John,
Fun fact: 1,983 people have served as U.S. Senators, but except for a few extraordinary exceptions, no one will remember our names when we're
no longer senators and return to being regular citizens.
That's why I'm spending my time in the Senate focused on service, not self. And results not rhetoric.
Unfortunately, many of my liberal colleagues have turned the Senate into a popularity contest, where they're prioritizing their
personal agendas over fulfilling their promises to their constituents.
This has to
stop.
Every day, I hear from Arizonans all over the state who tell me they're tired of the gridlock. They want Congress to work for them, not the other way
around, and the numbers say it all.
Congress' approval ratings are pathetically low, but Democrats refuse to get on board with the logical
solution: stop the dysfunction, break the gridlock, stop the spin, and start truly working on behalf of the American people.
It shouldn't be this
hard to get things done in Washington, and the way I see it, any politician who obstructs common sense solutions is part of the problem and needs to
go.
In service,
Martha McSally
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