Rehberg will be cruising aboard a “donated” Prevost Entertainer luxury with Rehberg’s name painted on it. According to a bus rental agency, renting a luxury bus like Rehberg’s costs between $2,000 and $3,400 per day.
Montanans deserve answers from Rehberg on questions that he consistently dodges, like these:
The 30-second ad, now airing across Montana, takes Rehberg to task over his irresponsible, meritless 2010 lawsuit against the City of Billings and its Fire Department.
But in June, Rehberg abruptly backed out of a long-planned Montana Broadcasting Association debate in Whitefish, Mont.
“The contribution limits on Montana’s political campaigns have worked well for decades, ensuring that our democracy is controlled only by people and their ideas. This decision, like Citizens United, moves us in the wrong direction. We don’t need more money in politics; we need more accountability.”
On September 9, 2009, two weeks after his involvement in an infamous alcohol-involved boat crash on Flathead Lake that left one of his top staffers in a coma, Congressman Dennis Rehberg held a conference call with a small number of Montana reporters.
Montanans for Tester is drawing attention to Congressman Dennis Rehberg’s ten votes to raise taxes on Montana families after an out-of-state special interest group launched another false attack ad Friday.
There’s a little-known fact about a controversial 2005 European vacation for members of Congress that prompted an ethics investigation by the Wall Street Journal: Congressman Dennis Rehberg was on it.
Few congressional trips have raised sharper debate behind the scenes than lobbyist-turned-Congressman Dennis Rehberg’s taxpayer-funded vacation to South America.
In 2004 Rehberg, along with his wife, flew to the South Pacific island nations in a luxury jet operated by the U.S. military. While the Rehbergs paid nothing for their travel, Montana taxpayers paid as much as $20,000 per hour for the 16-hour flight.