Harris bus tour stops in Salisbury

As I wrote yesterday, leg number one of Andy Harris’s districtwide bus tour was scheduled to stop in Salisbury this morning, and indeed it did.

Congressional candidate and State Senator Andy Harris emerges from his tour bus at its Salisbury stop, April 23, 2010.

Along for the ride was, among others, Harris campaign chair and two-time candidate for governor Ellen Sauerbrey.

Harris campaign chair Ellen Sauerbrey chats with a supporter at the tour's stop in Salisbury, April 23, 2010.

Speaking in front of about two dozen supporters including fellow State Senator Rich Colburn, Harris outlined his plans should he be elected.

About two dozen supporters listened as Harris outlined his plans should he be elected.

Congressional candidate Andy Harris spoke about health care and job creation in his remarks to a tour stop in Salisbury, April 23, 2010.

Telling those gathered that “we can no longer be the silent majority,” Harris described the need for a turnaround, as he represented a group who liked the America we had prior to the growth of government.

Turning to the health care bill, Andy opined that, “the government doesn’t think you can make the best decisions” – we didn’t need bureaucrats to do the jobs physicians should be doing.

Harris then discussed the lack of jobs in the First District. While Maryland as a whole has an unemployment rate significantly below the national average, 7 of the 9 Eastern Shore counties suffer from double-digit unemployment rates. “The approach in Washington is wrong,” said Harris, who advocated an across-the-board tax cut to help solve the problem.

His best applause line, though, concerned the ouster of Nancy Pelosi should the GOP win back the majority in Congress this year. It came after he concluded that part of Washington’s problem was spending and that having a value-added tax (VAT) would make the problem worse.

Harris was kind enough to take a few questions after his prepared remarks.

The first had to do with immigration reform, as Arizona is primed to pass tough anti-illegal immigration legislation. Indeed, the federal government should enforce immigration laws but we do need legal immigrants to supplement our labor force, said Harris.

What can we do about health care reform now? asked another. “The health care debate is not over,” Andy stated. While some of the provisions are agreeable, the taxes on items such as durable medical devices will have a deleterious effect on care as a whole. But Congress does have the power of the purse and can choose not to fund the most egregious portions of the bill.

In that vein, I asked, is there some sort of workaround to keep the Bush tax cuts around beyond their expiration date at the end of this year?

While Andy didn’t have an answer as to tactics, he did correctly note that this uncertainty affects business decisions – entrepreneurs are “waiting for a signal” from the federal government on a number of issues including taxation.

Returning to health care, the final question posed regarded turning health care back to the states. Harris noted that some states (like Maryland) do just fine with the system they have while others like Massachusetts are struggling. The federal government should have little to do with health care, he said.

Harris spent about 30 minutes in Salisbury, which was longer than I expected. But I knew this would be the prime media stop.

A reporter from WBOC asks Andy Harris questions. The question he was answering when I took the picture had to do with offshore oil exploration, which Harris favors as a way for America to use more of its own resources and states to gain from revenue sharing.

A reporter from the Daily Times interviews Andy after the event.

Besides the WBOC reporter – who left before Harris actually spoke from the podium – and the Daily Times, the media cabal consisted of myself and a couple other local bloggers.

But one remark from Andy I overheard as he was preparing to leave seems to be the thought we all have on our minds: “November is our last chance…I’m convinced of that.” Given the direction our nation is being dragged into, I think Harris just may be right.

One other observation – unless he said it in a private conversation, I never heard the name of his opponent cross his lips during this stop, a stop held within sight of his district office. Hopefully it’s a sign of a clean campaign.

Author: Michael

It's me from my laptop computer.

4 thoughts on “Harris bus tour stops in Salisbury”

  1. I also hope for a clean campaign. Harris is right on the issues. There is little need to sling mud at Kratovil. The voters know Kratovil has done a poor job in Congress. The liberals are disenchanted with him, too. If Harris starts attacking him it will motivate the liberal base who will come out just to vote against Harris.

  2. Andy must be thrilled by the huge turnout and the intense media coverage. Fail. He’s a lost cause. Kratovil has delivered the independent representation he promised. What the voters know is a loser when they see one, and that loser is Andy Harris. Liberals will tolerate Kratovil’s moderate tendencies when the alternative is a conservative fanatic.

  3. Say, Fred, have you seen Frank Kratovil out campaigning on his record? If you consider independent as voting with the party line most of the time, well, I suppose those chains must lay lightly upon you.

    This is the guy who will vote the way the special interests want him to unless We the People squawk loud enough – I’d rather have someone I can count on to vote for my interests in Washington and filp-flop Frank is not that guy.

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