Biden's comments on special needs kids called 'new low'

by master_jim2008 | September 9, 2008 at 04:34 pm
652 views | 16 Recommendations | 10 comments

Notice how low the Republican response was to this. Talk about taking the low road. What hurts most is that some people will believe it.

(CNN) -- Sen. John McCain's campaign rebuked Sen. Joe Biden on Tuesday, saying the Democratic vice presidential nominee had "sunk to a new low" by raising a debate over who cares more for special needs children.

Sen. Joseph Biden embraces a supporter during a campaign stop in Columbia, Missouri, on Tuesday.

The Republican camp's sharp response came after Biden said GOP advocates for children with birth defects should support stem cell research.

During a campaign event in Columbia, Missouri, Biden did not mention his Republican counterpart by name but said, "I hear all this talk about how the Republicans are going to work in dealing with parents who have both the joy ... and the difficulty of raising a child who has a developmental disability, who were born with a birth defect."

Biden's support of stem cell research is at odds with the position taken by the Republicans' vice presidential nominee, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, whose 5-month-old son, Trig, has Down syndrome.

Palin, an evangelical Christian, opposes stem cell research because it involves the use of human embryos, but her running mate, GOP presidential nominee McCain, does support stem cell research.

"Well, guess what, folks? If you care about it, why don't you support stem cell research?" asked Biden, the running mate of Democratic presidential nominee Sen. Barack Obama.

Those comments brought a sharp response.

"Barack Obama's running mate sunk to a new low today, launching an offensive debate over who cares more about special needs children," McCain-Palin spokesman Ben Porritt said. "Playing politics with this issue is disturbing and indicative of a desperate campaign."

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Biden spokesman David Wade insisted that the Delaware senator's comments were not directed at Palin.

"This is a clash of policies, not a clash of personalities," Wade said. "We've heard not a dime's worth of difference between the McCain-Palin ticket and the Bush administration on medical breakthroughs that millions of parents and doctors believe could save lives and transform the quality of life for countless Americans."

During her acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention last week, Palin told parents of children with disabilities that she would be "a friend and advocate in the White House."

But the Alaska governor's support for the disabled has come under scrutiny since McCain chose Palin to be his running mate nearly two weeks ago.

Before her run for the vice presidency, advocacy for special needs programs had not been a central part of her political campaigns or during her administration, despite her sister's autistic son. Watch more on Palin's budget priorities »

Palin signed a bill this year increasing special needs funding but frustrated some of the bill's co-sponsors by stepping in only at the last minute.

Sonya Kerr, an Anchorage attorney specializing in disability rights, filed a lawsuit against the state and Palin, alleging that there are not enough services for kids with special needs, specifically a child with autism.

"I would say, welcome, Gov. Palin, to our reality and what we've been trying to deal with for a long time," Kerr said. "I hope that it means that there will be support on a bipartisan basis for what people with disabilities need so we are not a bargaining chip in the political process."

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0
World_Groove

Palin did not cut funding for special needs education in Alaska by 62 percent. She didn’t cut it at all. In fact, she tripled per-pupil funding over just three years.


0
World_Groove


No Cut for "Special Needs" Kids


It's not true, as widely reported in mass e-mails, Web postings and at least one mainstream news source, that Palin slashed the special education budget in Alaska by 62 percent. CNN's Soledad O'Brien made the claim on Sept. 4 in an interview with Nicolle Wallace, a senior adviser to the McCain campaign:

O'Brien, Sept. 4: One are that has gotten certainly people sending to me a lot of e-mails is the question about as governor what she did with the special needs budget, which I'm sure you're aware, she cut significantly, 62 percent I think is the number from when she came into office. As a woman who is now a mother to a special needs child, and I think she actually has a nephew which is autistic as well. How much of a problem is this going to be as she tries to navigate both sides of that issue?

Such a move might have made Palin look heartless or hypocritical in view of her convention-speech pledge to be an advocate for special needs children and their families. But in fact, she increased special needs funding so dramatically that a representative of local school boards described the jump as "historic."

According to an April 2008 article in Education Week, Palin signed legislation in March 2008 that would increase public school funding considerably, including special needs funding. It would increase spending on what Alaska calls "intensive needs" students (students with high-cost special requirements) from $26,900 per student in 2008 to $73,840 per student in 2011. That almost triples the per-student spending in three fiscal years. Palin's original proposal, according to the Anchorage Daily News, would have increased funds slightly more, giving intensive needs students a $77,740 allotment by 2011.

Education Week: A second part of the measure raises spending for students with special needs to $73,840 in fiscal 2011, from the current $26,900 per student in fiscal 2008, according to the Alaska Department of Education and Early Development.

Unlike many other states, Alaska has relatively flush budget coffers, thanks to a rise in oil and gas revenues. Funding for schools will remain fairly level next year, however. Overall per-pupil funding across the state will rise by $100, to $5,480, in fiscal 2009. ...

Carl Rose, the executive director of the Association of Alaska School Boards, praised the changes in funding for rural schools and students with special needs as a "historic event," and said the finance overhaul would bring more stability to district budgets.

According to Eddy Jeans at the Alaska Department of Education and Early Development, funding for special needs and intensive needs students has increased every year since Palin entered office, from a total of $203 million in 2006 to a projected $276 million in 2009.

Those who claim that Palin cut special needs funding by 62 percent are looking in the wrong place and misinterpreting what they find there. They point to an apparent drop in the Department of Education and Early Development budget for special schools. But the special schools budget, despite the similar name, isn't the special needs budget. "I don’t even consider the special schools component [part of] our special needs funding," Jeans told FactCheck.org. "The special needs funding is provided through our public school funding formula. The special schools is simply a budget component where we have funding set aside for special projects," such as the Alaska School for the Deaf and the Alaska Military Youth Academy. A different budget component, the Foundation Program, governs special needs programs in the public school system.

And in any case, the decrease in funding for special schools is illusory. Palin moved the Alaska Military Youth Academy's ChalleNGe program, a residential military school program that teaches job and life skills to students under 20, out of the budget line for "special schools" and into its own line. This resulted in an apparent drop of more than $5 million in the special schools budget with no actual decrease in funding for the programs.



0
SquidLord

Excellent catch.

Karen Hatter
Karen Hatter
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 19:53 on September 9th, 2008

Master_jim2008, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Emilio Lizardo
Emilio Lizardo
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 22:25 on September 9th, 2008

master_jim2008, I like this story. It's good stuff.

This has to be a new low for politics on the whole planet ...

0
SquidLord

Certainly the reporting on this issue has sunk to a new low, with MSM folks not bothering to check their facts, their assertions, or anything else. But it is as we've come to expect.

0
djermano

Palin, an evangelical Christian, opposes stem cell research because it involves the use of human embryos, but her running mate, GOP presidential nominee McCain, does support stem cell research.

"Well, guess what, folks? If you care about it, why don't you support stem cell research?" asked Biden, the running mate of Democratic presidential nominee Sen. Barack Obama.

Bush has not supported stem cell research....and I am sure Biden was referring to that. McCain and Palin are divided on the issue.... That is no sign of a unified ticket

0
World_Groove

a bit off topic....


....only against "embryonic" derived stem cell research.


In the last two years science has developed many options to embryonic stem cells, and most of these options are supported by GOP.


duo
duo
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 21:24 on September 13th, 2008

master_jim2008, I like this story. It's good stuff.

It is not true that all stem cell research involves embryos, first of all.  Stem cells are available even in menstrual blood, as I read in an article here on NowPublic last night.  Stem cells are sometimes taken from the person of folks being treated.  They are also available from the umbilical cord following a live birth.  With proper research, other sources may be found. 

However, if a pregnancy has already been terminated by abortion, which is still a legal procedure, what the heck is wrong with using the embryo to save a life?  I don't get it.  To my idea, it is the same principal as using body parts from deceased persons for transplants.  The body of a 21-year-old shooting victim and organ donor can be used to save people who are dying or suffering from a debilitating health condition.  The recipients of his organs had nothing to do with his demise, but their lives can be saved or enhanced through his unfortunate loss of life.

When trying to understand Republicans, it is always a good idea to follow the money.  Morals are usually not the real reason behind their given position on a subject, but money often is.  Who stands to lose if stem cell research is conducted and proved to be very successful in treating chronic conditions?  Big health insurance companies would suffer if stem cell research proves successful, because they would then be expected by policyholders to pay for such medical treatments as needed that involve transferring stem cells.  If we ever get a national health insurance, as is widely discussed, the government may eventually be expected to pay for stem cell treatment for citizens in need.  That is probably the reason for the objections to stem cell research - Republicans may want to help health insurance companies never to incur the added expense of the new treatments that would result.

Mary Neal
http://wrongfuldeathoflarryneal.com

0
duo

I hope that some fine day all of the right-to-lifers would get on board and help defeat the death penalty in America.  Strange to me how they are ready to lay their bodies down in front of an abortion clinic and stage demonstrations and elect candidates on this single issue, but the same folks often vote against programs to help nurture and provide for the children who are here among us - kids who other moms would have aborted because of poverty or other issues.  How many days do they volunteer their time to homeless shelters or to child protection services and help care for the children who were born in imperfect conditions and could benefit from their help?  Go change some diapers for the kids who got here and insist that moms who do give birth have the basics to care for their children!

I perceive there is a reason for so many abortions, and if right-to-lifers are truly interested in reducing/eliminating abortions, then they should use their time, energy, resources, and votes to help defeat the reasons behind so many moms' decision not to bring their unborn babies to term.

In addition to objecting to helping to care for such LIVING kids through various social programs, many right-to-lifers are all for trying these same kids as adults and some even would like to lower the age for the death penalty to imprison and kill these very same children who did escape the sunction cup  a scant 15 years before.

Folks who read the Bible every day ought to know that Jesus does not like hypocrisy.

Mary Neal
http://wrongfuldeathoflarryneal.com

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