"Johnson says he is currently paying for the lawsuit himself but he hopes to use his campaign committee to raise funds to cover most of the legal fees."
Even The National Review is calling Sen. Johnson's lawsuit "grandstanding." Here is Andrew McCarthy today (under the headline, "Ron Johnson's Frivolous Obamacare Lawsuit"):
Back in October, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin slammed his fellow Republican senator Ted Cruz of Texas for what he portrayed as Cruz’s flawed strategy of attempting to defund Obamacare. But it soon became painfully apparent that Johnson had no strategy of his own to mount any meaningful opposition to the law. He had no answers, and barely a coherent thought, when grilled on the matter by Mark Levin. Now, as reported Monday in Alec Torres’s post and outlined in the senator’s own Wall Street Journal op-ed, Johnson has decided that filing a lawsuit is the way to go. . . . thereby demonstrating that he still has no serious strategy — other than to engage in the very sort of grandstanding the Republican establishment accused Cruz of.
Bradley foundation
ReplyDelete"Johnson says he is currently paying for the lawsuit himself but he hopes to use his campaign committee to raise funds to cover most of the legal fees."
ReplyDelete(Shawn Johnson, WPR, 1/06/14)
Even The National Review is calling Sen. Johnson's lawsuit "grandstanding." Here is Andrew McCarthy today (under the headline, "Ron Johnson's Frivolous Obamacare Lawsuit"):
ReplyDeleteBack in October, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin slammed his fellow Republican senator Ted Cruz of Texas for what he portrayed as Cruz’s flawed strategy of attempting to defund Obamacare. But it soon became painfully apparent that Johnson had no strategy of his own to mount any meaningful opposition to the law. He had no answers, and barely a coherent thought, when grilled on the matter by Mark Levin. Now, as reported Monday in Alec Torres’s post and outlined in the senator’s own Wall Street Journal op-ed, Johnson has decided that filing a lawsuit is the way to go. . . . thereby demonstrating that he still has no serious strategy — other than to engage in the very sort of grandstanding the Republican establishment accused Cruz of.