Jake Tapper reports:
In Youngstown, Ohio, this week Obama said that McCain is “offering $4 billion more in tax breaks to the biggest oil companies in America — including $1.2 billion to Exxon-Mobil…a company that, last quarter, made the same amount of money in 30 seconds that a typical Ohio worker makes in a year.” In Lansing, Michigan, Obama said Exxon-Mobil “is the company that, last quarter, made $1,500 every second. That’s more than $300,000 in the time it takes you to fill up a tank with gas that’s costing you more than $4-a-gallon. And Senator McCain not only wants them to keep every dime of that money, he wants to give them more. So make no mistake – the oil companies have placed their bet on Senator McCain.” But based on data downloaded electronically from the Federal Election Commission on July 29, 2008, reports CRP: “Through June, Exxon employees have given Obama $42,100 to McCain’s $35,166. Chevron favors Obama $35,157 to $28,500, and Obama edges out McCain with BP $16,046 vs. $11,500.”
At a campaign stop in Ohio today, McCain rapped Obama for voting for President Bush’s energy bill:
“I spoke up against the administration and Congress and Sen. Obama when they gave us an energy bill with more than giveaways to big oil and really no solution to our energy problems,” McCain said. “I want to take a minute here on this issue ’cause I think Sen. Obama might be a little bit confused. Yesterday he accused me of having President Bush’s policies on energy. That’s odd because he voted for the president’s energy bill and I voted against it.”[…] “It had $2.8 billion in corporate welfare to big oil companies and they’re already making record profits as you know,” McCain said of the 2005 energy bill. “Sen. Obama voted for that bill, and it’s big oil giveaways. I know he hasn’t been in the senate that long, but even in the real world, voting for something — voting for something means your support, and voting against something means you oppose it.”
