image

INDEPENDENCE, IA — U.S. congressional candidate Ben Lange today launched his first television ad of the 2012 election cycle. The ad, entitled “Quasky Values,” highlights Lange’s upbringing in the rural town of Quasqueton, Iowa where he learned to “live within [his] means, to have courage, and to do what’s right.”

 

Lange contrasts his rural upbringing and Iowa values with the values of Washington politicians who have nearly doubled the national debt to $16 trillion in less than four years.

Lange’s opponent, the liberal Democrat incumbent Bruce Braley, promised Iowans in one of his very first television ads in May 2006 that, if elected, he would “reduce the deficit” as his highest priority.[1]

But since arriving in Congress, Braley has been captured by Washington and has gone on a massive spending spree. Braley voted to bailout Wall Street executives to the tune of $12.8 trillion in new U.S. obligations, according to Bloomberg News and PBS. Braley voted for the failed stimulus program that cost taxpayers $1.2 trillion and diverted funds to campaign contributors of the Democratic party. Braley even voted against a Balanced Budget Amendment on the House floor.

As a result of these policies and others, the U.S. credit rating was downgraded for the first time in American history in 2011, and the share of debt owed by a middle class family of four in Iowa has increased from $29,000 to $53,000.

Lange’s ad is scheduled to run in the Cedar Rapids market and on district-wide cable through September 4.

AD SCRIPT: “I grew up right here — Quasqueton, Iowa. Here in Quasky, my parents taught me to live within my means, to have courage, and to do what’s right. I took these values with me as I went to college, got married, opened my own business, and started a family. Politicians in Washington don’t share our values. Reckless spending. Record debt. They’re bankrupting our kids and it’s not right. We need to do something about it. I’m Ben Lange and I approved this message because Washington sure could use some courage from “Quasky.”

[1] See “Dix Now Playing for Team America,” National Journal, May 16, 2006.

You May Also Like

Ernst and Grassley Pay Tribute to Suffragettes on 100th Anniversary of 19th Amendment

Chuck Grassley shares with Joni Ernst the story of his mother, who was one of the first women in Iowa to vote under the 19th Amendment.

Reynolds Signs 24-Hour Waiting Period for Abortions Into Law

Gov. Kim Reynolds signed HF 594, a bill requiring a 24-hour waiting period for abortions, into law that already faces a legal challenge by abortion advocates.

Bob Vander Plaats’ Campaign to Oust Iowa Supreme Court Justices Kicked Off Amid Encouraging Poll

Bob Vander Plaats just launched the online component for his campaign to…

John Landon Wins Iowa House District 37 Special Nominating Convention

DES MOINES, Iowa– The Republican Party of Iowa announced today that John Landon…