January 23, 2006: Headlines: Figures: COS - Tunisia: Politics: State Government: San Jose Mercury News: To Gov. Jim Doyle, Washington is a place where politicians allow oil companies to gouge citizens, deny health care to the poor and stand in the way of scientific breakthroughs

Peace Corps Online: Directory: Tunisia: Special Report: RPCV Jim Doyle, Governor of Wisconsin: Special Report: Governor and Tunisa RPCV Jim Doyle: January 23, 2006: Headlines: Figures: COS - Tunisia: Politics: State Government: San Jose Mercury News: To Gov. Jim Doyle, Washington is a place where politicians allow oil companies to gouge citizens, deny health care to the poor and stand in the way of scientific breakthroughs

By Admin1 (admin) (adsl-70-240-139-65.dsl.okcyok.swbell.net - 70.240.139.65) on Thursday, February 02, 2006 - 9:50 am: Edit Post

To Gov. Jim Doyle, Washington is a place where politicians allow oil companies to gouge citizens, deny health care to the poor and stand in the way of scientific breakthroughs

To Gov. Jim Doyle, Washington is a place where politicians allow oil companies to gouge citizens, deny health care to the poor and stand in the way of scientific breakthroughs

Through most of his term, Doyle has been critical of Washington because he has found himself at odds with the Bush administration and GOP-led Congress on issues ranging from stem cell research to the ability to buy prescription drugs from Canada. Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle and his wife served as Peace Corps Volunteers in Tunisia in the 1960's.

To Gov. Jim Doyle, Washington is a place where politicians allow oil companies to gouge citizens, deny health care to the poor and stand in the way of scientific breakthroughs

To Gov. Jim Doyle, Washington is a place where politicians allow oil...
Associated Press

MADISON, Wis. - To Gov. Jim Doyle, Washington is a place where politicians allow oil companies to gouge citizens, deny health care to the poor and stand in the way of scientific breakthroughs.

To U.S. Rep. Mark Green, R-Green Bay, one of two Republicans running to defeat Doyle, Madison is sometimes so out of step with Wisconsin values that it is almost a different world - "Planet Madison," he calls it.

A theme of the 2006 governor's race is shaping up as a tale of two Capitols featuring Doyle, a first-term Democratic governor who has lived in Madison most his life, and Green, who has represented northeastern Wisconsin in Washington since 1998.

Green, dusting off an old line from Wisconsin Republicans' playbook, is trying to portray Doyle as an out-of-touch Madison liberal. By inference, not by name, Doyle is painting Green as part of a do-nothing Congress that is failing the middle class.

For his part, Green's GOP rival, Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker, describes both capital cities as part of a political system that allows out-of-control spending.

Through most of his term, Doyle has been critical of Washington because he has found himself at odds with the Bush administration and GOP-led Congress on issues ranging from stem cell research to the ability to buy prescription drugs from Canada.

He stepped up the criticism in his televised State of the State address last week, declaring, "Washington's failure can't be ours." In the speech, viewed as the kickoff to Doyle's re-election campaign, the governor faulted Washington policies on health care, energy, manufacturing jobs and stem cell research.





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Story Source: San Jose Mercury News

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; Figures; COS - Tunisia; Politics; State Government

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