Contact Information: Contact: Christopher Gunn Communications Director American Small Business League (707) 789-9575
Obama Bails Out on Pledge to End Contracting Scandal, According to the American Small Business League
| Quelle: American Small Business League
PETALUMA, CA--(Marketwire - October 8, 2008) - The following is a statement by the American
Small Business League:
On February 26, 2008, in the midst of his campaign to become the Democratic
nominee for President of the United States, Senator Barack Obama (D-IL)
issued the statement, "It is time to end the diversion of federal small
business contracts to corporate giants."
Senator Obama's statement was in response to 15 federal investigations that
have been released since 2003, which have found the Bush Administration has
diverted hundreds of billions of dollars in federal small business
contracts to some of the largest corporations in the United States and
Europe.
Federal investigators found hundreds of large businesses have received
billions of dollars in government small business contracts. Large firms
that received federal small business contracts included: Rolls Royce,
Office Depot, Dell, Xerox, Hewlett-Packard, Raytheon, Oracle, Archer
Daniels Midland, John Deere, General Dynamics, Titan Industries, L-3
Communications, Northrop Grumman and British Aerospace Engineering (BAE).
Now that Senator Obama has clinched the Democratic nomination, and is the
most likely presidential candidate to win the election in November, he has
backed away from his pledge to America's 27 million small businesses to
stop the blatant and ongoing abuses in federal small business contracting
programs. The Obama campaign went so far as to modify his original complete
quote on the issue and to remove his original statement, "It is time to end
the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants."
Despite the fact that over 99 percent of voters would obviously agree that
Fortune 500 firms should not be able to receive federal small business
contracts, Senator Obama has refused to mention the issue in public
speeches and has declined to include any mention of the issue on his
website or in his small business plan.
American Small Business League (ASBL) President Lloyd Chapman has
encouraged the Obama Campaign to include the issue in its small business
plan during a series of conference calls and e-mails. Thus far, they have
consistently declined.
"I cannot imagine why Senator Obama has now decided to flip-flop on his
pledge to end these blatant abuses against middle class firms. We are in a
severe recession and American businesses need political leaders they can
count on," Chapman said. "I think Senator Obama's handling of this issue
could be a real glimpse of his true character. We'll see if he can deliver
on his promise of 'change we can believe in' or if he is just another
overly ambitious politician that is willing to say or do anything to get
elected."