But Rehberg’s campaign manager said in early October that Rehberg himself “has no problem with the documents being released at all.”
The news organization Politico reports that Rehberg is one of the few U.S. Senate candidates who supports weakening the right to pursue legal recourse despite “abusing the courts for [his] own personal gain.”
Congressman Dennis Rehberg made a mockery of Montanans’ ability to sort fact from fiction during Saturday night’s final U.S. Senate debate when he repeatedly lied about his irresponsible decisions that hurt Montana.
When asked about his out-of-touch comments during his debate Saturday with Montana farmer Jon Tester, Rehberg doubled down, claiming everyone in the room is “represented by a lobbyist in Washington, D.C.”
Congressman Dennis Rehberg again failed to hold himself accountable by refusing to explain why, in 2009, he voted to end Medicare as we know it during tonight’s U.S. Senate debate in Bozeman.
Thousands of Montana sportsmen and women would have been forced to give up their right to fish and hunt on public lands if Rehberg passed his controversial plan to sell off prime public land to wealthy private owners for rock-bottom prices.
Rehberg admitted there is no more TV air-time to buy in Montana thanks to all of the money being spent on false attack ads by Rove and the Koch Brothers.
Montanans across the state are opening their local newspapers this week to find full-page ads contrasting Jon Tester’s Montana-first agenda with the wrong priorities of his fellow U.S. Senate candidates, Congressman Dennis Rehberg and Libertarian Dan Cox.
Congressman Dennis Rehberg’s luxury bus tour across Montana was missing one key person this weekend: Dennis Rehberg.
The first phone call that Congressman Dennis Rehberg made after his 2009 boat crash on Flathead Lake was to his current campaign manager.