buy. Listen here: Sales Tax Roy
While Montana’s top Republican Dennis Rehberg is jealously guarding the Bush tax cuts for America’s wealthiest people, those in his income bracket, the idea of a state sales tax– which would disproportionately penalize working people and middle and low income consumers — is something Roy Brown, a bigwig in the state Republican inside circle “has always supported.”