The bush camp are such idiots for calling him a flip-flopper for being able to separate his personal beliefs and the personal rights of citizens.
Flip | Flop | More Information |
Troop Funding "I actually did vote for the $87 billion before I voted against it," - Mar. 16, 2004 | Troop Funding He actually voted against final - That is an absolute fact. He is lying. "I voted against that $87 billion in Washington yesterday," 12 Who Voted Against It: | Roll Call Vote |
Tough on Castro ''I'm pretty tough on Castro, because I think he's running one of the last vestiges of a Stalinist secret police government in the world,'' Kerry told WPLG-ABC 10 "And I voted for the Helms-Burton legislation to be tough on companies that deal with him.'' | Tough on Castro Kerry voted against it along with 21 other senators | Herald Story |
Kerry Against Kyoto Kerry voted to cut of funding for Kyoto | Kerry for Kyoto April 9, 2001: | |
Kerry on Arafat In a 1997 book, Kerry described "Arafat's transformation from outlaw to statesman." | Kerry on Arafat "Obviously, Yasser Arafat has been an impediment to the peace process," said Kerry, the Democratic presidential nominee-in-waiting. "He missed a historic opportunity and he's proved himself to be irrelevant." | |
50 Cent Tax Hike - For In 1994, Kerry Backed Half-Dollar Increase In Gas Tax. ?Kerry said [the Concord Coalition?s scorecard] did not accurately reflect individual lawmakers? efforts to cut the deficit. ?It doesn?t reflect my $43 billion package of cuts or my support for a 50-cent increase in the gas tax,? Kerry said.? (Jill Zuckman, ?Deficit-Watch Group Gives High Marks To 7 N.E. Lawmakers,? The Boston Globe, 3/1/94) | 50 Cent Tax Hike - Against Two Years Later, Kerry Flip-Flopped. ?Kerry no longer supports the 50-cent [gas tax] hike, nor the 25-cent hike proposed by the [Concord] coalition.? (Michael Grunwald, ?Kerry Gets Low Mark On Budgeting,? The Boston Globe, 4/30/96) | |
Abortion a State Issue ?I think the question of abortion is one that should be left for the states to decide,? Kerry said during his failed 1972 Congressional bid. (?John Kerry On The Issues,? The [Lowell, MA] Sun, 10/11/72) | Abortion a Federal Issue ?The right to choose is the law of the United States. No person has the right to infringe on that freedom. Those of us who are in government have a special responsibility to see to it that the United States continues to protect this right, as it must protect all rights secured by the constitution.? | |
Drilling in ANWAR - Against Kerry voted against drilling in ANWAR Upheld 52-48 S.Amdt. 272 to S.Con.Res. 23 (Budget resolution FY2004 ) | Drilling in ANWAR - For it MATTHEWS: How about ANWR? You guys want to see ANWR because you want to see guys working in your business. I guess there?s a lot of Teamsters jobs up there lined up and organized, if you could put a pipeline up to the Alaska wilderness. He is against that. HOFFA: Well, we talked about that. He says, look, I am against ANWR, but I am going to put that pipeline in and we?re going to drill like never before. MATTHEWS: What, are they going to run water through it? HOFFA: ... more jobs than the ANWR would have ever created. MATTHEWS: What are they going to run through the pipeline? HOFFA: And that?s the position he?s taking. MATTHEWS: But he is against drilling up there. What are they going to run through the pipeline? HOFFA: Well, they are going to drill all over, according to him. And he says, we?re going to be drilling all over the United States. And he says that is going to create more jobs. | |
PAC Money - For It Kerry Used To Decry ?Special Interests And Their PAC Money.? ??I?m frequently told by cynics in Washington that refusing PAC money is naive,? Kerry told his supporters in 1985. ?Do you agree that it is ?naïve? to turn down special interests and their PAC money??? (Glen Johnson, ?In A Switch, Kerry Is Launching A PAC,? The Boston Globe, 12/15/01) | PAC Money - Against it But Kerry Created His Own Hard Money PAC Called Citizen Soldier Fund, Which Raised Over $700,000. ?A week after repeating that he has refused to accept donations from political action committees, Senator John F. Kerry announced yesterday that he was forming a committee that would accept PAC money for him to distribute to other Democratic candidates. ? Kerry?s stance on soft money, unregulated donations funneled through political parties, puts him in the position of raising the type of money that he, McCain, and others in the campaign-finance reform movement are trying to eliminate.? (Federal Election Commission Website, www.fec.gov, Accessed 2/10/04; Glen Johnson, ?In A Switch, Kerry Is Launching A PAC,? The Boston Globe, 12/15/01) | |
$10,000 Limit to His PAC When Kerry Established His PAC In 2001, He Instituted $10,000 Limit On Donations. ?A week after repeating that he has refused to accept donations from political action committees, Senator John F. Kerry announced yesterday that he was forming a committee that would accept PAC money for him to distribute to other Democratic candidates ? The statement also declared that the new PAC would voluntarily limit donations of so-called soft money to $10,000 per donor per year and disclose the source and amount of all such donations.? (Glen Johnson, ?In A Switch, Kerry Is Launching A Pac,? The Boston Globe, 12/15/01) | $10,000 Limit to His PAC One Year Later, Kerry Started Accepting Unlimited Contributions. ?Senator John F. Kerry, who broke with personal precedent last year when he established his first political action committee, has changed his fund-raising guidelines again, dropping a $10,000 limit on contributions from individuals, a cap he had touted when establishing the PAC. The Massachusetts Democrat said yesterday he decided to accept unlimited contributions, which has already allowed him to take in ?soft money? donations as large as $25,000, because of the unprecedented fund-raising demands confronting him as a leader in the Senate Democratic caucus.? (Glen Johnson, ?Kerry Shifts Fund-Raising Credo For His Own PAC,? The Boston Globe, 10/4/02) | |
Personnal Funds in 1996 Race - Against It In 1996, Kerry And Weld Established $500,000 Limit Of Personal Wealth To Be Used In Senate Campaign. ?In 1996, Kerry and Weld gave their already noteworthy Senate race added significance by establishing a spending cap. The candidates agreed to spend no more than $6.9 million from July 1 through the election. Weld ended up spending $6.6 million and Kerry $6.3 million. One key element of the agreement limited the candidates to spending $500,000 in personal wealth, a clause Weld favored because Kerry is married to a millionaire, Teresa Heinz.? (Glen Johnson, ?In Kerry?s Plan For A Pac, The Resolution Of Opposites,? The Boston Globe, 12/18/01) | Personal Funds in 1996 Race - For It Kerry Broke Agreement By Spending $1.2 Million Over Limit. ?[P]ost-election reports showed a last-minute infusion of $1.7 million from Kerry?s wife, heiress Teresa Heinz. ? [K]erry denied that his campaign violated its agreement. The money had been loaned--not contributed--by his wife, he explained. ?There was nothing in the agreement that restricted us from taking a loan ? and we paid it back in $1,000 and $2,000 chunks.?? (?Global Ecology Lobby Rocked By Defection,? Political Finance, The Newsletter, 1/02) | |
Against Vietnam in Campaigns 1992 in defense of Bill Clinton's Draft Dodging: "I am saddened that Vietnam has yet again been inserted into the campaign." | For Vietnam in From "About John Kerry" at John Kerry.com | |
NAFTA - For Kerry voted for NAFTA: | NAFTA - Against Kerry, who voted for NAFTA in 1993, expressed some doubt about the strength of free-trade agreements. ?If it were before me today, I would vote against it because it doesn?t have environmental or labor standards in it,? he said.? (David Lightman, ?Democrats Battle For Labor?s Backing,? Hartford Courant, 8/6/03) | |
Federal Health Benefits - In 1993, Kerry Expressed Doubts That Federal Employees Health Benefits System Worked Well. ?Hillary Rodham Clinton today offered a fresh description of one of the most confusing elements of the Administration health care plan, the health insurance purchasing alliances, saying they would let all Americans choose coverage in the way members of Congress do. ? Senator John Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, said he was not sure that the Federal program worked all that well.? (Adam Clymer, ?Hillary Clinton Says Health Plan Will Be Familiar,? The New York Times, 12/8/93) Kerry Expressed Personal Dissatisfaction With His Coverage Through Federal Program. ?Earlier this month, when Hillary Rodham Clinton came to Boston and vowed that average Americans would get as good coverage as that enjoyed by their senators and representatives, Sen. John F. Kerry told Clinton that he thought the country could do better. The Massachusetts Democrat said he was thinking, among other recent disasters, of his $500 dental bill for treatment of an abscessed tooth. ?Because it was done in the dentist?s office, rather than the hospital, they didn?t cover it. So they were urging me to go spend twice as much in a hospital,? said Kerry, who is covered by BACE, the Beneficial Association of Capitol Employees.? (Ana Puga, ?Lawmakers Talk Health Care,? The Boston Globe, 12/19/93) | Federal Health Benefits - Now, On Campaign Trail, Kerry Is Enthusiastic About Health Care He Receives As Senator. ?As a U.S. Senator, I could get the best health care in the world. Most people aren?t so lucky, and we need to change that. That?s why my plan gives every American access to the same kind of health care that members of Congress give themselves. ? Because your family?s health care is just as important as any politicians? in Washington.? (Sen. John Kerry, ?Affordable Health Care For All Americans,? Remarks At Mercy Medical, Cedar Rapids, IA, 12/14/03) Kerry: ?I?m Going To Make Available To Every American The Same Health Care Plan That Senators And Congressmen Give Themselves ?? (Sen. John Kerry, AARP Democrat Candidate Debate, Bedford, NH, 11/18/03) | |
Military Service for Public Office - Against Kerry: Service Should Not Be ?Litmus Test? For Leadership. ?Mr. President, you and I know that if support or opposition to the war were to become a litmus test for leadership, America would never have leaders or recover from the divisions created by that war. You and I know that if service or nonservice in the war is to become a test of qualification for high office, you would not have a Vice President, nor would you have a Secretary of Defense and our Nation would never recover from the divisions created by that war.? (Sen. John Kerry, Congressional Record, 10/08/92, p. S17709) | Military Service for Public Office - For Kerry Constantly ?Challenged The Stature Of His Democratic Opponents? Over Their Lack Of Military Service. ?And more than ever, Mr. Kerry is invoking his stature as a Vietnam veteran as he challenges the stature of his Democratic opponents -- none of whom, he frequently points out, have ?worn the uniform of our country? -- to withstand a debate with Mr. Bush on national security.? (Adam Nagourney, ?As Campaign Tightens, Kerry Sharpens Message,? The New York Times, 8/10/03) | |
Burma Sanctions In 1995, Kerry Was Against Burma Sanctions. ??I question whether isolation is a successful means of promoting political change,? Kerry told a constituent in a 1995 letter justifying his opposition to a Burma sanction bill.? (Geeta Anand, et al., ?Menino Gets Ahead Of Himself, Starts Contemplating Third Term,? The Boston Globe, 5/18/97) | Burma Sanctions But Now Kerry Supports Burma Sanctions. ?In his 1996 reelection campaign, Kerry, after Governor William F. Weld took up the cause, was badgered by advisers into shifting his position. But as he eyes a presidential campaign and the Burma sanction movement gains credibility, Kerry ? describes the Burma regime as a ?semi-criminalized dictatorship ? which should not be treated with respect by other nations, but should be instead subject to limitations on travel, investment, and access to the most developed nations.?? (Geeta Anand, et al., ?Menino Gets Ahead Of Himself, Starts Contemplating Third Term,? The Boston Globe, 5/18/97) | |
Health Coverage - Against In 1994, Kerry Said Democrats Push Health Care Too Much. ?[Kerry] said Kennedy and Clinton?s insistence on pushing health care reform was a major cause of the Democratic Party?s problems at the polls.? (Joe Battenfeld, ?Jenny Craig Hit With Sex Harassment Complaint - By Men,? Boston Herald, 11/30/94) | Health Coverage - For But Now Kerry Calls Health Care His ?Passion.? ?Sen. John Kerry says expanding coverage is ?my passion.?? (Susan Page, ?Health Specifics Could Backfire On Candidates,? USA Today, 6/2/03) | |
Welfare Reform - Against In 1993, Kerry Voted To Kill Bipartisan Welfare Work Requirement. In 1993, Kerry and Kennedy voted against a welfare-to-work requirement that was supported by many Democrats, including Sens. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) and Harry Reid (D-NV): Fiscal 1993 Supplemental Appropriations - Welfare Work Requirement. ?Moynihan, D-N.Y., motion to table (kill) the D?Amato, R-N.Y., amendment to sharply cut federal welfare administration aid to states that do not, within a year, require at least 10 percent of their able-bodied welfare recipients without dependents to work. The required workfare participation rate would be increased by 2 percent a year until 50 percent were working.? (H.R. 2118, CQ Vote #163: Rejected 34-64: 6/22/93, Kerry Voted Yea) | Welfare Reform - For But In 1996, Kerry Voted For Welfare Reform. (H.R. 3734, CQ Vote #262: Adopted 78-21: 8/1/96, Kerry Voted Yea) | |
Gay Marriage - For ?While I believe marriage is between a man and a woman, for 200 years, this has been a state issue. I oppose this election year effort to amend the Constitution in an area that each state can adequately address, and I will vote against such an amendment if it comes to the Senate floor." oted against the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which defined marriage as a union of a man and woman. At the time, Kerry said he opposed gay marriage, but the law amounted to gay-bashing. Kerry Signed Letter Backing Gay Marriage | Gay Marriage - Against Kerry Supports Mass. Constitutional Amendment banning gay marriage: "If the Massachusetts Legislature crafts an appropriate amendment that provides for partnership and civil unions, then I would support it, and it would advance the goal of equal protection," Kerry explained his opposition to gay marriage by saying it was simply ?a matter of how I view the world. Culturally, historically and religiously I don?t believe that is a distinction that makes a difference.? Kerry said he backed civil unions of the type Dean had signed into law. | Boston Globe: Kerry Supports Gay Marriage Ban Kerry Press Release on Gay Marriage USA Today - Kerry's letter backing Gay Marriage |
Judge Litmus Test - Against Kerry Used To Oppose Litmus Tests For Judicial Nominees. ?Throughout two centuries, our federal judiciary has been a model institution, one which has insisted on the highest standards of conduct by our public servants and officials, and which has survived with undiminished respect. Today, I fear that this institution is threatened in a way that we have not seen before. ? This threat is that of the appointment of a judiciary which is not independent, but narrowly ideological, through the systematic targeting of any judicial nominee who does not meet the rigid requirements of litmus tests imposed ?? (Sen. John Kerry, Congressional Record, 2/3/86, p. S864) | Judge Litmus Test - For But Now Kerry Says He Would Only Support Supreme Court Nominees Who Pledge To Uphold Roe v. Wade. ?The potential retirement of Supreme Court justices makes the 2004 presidential election especially important for women, Senator John F. Kerry told a group of female Democrats yesterday, and he pledged that if elected president he would nominate to the high court only supporters of abortion rights under its Roe v. Wade decision. ? ?Any president ought to appoint people to the Supreme Court who understand the Constitution and its interpretation by the Supreme Court. In my judgment, it is and has been settled law that women, Americans, have a defined right of privacy and that the government does not make the decision with respect to choice. Individuals do.?? (Glen Johnson, ?Kerry Vows Court Picks To Be Abortion-Rights Supporters,? The Boston Globe, 4/9/03) | |
Medical Marijuan a - Against Kerry Said His ?Personal Disposition Is Open To The Issue Of Medical Marijuana.? ?Aaron Houston of the Granite Staters for Medical Marijuana said that just a month ago Mr. Kerry seemed to endorse medical marijuana use, and when asked about the content of his mysterious study, said, ?I am trying to find out. I don?t know.? Mr. Kerry did say his ?personal disposition is open to the issue of medical marijuana? and that he?d stop Drug Enforcement Administration raids on patients using the stuff under California?s medical marijuana law.? (Jennifer Harper, ?Inside Politics,? The Washington Times, 8/8/03) | Medical Marijuana - For But Now Kerry Says He Wants To Wait For Study Analyzing Issue Before Making Final Decision. ?The Massachusetts Democrat said Wednesday he?d put off any final decision on medical marijuana because there?s ?a study under way analyzing what the science is.?? (Jennifer Harper, ?Inside Politics,? The Washington Times, 8/8/03) | |
Affirmative Action ?...today the civil rights arena is controlled by lawyers and the winners and losers determined by...rules most Americans neither understand nor are sympathetic with. ...This shift in the civil rights agenda has directed most of out attention and much of our hope into one inherently limited and divisive program: affirmative action | Affirmative Action Backtracks: "let me explain exactly what I said. Affirmative action, if you recall, back in the 1990s?Bill Clinton said this, too?needed to be mended. I was one of the early people saying we have to mend it, don?t end it." | |
Death Penalty - Against Voted No to limit AppealsVoted no to reject racial AppealsIntroduced mandatory DNA Testing In 1996, Kerry Attacked Governor Bill Weld For Supporting Death Penalty For Terrorists. KERRY: ?Your policy would amount to a terrorist protection policy. Mine would put them in jail.? (1996 Massachusetts Senate Debate, 9/16/96) In 1996, Kerry Said, ?You Can Change Your Mind On Things, But Not On Life-And-Death Issues.? (Timothy J. Connolly, ?The ?Snoozer? Had Some Life,? [Worcester, MA] Telegram & Gazette, 7/3/96) | Death Penalty - For He is pro-choice, opposes the death penalty except for terrorists, favors gun control and would repeal the President's tax breaks for the wealthy. John Kerry Press Release | |
Flipped on Business Kerry Voted Against Exempting Small Businesses And Family Farms From Clinton Income Tax Increase. To shield small businesses and family farms from President Clinton's proposed tax on the wealthy, to make proprietorships, partnerships, and Subchapter S corporations exempt from President Clinton's proposed increase in the marginal individual income tax rates, and to reduce the add-on spending contained in President Clinton's plan by a corresponding amount so that no deficit increase results from exempting small businesses and family farms from the increased marginal tax rates. Three Months Later, Kerry Voted In Favor Of Proposal To Exclude Small Businesses From Increased Income Tax. To limit the tax rate for certain small businesses, and for other purposes.(S. 1134, CQ Vote #171: Motion Rejected 56-42: R 43-0; D 13-42, 6/24/93, Kerry Voted Yea) | Flopped on Business Kerry Claimed He Fought To Exempt Small Businesses From Income Tax Increases. ?I worked to amend the reconciliation bill so that it would ? exempt small businesses who are classified as subchapter S corporations from the increased individual income tax.? (Sen. John Kerry, Congressional Record, 6/29/93, p. S 8268) | |
No Child Left Behind NCLB Act of 2001 - Kerry voted for NCLB. | No Child Left Behind "Between now and the time I'm sworn in January 2005, I'm going to use every day to make this president accountable for making a mockery of the words 'No Child Left Behind,'" he said. | |
Raising Taxes during September 2001: Said Taxes Should Not Rise In Economic Downturn. ?The first priority is the economy of our nation. And when you have a downturn in the economy, the last thing you do is raise taxes or cut spending. We shouldn?t do either. We need to maintain a course that hopefully will stimulate the economy. ? No, we should not raise taxes, but we have to put everything on the table to take a look at why we have this structural problem today. ? [Y]ou don?t want to raise taxes.? (NBC?s ?Meet The Press,? 9/2/01) We Should ?Absolutely Not Raise Taxes.? ?Well, I think it?s very clear what I favor because we voted for it early in the spring, which was the Democratic budget alternative that had triggers in it where you didn?t wind up spending money you don?t have. It had a smaller tax cut but more tax cut for a stimulus, which is what we need. So you ask me, what do we need now? Yes, we need additional stimulus. We should absolutely not raise taxes. We should not cut spending. What we need to do is drive the economy of this country. The economy is the number one issue. It is the most important thing we should focus on.? (CNN?s ?Evans, Novak, Hunt & Shields,? 9/8/01) April 2002: Said He Wanted Larger Tax Cut And Was ?Not In Favor Of? Repeal. CNN?s TUCKER CARLSON: ?Senator Kerry ? [many Democrats] [g]et a lot of political mileage out of criticizing [President Bush?s tax cut], but nobody has the courage to say repeal it. Are you for repealing it?? KERRY: ?It?s not a question of courage. ? And it?s not an issue right now. We passed appropriately a tax cut as a stimulus, some $40 billion. Many of us thought it should have even maybe been a little bit larger this last year ? [T]he next tax cut doesn?t take effect until 2004. If we can grow the economy enough between now and then, if we have sensible policies in place and make good choices, who knows what our choices will be. So it?s simply not a ripe issue right now. And I?m not in favor of turning around today and repealing it.? (CNN?s ?Crossfire,? 4/16/02) | Raising Taxes during economic downturn - for December 2002: Flip-Flopped, Would Keep Tax Cuts From Taking Effect. NBC?s TIM RUSSERT: ?Senator ? should we freeze or roll back the Bush tax cut?? KERRY: ?Well, I wouldn?t take away from people who?ve already been given their tax cut ? What I would not do is give any new Bush tax cuts.? ? RUSSERT: ?So the tax cut that?s scheduled to be implemented in the coming years ?? KERRY: ?No new tax cut under the Bush plan. ? It doesn?t make economic sense.? ? RUSSERT: ?Now, this is a change ?? (NBC?s ?Meet The Press,? 12/1/02) Called For Freeze Of Bush Tax Cuts In Favor Of Year-Long Suspension Of Payroll Taxes On First $10,000 Of Personal Income. ?Kerry said Bush?s tax cuts have mainly benefited the rich while doing little for the economy. Kerry is proposing to halt Bush?s additional tax cuts and instead impose a yearlong suspension of payroll taxes on the first $10,000 of income to help the poor and middle class.? (Tyler Bridges, ?Kerry Visits Miami To Start Raising Funds,? The Miami Herald, 12/7/02) | 0 |
For ending double taxation of dividends In December 2002, Kerry said, "We should encourage the measurement of the real value of companies by ending the double taxation of dividends." | Against ending double taxation of dividends Throughout 2003, Kerry opposed President Bush's tax plan, which, according to Bush, would eliminate the "double taxation on dividends." In May, Kerry voted against the final plan, which cut but didn't eliminate the tax on corporate dividends. | |
The Patriot Act - For Kerry Voted for the Patriot Act | The Patriot Act - Against Sen. Kerry, D-Mass., denounced the act in a speech to more than 800 people in the Sun Room of the Memorial Union. Kerry said the American people must stand up to protect the U.S. Constitution. "We will not be silenced, we will not be intimidated," he said. "We will be heard and we will stand up for our rights." | |
Is Black "President Clinton was often known as the first black president. I wouldn't be upset if I could earn the right to be the second." John Kerry | Ain't Black Kerry is quite obviously white. So was Bill Clinton. | |
Is Irish ''For those of us who are fortunate to share an Irish ancestry, we take great pride in the contributions that Irish-Americans ?" (Congressional Record, March 18, 1986). "As some of you may know, I am part-English and part-Irish. And when my Kerry ancestors first came over to Massachusetts from the old country to find work in the New World, it was my English ancestors who refused to hire them." | Ain't Irish Kerry was accused of using such comments to make his Irish-American constituents think he is one of them when, in fact, he isn't. His grandparents were Jewish who changed their names. | |
Intelligence - Against 1994: Proposed Bill To Gut $1 Billion From Intelligence And Freeze Spending For Two Major Intelligence Programs. Kerry proposed a bill cutting $1 billion from the budgets of the National Foreign Intelligence Program and from Tactical Intelligence, and freezing their budgets. The bill did not make it to a vote, but the language was later submitted (and defeated ? see below) as S. Amdt. 1452 to H.R. 3759. (S. 1826, Introduced 2/3/94) 1995: Proposed Bill Cutting $1.5 Billion From Intelligence Budget. Kerry introduced a bill that would ?reduce the Intelligence budget by $300 million in each of fiscal years 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, and 2000.? 1995: Voted To Slash FBI Funding By $80 Million. (H.R. 2076, CQ Vote #480: Adopted 49-41: R 9-40; D 40-1, 9/29/95, Kerry Voted Yea) 1997: Kerry Questioned Growth Of Intelligence Community After Cold War. ?Now that that [Cold War] struggle is over, why is it that our vast intelligence apparatus continues to grow even as Government resources for new and essential priorities fall far short of what is necessary? ?? Congressional Record 5/1/97, p. S3891) Kerry proposed cutting $1 billion from the National Foreign Intelligence Program and Tactical Intelligence budgets, and freezing their budgets. Defeated: | Intelligence - For "Kerry Strongly Supports Increased Intelligence Funding" Campaign slogan from JohnKerry.com | NoJFK2 Archive of S1290, S1826Search 104th for S 1290, S 1826, HR 2076 Congressional Record 5/1/97, p. S3891 S.AMDT.1452 to H.R.3759 |
Cuban Sanctions H.R. 927: Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity Act of 1996 Measure Title: A bill to seek international sanctions against the Castro government in Cuba, to plan for support of a transition government leading to a democratically elected government in Cuba, and for other purposes. - Passed 74-22 Kerry voted Nay Voted Against Stronger Cuba Sanctions: S. 1234, CQ Vote #189, Motion Agreed To 55-43: R 43-10; D 12-33, 6/30/99, Kerry Voted Nay; To establish a National Bipartisan Commission on Cuba to evaluate United States policy with respect to Cuba. Senator John F. Kerry, the Massachusetts Democrat and member of the Foreign Relations Committee, said in an interview that a reevaluation of relations with Cuba was ''way overdue.'' ''We have a frozen, stalemated, counterproductive policy that is not in humanitarian interests nor in our larger credibility interest in the region,'' Kerry said. | Cuban Sanctions Meet the Press: MR. RUSSERT: Would you consider lifting sanctions, lifting the embargo against Cuba? SEN. KERRY: Not unilaterally, not now, no. MR. RUSSERT: Would you lessen travel restrictions? SEN. KERRY: Yes. MR. RUSSERT: How? SEN. KERRY: I?d like to get people traveling in there. I think that people traveling in there weakens Castro. I want to do what it takes to weaken Fidel Castro. I don?t like Fidel Castro. Some people have cottoned to him in our party and go down and visit. I went to Cuba once and I purposely said I don?t want to. I... MR. RUSSERT: But, Senator, we trade with Russia, we trade with China, why not trade with Cuba? SEN. KERRY: I don?t think we should do that automatically. Because I think you want to get something for something, and I think that you should re-evaluate, and I agree?I mean, I don?t change what I said. But I think we need to move step by step in a way that begins to engage and see what we can do. But I wouldn?t just give him a reward for nothing, no. | Boston Globe Article $ Web Archive of Boston Globe Article |
Persian Gulf War - Against Kerry voted against the Authorization to use force against Iraq Roll Call Vote ?Rather than take a side--albeit the one he thought was most expedient--Kerry actually stood on both sides of the first Gulf war, much like he did this time around. Consider this ?Notebook? item from TNR?s March 25, 1991 issue, which ran under the headline ?Same Senator, Same Constituent?: ?Thank you for contacting me to express your opposition ... to the early use of military force by the US against Iraq. I share your concerns. On January 11, I voted in favor of a resolution that would have insisted that economic sanctions be given more time to work and against a resolution giving the president the immediate authority to go to war.? | Persian Gulf War - For Kerry voted for Nunn's rejected resolution which would allow sanctions time to remove Hussein from Kuwait. Roll Call Vote Nunn Stated in 1996: Retiring Sen. Sam Nunn now believes his vote against authorizing the Persian Gulf War hurt his credibility and removed once and for all whatever thoughts he had about running for president. ``I think I was wrong on that,'' said Nunn, calling it the greatest regret of his career as the Senate's unquestioned expert on national defense. ``I think I was wrong because if I had voted that way, it would have given a more solid vote for the authorization of the war, which I thought was justified.'' Article Kerry voted for the Concurrent Resolution supporting the effort to remove Iraq from Kuwait. Roll Call Vote | |
Iraq War For In October 2002, Kerry voted for the Iraq war resolution sought by Bush. Kerry voted against an alternative that would have authorized force only if the U.N. Security Council sanctioned it. "I voted against that $87 billion in Washington yesterday," Mr. Kerry said. | Iraq War Against Soon after voting for the resolution, Kerry expressed dismay over the march to war. He said he wouldn't "support the president to proceed unilaterally" and consistently criticized administration policy leading up to the invasion "But let me make it clear, I am for winning the war in Iraq." | |
Israeli Fence - Against October 2003: Kerry Calls Fence ?Barrier To Peace.? ?And I know how disheartened Palestinians are by the Israeli government?s decision to build a barrier off the green line, cutting deeply into Palestinian areas. We do not need another barrier to peace. Provocative and counterproductive measures only harm Israel?s security over the long- term, they increase hardships to the Palestinian people, and they make the process of negotiating an eventual settlement that much harder.? (Sen. John Kerry, Remarks Before Arab American Institute National Leadership Conference, Dearborn, MI, 10/17/03) | Israeli Fence - For US Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, the frontrunner in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, described Israel?s construction of a security barrier as a ?legitimate act of self defense? | |
On Criticizing President During war Senator John F. Kerry of Massachusetts, who voted to authorize military action but has accused President Bush of rushing into war, said he will cease his complaints once the shooting starts. ''It's what you owe the troops,'' said a statement from Kerry, a Navy veteran of the Vietnam War. ''I remember being one of those guys and reading news reports from home. If America is at war, I won't speak a word without measuring how it'll sound to the guys doing the fighting when they're listening to their radios in the desert.'' | On Criticizing President During war "What we need now is not just a regime change in Saddam Hussein and Iraq, but we need a regime change in the United States," | Boston Globe Archive $ |
Ethanol - Against It Voted twice against tax breaks for ethanol: 2: To reduce the revenue level contained in the budget resolution by an amount sufficient to assume an exemption under the Btu energy tax for off road fuel use and to offset lost revenues by reducing spending increases. Kerry Voted Against Ethanol MandatesH.R. 4624, CQ Vote #255 | Ethanol - For It "We must invest in domestic, renewable sources of energy like solar, wind, ethanol, and biomass. These are under our control and not subject to embargoes of foreign governments. They cannot be seized by terrorists. " | S. Con. Res 18 Vote 44 Roll Call vote |