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Mark Udall: You bet I support a new energy tax and releasing more Gitmo terrorists
Hotair ^ | 10/07/2014 | Guy Benson

Posted on 10/07/2014 10:41:33 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Colorado Democrat Mark Udall has taken the unprecedented step of refusing to debate his Republican opponent on statewide television, so the voting public’s insights into his views generally come from one of three sources: (1) His voting record, which backs Barack Obama 99 percent of the time, (2) his ads, a ludicrous percentage of which obsess and mislead over birth control, and (3) clips from untelevised candidate forums and interviews. On that last front, Udall has uncorked some real head-turning quotes over the last 48 hours. In an exclusive sit-down with KDVR television, Udall said he doesn’t regret any of his votes over his six-year Senate term — thus whiffing on a choice opportunity to distance himself from Obama, something that obviously doesn’t come easily to him. He averred that casting the deciding vote for Obamacare was the right thing to do (he pledged to oppose a “government sponsored” plan in 2008), even though he isn’t campaigning on the law. And he cooked up this incoherent word soup on the Guantanamo Bay terrorist detention facility:

CLICK ABOVE LINK FOR THE VIDEO

“It’s a stain on our reputation. We should close Guantanamo Bay. And I cast a vote at one point that made it a little more difficult to close Guantanamo Bay. Let’s close it. We can send these terrorists back. Wait, I’m sorry. We’ll keep the terrorists here, in jail, indefinitely. But there are a lot of people in Guantanamo that ought to be sent back to the countries from where they came.”

That may be gibberish, but it’s telling gibberish. Udall supports a wildly unpopular plan to shutter the secure detention facility that houses the very worst captured jihadists on the planet, and transfer those detainees onto US soil. After initially suggesting that the terrorists should be “sent back” — a la the Bergdahl/Taliban deal — Udall reversed himself…then bizarrely doubled down two sentences later. “A lot” of the Gitmo terrorists “ought to be sent back” home, he asserted. Is he unaware that Gitmo’s inmate population has been steadily winnowed down over the years, to the point that those who remain represent a who’s-who of terrorist all-stars? Is he similarly uninformed that of the hundreds of detainees we have “sent back,” roughly 28 percent of them rejoined the fight against the West, according to 2012 figures released by the Director of National Intelligence? (At least one member of the ‘Taliban Five’ has already explicitly vowed to resume violent jihad). If Mark Udall thinks “a lot” of the remaining 149 detainees should be shipped back to their nations of origin, perhaps he can name a few of them, and explain to voters why they no longer pose a threat. I’m also trying to figure out how he squares his ‘Gitmo is a stain on our reputation’ statement with his vote (that he raised) to make its closure more difficult. Perhaps he could have listed that as his one regret, rather than drawing a blank. Now we turn to yesterday’s untelevised debate, at which Udall voiced his strong support for a carbon tax. “I support putting a price on carbon,” Udall proudly said. Gardner asked him three times what that price would be:

Unresponsive, rambling non-answers. Mark Udall supports a massive new energy tax on American families, but he’s unwilling to say how much the price tag of his policies would be. On another energy issue, Udall flat-out denied that he ever said that fracking “keeps us locked into the old system.” He claimed that the quote was invented by a “far right-wing blog” — a.k.a. the Washington Free Beacon. The WFB did, indeed, report the quote. The problem for Udall is that they also have it on tape:

“I didn’t say it,” Udall now claims. The evidence proves otherwise. Lastly, on Obamacare, Udall played the Kay Hagan ignorance card on cancelled plans, weakly calling on “rugged collaborators” to fix the mess he helped to create. That excuse doesn’t fly for several reasons (“we all knew!”) — especially for someone whose staff tried to pressure state officials into hiding the extent of his broken promise. Oh, and for good measure, Udall openly admitted that he cut $800 billion from Medicare with his Obamacare vote. Friendly reminder: When he says those (unrealistic) cuts were to shore up the program’s solvency, he neglects to mention that those exact same dollars were double-counted to “pay for” Obamacare.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Colorado
KEYWORDS: co2; colorado; elections; energy; gitmo; markudall; taxes
Well, I gotta give it to him... at least he's not running away from his record.
1 posted on 10/07/2014 10:41:33 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Well.. we’re soon going to find out what Coloradans really stand for, because Udall’s laying it all out there.

If he really wants to win, he’d push for federal subsidies for recreational marijuana.


2 posted on 10/07/2014 10:46:03 AM PDT by ScottinVA (We either destroy ISIS there... or fight them here. Pick one, America.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Should tie Udall to Obama, gun control, and Chickenpooper.

Who care if he ever voted for more gun control, chickenpooper and Obama did, smear him with it anyway!


3 posted on 10/07/2014 10:54:39 AM PDT by Beagle8U (If illegal aliens are undocumented immigrants, then shoplifters are undocumented customers.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Energy tax = a hidden consumption tax.

I am not against consumption taxes at all, so long as they are identified and clearly and equitably assessed. But a tax placed on energy does not strike all equally, and should it be assessed at the producer level, this tax runs through and becomes a part of the cost of every product or service generated through the consumption of energy. Taxes on energy at the end-user consumer level, identified as such and separately listed, like sales taxes at the store or through non-traditional suppliers, would be a thing any individual could control, by either more thrifty use of the energy consumed, or by simply using less energy, or even none at all.

Conversely, because of the lop-sided and inequitable administration of the tax code through the Internal Revenue Service as now constituted, the income tax at the corporate and individual level should be abolished, if only to eliminate the stultifying and venomous actions of the IRS.

Terrorists were placed in Gitmo for good and sufficient reasons at the time, and they always had a way to be released - simply renounce their “enemy combatant” ways, and co-operate with the captors, supplying the information asked of them. Of course, if they ratted out their accomplices, they would have been branded as collaborators and murdered on sight if ever they were detected by any of the surviving bands of combatants.

Nazis have such a cold code.


4 posted on 10/07/2014 11:01:09 AM PDT by alloysteel (Most people become who they promised they would never be.)
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To: SeekAndFind

We have a Catch-22 here—low-info voters voting for low-info representatives. We’re screwed.


5 posted on 10/07/2014 11:02:35 AM PDT by mrsmel (One Who Can See)
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To: SeekAndFind

Well at least he is campaigning on something besides how cool it is to kill babies.


6 posted on 10/07/2014 11:44:08 AM PDT by DaveyB ("When injustice becomes the law; rebellion becomes duty." - Thomas Jefferson)
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To: SeekAndFind

Udall a moron Senator and if Colorado ‘re-elect this nut, I have proof Califorians took it over.


7 posted on 10/07/2014 1:16:16 PM PDT by ExCTCitizen (I'm ExCTCitizen and I approve this reply. If it does offend Libs, I'm NOT sorry...)
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To: SeekAndFind

Udall dude is a freakin’ idiot; plain and simple.


8 posted on 10/07/2014 8:53:42 PM PDT by Din Maker (I've always been crazy, but, that's the only thing that's kept me from going insane.)
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