What do pigs , cosmetics have to do with election
George Curry/NNPA Columnist
Issue date: 9/21/08 Section: Politics
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This year, there is no beef. Instead, everyone is pigging out on pigs. Especially pigs with lipstick. And perhaps that's fitting imagery for those peddling political slop. They are giving both pigs and lipstick a bad name.
John McCain's running mate, a self-described hockey mom, kicked off this trite min-debate at the Republican National Convention when she said the only difference between a pit bull and a hockey mom was lipstick.
In a clear reference to his contention that John McCain would continue Presdent Bush's failing policies, Barack Obama said, "…You can put lipstick on a pig, it's still a pig."
The McCain camp pretended outrage, accusing Obama of referring to vice presidential nominee, Gov. Sarah Palin. Their argument? She's the only one in the race who wears lipstick.
As far-fetched as that seems, it is even more incredulous when you realize that McCain has used similar language at least twice.
According to Time magazine, Sen. McCaign used the expression while campaigning in Iowa in October 2007, to criticize Hillary Clinton's revamped health care plan, which he said wasn't much different from the one she unsuccessfully pushed in 1993. "I think they put some lipstick on the pig, but it's still a pig," he said.
The magazine reported that McCain brought up the phrase again in May this year to describe Clinton's health care plan at a town hall in Denver: "I don't like to use the term, but the latest proposal I see is putting lipstick on a pig," he said.
This debate over pigs and cosmetics is part of a larger Republican strategy to keep Sen. Barack Obama on the defensive by forcing him to address phony issues
Even more troubling is McCain's willingness to keep lying about the GOP's record, even after the lies have been exposed. For example, despite the record clearly showing that Palin favored the "Bridge to Nowhere" until the federal government decided to drop the project, the GOP keeps insisting that Palin opposed the bridge; she opposed it only after the fact.

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