Mike Lawler’s ‘I Don’t Support Tariffs’ Claim vs. His Vote Record
Rep. Mike Lawler claims he’s tariff-averse on CNN but his voting record suggests he has quite the appetite. With four crucial votes keeping Trump’s cost-boosters alive, Hudson Valley folks feel the pinch.
In the land of burnt coffee and political fibs, Rep. Mike Lawler delivered a real eye-opener on CNN, claiming he doesn’t support tariffs long-term. But hang on—turns out, his congressional votes tell a different bedtime story. Sprinkle in a couple of late nights defending Trump’s price-pumping tariffs, and we’ve got ourselves a classic episode of ‘Do as I Finagle, Not as I Say.’
Why should your everyday Joe care? Well, if you’ve noticed your grocery bill doing Tarzan swings, you might’ve guessed right—the tariffs are taking a bite out of Hudson Valley wallets to the tune of an estimated $1,700 per family. Lawler might announce he’s a budget hero, but those numbers suggest he’s more of a sneaky gymnastic—flipping one story on CNN, rolling out another in Congress.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) was quick to slap the “Congressman coward” label on Lawler’s forehead. They highlighted his four separate votes nail-gunning Trump’s tariffs to the wall. This includes at least two votes that came hot off the heels of his CNN appearance and a couple of others from earlier this year. Makes you wonder if his reality check bounced.
For Hudson Valley families, that extra $1,700 isn’t just pocket change—it’s food on the table and shoes on the kids. When politicians play political Twister with tariffs, it’s the local folks who foot the bill. Lawler’s votes have turned the family budget into a high-wire act without a net.
Picture this: A district-hopping Lawler, performing yoga with policy gymnastics while hanging flag pins like a seasoned interior decorator—a scene, almost worth the extra checkout total. But whether these performances will earn him a standing ovation or a last-place finish at the polls remains a hot question.
As things shape up ahead of the midterms, Lawler may find that appearing principled on cable news doesn’t spare him consequences from documented contradictions. Perhaps his tariffs are a little like paperwork perfume—they smell like patriotism but end up just masking the real costs.
Sources
Keep Me Marginally Informed