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.
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.
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.
Montanans deserve answers from Rehberg on questions that he consistently dodges, like these:
Tester highlighted his consistent support for equal pay for women for equal work, support for cancer screening initiatives and his support for the U.S. Senate’s bipartisan Violence Against Women Act …
A health care coalition representing 100 million members claims that Congressman Dennis Rehberg’s controversial spending proposal will do “untold harm to Americans.”
The American Medical Association calls the spending plan Rehberg introduced to his congressional committee “pennywise and pound foolish” for eliminating the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
A coalition committed to supporting biomedical imaging research is criticizing Congressman Dennis Rehberg’s controversial spending proposal, saying the plan puts life-saving research at risk.
The 44 organizations representing the Nursing Community informed Rehberg that his spending plan cuts “funding to health professions and nursing workforce programs that are critical to sustaining an effective health care delivery system.”
Congressman helped pass bill that “threatens women’s health and lives”