Thursday, June 30, 2005

John McCain Hannity's show

John McCain Refuses Hannity's Bait to Bash Democrats


John McCain came on Hannity & Colmes last night to discuss President Bush's speech. I didn't hear the speech but I suspect it didn't go too well because whenever his side is in trouble, Sean Hannity changes the subject and goes on the attack. Last night, Hannity didn't say much about the speech and instead used the occasion to try to push McCain into bashing Democrats. McCain kept to the higher ground.


The discussion with McCain started off with Alan Colmes asking if Bush did what needed to be done to overcome his "sinking poll numbers." McCain said he believed so. Colmes disagreed, noting that Bush once again tried to tie Saddam Hussein to September 11, "something that has been pretty much disproven and discredited."


McCain defended Bush


see complete article at.......



http://www.newshounds.us/2005/06/29/john_mccain_refuses_hannitys_bait_to_bash_democrats.php


for Arizona Lotto results see www.needto.net

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

McCain serious about running in 2008

White House Watch: McCain serious about running in 2008



Posted 6/29/05
By Paul Bedard


Senator John McCain, who tops the GOP ratings in some political popularity polls, is moving to run for president in 2008, according to friends and associates.


"They're going. They're running," says a McCain insider. Republicans associated with the Arizona senator said that he believes he can overcome opposition from conservatives to his positions on oil drilling, abortion, and taxes by providing a forceful and popular alternative to Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, who right now appears to be the Democratic front runner.


Others suggest that McCain can largely ignore the conservative base of the party during the primaries and caucuses because that vote will be divided among the numerous conservatives expected to jump in. "If he can pull off 20 percent or so in the primaries and caucuses, it's his," says one GOP analyst.

see article at.......
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/050629/29whwatch.htm?track=rss

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

MCCAIN, KYL SAY NO TO FLAWED ENERGY BILL


MCCAIN, KYL SAY NO TO FLAWED ENERGY BILL
Bill Is Bad For Arizona’s Gas Prices, Air Quality
For Immediate Release
Tuesday, Jun 28, 2005


WASHINGTON, D.C. -- U.S. Senators John McCain and Jon Kyl today voted against Senate passage of H.R. 6, the Energy Policy Act of 2005, warning that it is not the solution that some have suggested and will actually result in higher gas prices for Arizonans.


The bill contains numerous provisions that will distort competitive markets for energy through subsidies, tax breaks, special projects, mandates and outlandish amounts of federal spending, and it is unlikely to have any positive short-term effect on energy prices.


"This bill does little to address the immediate energy crisis we face in this country. The handouts to big business and oil companies are irresponsible and will be disastrous for people of Arizona. I cannot in good conscience, vote to pass legislation that does not adequately address issues related to energy efficiency, security, and energy independence," said McCain.


One example from the bill that is harmful to Arizona is the mandate that Americans use eight billion gallons of ethanol annually by 2012. Currently, Americans consume only 3.4 billion gallons. Such mandates will result in higher gasoline costs for states, like Arizona, that do not have an abundant in-state supply of renewable energy or who do not produce their own ethanol.


"I predict that if this bill is enacted, gas prices in Arizona will increase and air quality will be impaired because of its ethanol mandates," said Kyl. "The bill does little to reduce our dependence on foreign oil and will impose huge new costs on Arizona power consumers because of the bill’s national one-size-fits-all renewable portfolio standard."


The bill also includes overly-generous tax incentives for individuals to buy alternative fuel vehicles. Both Senators noted Arizona’s disastrous experience a few years ago with its alternative fuel vehicle tax incentives. Arizona’s program could have cost state taxpayers half a billion dollars -- 11 percent of the state’s budget -- if it had not been repealed. Originally projected costs of the Arizona program were between $3 million and $10 million -- less than 10 percent of its true cost.


McCain and Kyl noted that with any bill of this size, there are both good and bad provisions. And though they praise the bill’s reliability standards and incentives for new refinery capacity, they concluded that the bad just outweighed the good.


press release



www.mccainalert.com
Mccainalert.com

McCain Targets Off-Reservation Gambling


McCain Targets Off-Reservation Gambling


WASHINGTON - Congress never intended for Indians to build Nevada-style casinos away from their reservations, and tribes risk a backlash by pursuing the trend, Sen. John McCain (news, bio, voting record) said Tuesday.



"None of us ever anticipated that there would be casinos in the Catskills," McCain, chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, told a tribal leader from New York who's pursuing such a project.


"We're seeing casinos in downtown Oakland and downtown Denver. ... If we have enough off-reservation casinos set up in America we're going to see a backlash against Indian gaming, because that was not the intent of the law," said McCain, R-Ariz.



for the complete article.......
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050628/ap_on_go_co/indian_gambling_1



http://www.needto.net/arizona.html

Saad puts 2008 heat on McCain

Saad puts 2008 heat on McCain
By Alexander Bolton



Republican leaders in Michigan’s Macomb and Oakland counties are pressuring Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) to win an up-or-down vote on a controversial judicial nominee from the Wolverine State.


They want McCain to use his influence to persuade his colleagues to clear Henry Saad, the nominee to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals who was left out of the judicial deal Senate centrists struck last month.


Conservative activists are launching a campaign this week to save Saad’s nomination, while Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee such as Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) are hinting that the nominee may not have enough support to pass out of committee.


McCain, the principal GOP architect of the agreement that ensured confirmation votes for several blocked nominees, assured the GOP leaders in Michigan that he would not give up on Saad, GOP officials said in interviews.



http://www.thehill.com/thehill/export/TheHill/News/Frontpage/062805/saad.html



Saturday, June 25, 2005

Protester disrupts McCain's dinner with Vietnamese leader

Protester disrupts McCain's dinner with Vietnamese leader


Wednesday, June 22, 2005; Posted: 9:29 a.m. EDT (13:29 GMT)


Sen. John McCain, left, talks with Vietnamese Prime Minister Phan Van Khai, right, at a dinner held Tuesday.


"That's life," visiting Prime Minister Phan Van Khai muttered after security officers hustled a balding, shouting protester believed to be a Vietnam veteran away from the head table




see complete at ,,,


http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/06/22/us.vietnam.ap/index.html?section=cnn_latest

McCain leads in polls for 2008

(CBS) A new poll suggests Sen. John McCain is far and away the leading contender for the White House in 2008. The Arizona Republican would rout the top Democrat, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York, in a theoretical match-up, according to a Zogby America poll.


The two senators were well ahead of the competition for their parties' respective nominations, but McCain would trounce the former first lady, 54 percent to 35 percent, in a head-to-head contest.


McCain would also easily defeat former Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, 55 to 35 percent.


see complete article at.....




http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/06/24/politics/main703992.shtml

Friday, June 24, 2005

MCCAIN commends restoration of Fossil Creek

MCCAIN COMMENDS RESTORATION OF FOSSIL CREEK
For Immediate Release
Friday, Jun 17, 2005

Washington D.C. ¬Senator John McCain (R-AZ) today commended Arizona Public Service Company (APS), government agencies, Tribal Nations, conservation groups, and academia whose commitment and cooperation to the rebirth of a desert river resulted in the restoration of Fossil Creek to its natural flow.

Senator McCain said, “I am pleased to herald an historic environmental event that will take place in Arizona. Fossil Creek is an extraordinary natural resource comparable to the more famous Havasu Creek in the Grand Canyon, with deep blue pools, waterfalls, and striking rock formations. Restoration of the creek opens opportunities for public recreation and restoration of riparian habitat, rare native fish species, and traditional Yavapai-Apaches sites in the watershed.”

The flow of Fossil Creek was diverted in 1909 to operate the state’s first hydroelectric power plant at Childs, with the second plant at Irving going into operation in 1916. An engineering marvel, the Childs-Irving plants were a critical source of electricity for the mining industry and early communities in Arizona. Although still a viable source of power, APS decided in favor of the outstanding environmental and public value of restoring Fossil Creek. The organizations that signed the initial decommissioning agreement with APS were the Yavapai-Apache Nation, American Rivers, Arizona Riparian Council, Center for Biological Diversity, The Nature Conservancy, and Northern Arizona Audubon Society. Many other groups have been involved in bringing this environmental feat to fruition.

Return of natural flows to Fossil Creek will create a scenic area of more than14 miles of free-flowing water. Public visitation is expected to increase dramatically. There is a critical need to provide additional protection and adequate staffing and management to the area to maintain the outstanding values of this reborn stream. Therefore, I intend to introduce legislation to include Fossil Creek in the Wild and Scenic Rivers system to ensure that future generations will enjoy this very special place.





~end~
[ back to press releases ]

Thursday, June 23, 2005

Mccain still looking into Boeing

He would be well advised to do so. Investigative interest in this campaign to underwrite Boeing's flagging fortunes, described in one investigated e-mail as a "bailout for Boeing" that would "screw the taxpayer," will not soon fade away.


For that, we all can thank Sen. John McCain, the Arizona Republican who doggedly has pursued the details of a deal that stank from the beginning.


The malodor only grows. Whether it results from outright lawbreaking, or simply the contempt for the taxpayers that so often has surfaced in multibillion-dollar procurement outrages, it must be fully aired.


McCain has pledged to demand that airing. Before he and an angered Armed Services Committee are done, more than a few in Washington's power elite may rue the day they ever heard of Boeing.



see complete article at Cleveland Trader.....
http://www.cleveland.com/editorials/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/opinion/1119432960317270.xml&coll=2#continue

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Indians being ripped off by Washington lobbyists?

Indians being ripped off by lobbyists?



WASHINGTON – When Sen. John McCain said recently that it was "long overdue time" to review the federal law that paved the way for lucrative Indian casinos, tribal leaders took notice.


The Arizona Republican, after all, helped write the 1988 law and is chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee.


Also, a scandal involving a powerful Republican lobbyist who represented Indian casinos has brought new scrutiny to the $19-billion-a-year industry and its growing clout in Washington.


Lawmakers have held a flurry of hearings on Indian gaming and some are considering legislation that would impose more regulations on the industry, including new rules for off-reservation gambling, a hot topic in California. One House member has asked President Bush to order a moratorium on new casinos.


Tribal leaders say that they have been unfairly tainted by the alleged transgressions of one lobbyist and that they have only taken their rightful seat at the table in Washington's power game. Regulations on their casinos are well-enforced and working, they insist.





see article at....

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/nation/20050620-9999-1n20tribes.html

Monday, June 20, 2005

Senators McCain and Kennedy

MEMBERS OF CONGRESS INTRODUCE COMPREHENSIVE BORDER SECURITY & IMMIGRATION REFORM BILL
For Immediate Release
Friday, May 13, 2005



WASHINGTON - Senators McCain and Kennedy, and Representatives Kolbe, Flake and Gutierrez, joined by Senators Brownback and Lieberman today introduced The Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act of 2005. The legislation follows months of thoughtful debate and negotiation, which has resulted in bipartisan, bicameral, comprehensive border security and immigration reform.




“The status quo is unacceptable, and we need to modernize our broken immigration system to meet the challenges of the 21st Century. And we need policies that continue to reflect our best values as a nation -- of fairness, equal opportunity, and respect for the law. One of the mistakes of the past is to assume we can control illegal immigration on our own. A realistic immigration policy must be a two-way street. Under our plan, America will do its part, but we expect Mexico and other nations to do their part, too, to replace an illegal immigration flow with regulated, legal immigration,” said Kennedy.




McCain said, “Homeland security is our nation’s number one priority, this legislation includes a number of provisions that together will make our nation more secure. For far too long, our nation’s broken immigration laws have gone unreformed – leaving Americans vulnerable. We can no longer afford to delay reform. I am proud to join my colleagues today as an original Sponsor of this legislation”




“This is a comprehensive bill that doesn’t try to solve the hemorrhaging immigration problem with a ban-aid – this bill is major surgery. The majority of the illegal immigration is happening in Arizona, and I will not stand by and let southern Arizona be the doormat for this country’s failed immigration policy,” said Rep. Kolbe. “They are illegal immigrants – they have broken the law and must be punished. That is why this legislation includes strict fines and penalties for those already in this country illegally and tough punishments for employers who hire illegal immigrants. More importantly, it provides the secure identification document so an employer can know the person seeking work is here legally. We must recognize reality and implement a tightly structured guest worker program to securely, and legally, fill jobs that no American is available or wants to do. Over the past several years, border security has been a necessity for all members of Congress, but it has been a top priority for only a few. Today, I am proud to continue my work as one of those few. I will work hard with Senator McCain, Senator Kennedy, Rep. Flake and Rep. Gutierrez to educate Congress and the public about the need for practical reform. We are at an important threshold – we can either work hard to secure our borders through commonsense reform of our immigration system, or hang-on to unrealistic ideals that will never improve the safety of our country.”




“We need a plan that fairly balances national security, economic reality, and worker protections, and I think our bill comes pretty darn close," said Flake. "I believe that this bill is very consistent with President Bush's principles of immigration reform and, given that the President has made immigration reform a priority of his second term, I hope that our colleagues in Congress will give this bill the consideration that it deserves.”




“This bill represents a vital step toward an immigration policy that makes sense,” Gutierrez said. "It reflects the enormous contributions immigrants make every day, it respects our nation's proud history of welcoming men and women to seek a better life and it better protects our homeland by creating a system of improved accountability and security."




If enacted, this legislation will help America meet 21st century challenges by replacing current outdated immigration laws with reforms that will improve our border security and make immigration policies more realistic and enforceable. The bill will help get control of our borders, strengthen our national security, create an even playing field for employers and ensure full labor rights for all our workers.


The following is Senator McCain’s floor statement on The Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act:




Mr. McCain. Mr. President, after more than five months of work, I am please to be joined by Senators Kennedy, Brownback, Lieberman, Graham, and Salazar in introducing the Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act. This bipartisan, comprehensive immigration reform legislation is designed to fix our nation’s broken immigration system. This landmark legislation would bring common sense to the current system and promote our national security interests.
I am equally pleased by the effort of Congressmen Kolbe, Flake, and Gutierrez who are introducing the House companion bill.




While in previous years we worked independently on immigration reform legislation, we are coming together today to introduce what we believe is groundbreaking, comprehensive legislation. Over a year ago, the President laid out a framework for what comprehensive immigration reform should look like. We have used the President’s framework to craft this package and I applaud the President for his leadership on this issue.




The simple fact is that America’s immigration system is broken. Recent vigilante activities along the Southwestern border have shown that the current situation is not sustainable. Americans are frustrated with our lack of border security and our inability to control illegal immigration. We have spent billions of dollars on border enforcement. We have sent more–but still not enough– federal agents to the border equipped with sophisticated technology. We have worked to harden the border in key places. And yet, illegal immigration continues.


I would like to mention some startling statistics that demonstrate the critical need for immigration reform. I think the numbers speak for themselves:


– Over 300 people died last year trying to cross the border – about 200 of those deaths occurred in Arizona’s desert.
– Last year 1.1 million illegal immigrants were caught by the Border Patrol in 2004. 51% of those were caught in Arizona.
– The Border Patrol is currently apprehending over 1,000 undocumented immigrants a day in Arizona.
– According to the FBI, an increasing number of these individuals are OTMs (Other Than Mexicans) from “countries of interest.”




Homeland security is our nation’s number one priority, and this legislation includes numerous provisions that together will make our nation more secure. This bill includes provisions to strengthen border security, both on our side of the border and throughout this hemisphere. Through the establishment of a new electronic employment verification system, the bill will create a more secure mechanism to better enforce our nation’s immigration laws within our borders. Additionally, the bill enhances the authority of the Department of Labor and the Department of Homeland Security to conduct random audits to ensure that employers are holding up their end of the bargain. And if they aren’t, they face double fines.
Make no mistake, this is not an amnesty bill. We are not here to reward law-breakers, and any accusations to the contrary are patently untrue. This bill recognizes the problems inherent in the current system and provides a logical and effective means to address these problems. The reality is, there are an estimated million undocumented people living and working in this country. It would be impossible to identify and round up all 10 to 11 million of the current undocumented, and if we did, it would ground our nation’s economy to a halt. These millions of people are working. Aliens will not come forward to simply “report and deport.” We have a national interest in identifying these individuals, incentivizing them to come forward out of the shadows, go through security background checks, pay back taxes, pay penalties for breaking the law, learn to speak English, and regularize their status. Anyone who thinks this goal can be achieved without providing an eventual path to a permanent legal status is not serious about solving this problem.


Part of the failure of the existing system is its inability to provide sufficient legal channels to pair willing workers with willing employers. This bill establishes a new market-based temporary worker program so that when there is no U.S. worker to fill a job, employers will be able to hire willing and able foreign workers who have gone through security background checks, medical exams, and paid a fee for their visa. And, by doing away with outdated numerical caps on this program, this bill recognizes that the needs of the U.S. economy are constantly in flux, and our immigration system must mach those needs.




I don’t believe there is another issue that is more important to our nation than immigration reform. For far too long, our nation’s broken immigration laws have gone unreformed – leaving Americans vulnerable. We can no longer afford to delay reform.




The complex and difficult problems associated with immigration reform will not be solved overnight, but they are among the most difficult challenges facing our nation today. That is why it is so important that the President shares our commitment to comprehensive reform. Together with the President, I am committed to this process and remain very hopeful that we will succeed.




I want to especially express my appreciation to Senator Kennedy and his staff for their sincere commitment to this critical issue. Also, the contributions to the bill as recommended by Senator Brownback have been invaluable to this effort. I would also like to thank Senator Lugar, who allowed us to incorporate critical international border enforcement provisions from his legislation, the North American Cooperative Security Act.




Through the collective efforts of a wide range of bipartisan interests in both houses of Congress, not to mention immigration advocacy groups, representatives of our nation’s businesses, and several labor unions, this comprehensive legislation provides a meaningful direction for how our immigration system should be reformed, and our border security strengthened.




I look forward to working with all interested parties in the important and necessary effort to once and for all reform our broken immigration system.



MCCAIN TO HOLD OVERSIGHT HEARING ON TRIBAL LOBBYING
For Immediate Release
Monday, Jun 20, 2005


Washington D.C. ­– U.S. Senator John McCain, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, will hold an oversight hearing on Wednesday, June 22, 2005 at 9:30am to receive information in the pending investigation In re Tribal Lobbying Matter. The hearing will be held in the Hart Senate Office Building room 216 (SH-216). The hearing is the third in a series of hearings that the committee has conducted on this matter. Witnesses will include representatives of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians; former lobbying associates of Jack Abramoff who served as client managers for the Tribe; and people associated with entities through or to which Mr. Abramoff or Mr. Scanlon directed the Tribes to pay money.




The following is a DRAFT of the witness list:


WITNESS LIST Panel I


Mr. Charlie Benn – Director of Administration, Office of the Chief, Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians Donald Kilgore, Esq. - Attorney General, Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians Ms. Nell Rogers – Planner, Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians Panel II Mr. Kevin Ring – former Abramoff associate Mr. Shawn Vasell – former Abramoff associate Panel III Mrs. Amy Ridenour – President, National Center for Public Policy Research Ms. Gail Halpern - former tax preparer/advisor to Jack Abramoff Mr. Brian Mann – former Director, American International Center Mr. David Grosh – former Director, American International Center Mr. Aaron Stetter – former Associate, Capitol Campaign Strategies # # #

McCain: U.S. in Iraq a couple of more years

WASHINGTON - A leading Republican senator said Sunday it probably would take ''at least a couple more years'' before enough Iraqis are capable of securing their country, a prime condition set by the Bush administration for beginning to withdraw U.S. troops. ''I don't think Americans believe that we should cut and run out of Iraq by any stretch of the imagination,'' said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.
see complete article....http://sltrib.com/nationworld/ci_2812559

Friday, June 17, 2005

MCCAIN, LIEBERMAN ADD NEW TECHNOLOGIES PROVISION TO GLOBAL WARMING BILL

MCCAIN, LIEBERMAN ADD NEW TECHNOLOGIES PROVISION TO GLOBAL WARMING BILL Senators Reintroduce Climate Stewardship Act With Alternative Technology Incentives
For Immediate Release
Thursday, May 26, 2005

WASHINGTON – Senators John McCain (R-AZ) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT) introduced today a modified climate change bill, the Climate Stewardship and Innovation Act. This legislation includes the provisions of the Climate Stewardship Act of 2005 introduced in February, along with new provisions to promote the development and deployment of low or zero greenhouse gas emitting technologies. “This new title, when combined with the ‘cap and trade’ provisions of the previously introduced bill, will promote the commercialization of technologies that can significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, mitigate the impacts of climate change, and increase the nation’s energy independence,” McCain said. “And, it will help to keep America at the cutting edge of innovation where the jobs and trade opportunities of the new economy are to be found.” “We face an urgent and complex challenge -- cutting emissions of climate-changing gases like CO2 while growing our economy. Every technology, every innovation has to be on the table so that the market can choose the best ideas and inventions,” Lieberman said. “Senator McCain and I have developed a bill that shuns picking winners and losers between and among different technologies – we want the market to do that. Instead, our bill would create a system that puts every technological option on the menu to ensure that there will be viable low greenhouse gas emitting products and energy services available to face the challenge of climate change.” "The technology provision, which will be added as “Title IV” to the Climate Stewardship Act of 2005, would use the financial resources generated by the emissions trading program that the legislation creates to provide incentives for the development of a variety of alternatives to conventional fossil fuel power production. These alternatives would include, but would not be limited to, solar, nuclear and integrated (coal) gasification combined cycle technologies, as well as more efficient products and vehicles, and a variety of alternative vehicle fuels that result in lower overall emissions. “There is much that the country can and should do to promote the most environmentally and economically promising technologies,” McCain said. “This includes removing unnecessary barriers to commercialization of new technologies so that new plants, products, and processes can move more efficiently from design and development, to demonstration and, ultimately, to the market place. Again, without cap and trade, these efforts will pale, but the new technology title we propose will work hand in glove with the emission cap and trade system to meet our objectives.” “By reintroducing the original climate bill with a new technology title, we are sending a signal to our Senate colleagues that the time is now and the opportunity is here to come forward and work with us to put together a package that works to get the politics, the economics and the policy right,” Lieberman said. The Climate Stewardship Act, crafted by Lieberman and McCain in close consultation with industry leaders and the environmental community, is modeled after the successful acid rain trading program of the 1990 Clean Air Act. It would require a reduction in carbon dioxide emission levels to 2000 levels by the year 2010 by capping the overall greenhouse gas emissions from the electricity generation, transportation, industrial, and commercial economic sectors, and creating a market for individual companies to trade pollution credits. McCain and Lieberman first introduced the legislation in 2002 and despite strong Senate support, the legislation fell short of passage in a vote in October 2003 on the Senate floor. The Senators have pledged to bring the legislation to another vote this year. A summary of the newly introduced bill is available at: http://lieberman.senate.gov/newsroom/release.cfm?id=238307

Thursday, June 16, 2005

McCain introduces "Spectrum Availabilty Act"

MCCAIN, LIEBERMAN INTRODUCE SAVE LIVES ACT OF 2005
For Immediate Release
Tuesday, Jun 14, 2005

Senators McCain and Lieberman today introduced the “Spectrum Availability for Emergency-Response and Law-Enforcement to Improve Vital Emergency Services Act,” known as The SAVE LIVES Act of 2005. The 9/11 Commission, in its final report, reiterated the immediate need for additional spectrum for public safety stating, “Congress should support pending legislation which provides for the expedited and increased assignment of radio spectrum for public safety purposes.” The SAVE LIVES Act of 2005 would provide public safety entities with more spectrum by January 1, 2009, by requiring television broadcasters to begin using their digital television spectrum and to return their analog television spectrum. Access to this spectrum will be extremely helpful as signals sent over these frequencies are able to penetrate walls, travel great distances, and assist multiple jurisdictions in deploying interoperable communications systems. Senator McCain said, “The SAVE LIVES Act implements one of the top recommendations of the 9/11 Commission. It also ensures that when our Nation experiences another attack or is confronted with a natural disaster or emergency, our police, fire fighters and emergency response personnel will have the ability to communicate with each other to prevent another catastrophic loss of life. Now is the time for Congressional action before another national emergency or crisis takes place.” Joined by 9/11 Commission Chairman Thomas H. Kean, Vice Chairman Lee H. Hamilton, and Mary Fetchet, Founding Director and President of the Voices of September 11th Senator McCain also added, “Today Senator Lieberman and I re-dedicate ourselves to preparing for another attack by introducing the SAVE LIVES Act of 2005 and seek to honor those who lost their life on September 11, 2001.” -30- * Senator Lieberman was not in attendance due to Shavuot observances.

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