Rep. Mary Miller spoke at a Guns Save Lives rally in Charleston on Nov. 11 | Twitter
Rep. Mary Miller spoke at a Guns Save Lives rally in Charleston on Nov. 11 | Twitter
U.S. Rep. Mary Miller (R-Danville), passed the inflation blame onto Congress and President Biden's Building Back Better plan.
Miller spoke her mind about the dilemma in a Nov. 10 tweet, taking a jab at her Democratic counterparts.
"The crushing inflation that is causing prices to go up and the value of our paychecks & savings to go down is the result of reckless spending by Congress, and Biden's plan is to tax & spend even more," she said. "Democrats want to pass Build Back Broke without knowing how much it cost!"
In a link attached to the tweet, Miller shared a piece from Wirepoints calling for more than just platitudes to assist the manufacturing industry in Illinois. In the article, Wirepoints founders Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner point out just how bad things have gotten for manufacturing in Illinois, noting that the state has lost more than 300,000 jobs since 2000, according to Wirepoints.
This is not the first time Miller has criticized the Build Back Better plan. In an Oct. 13 Tweet, she pointed to empty grocery shelves and rising prices and said the government was "forcing companies to fire people," according to Metro East Sun.
She has also questioned Education Secretary Miguel Cardona regarding the Department of Education's guidance for schools on how to handle issues related to transgender students, according to SE Illinois News.
"Mr. Secretary, I'm truly shocked at your position on these issues," Miller said during an Education and Labor Committee Hearing, according to the SE Illinois News. "While I have nothing but sympathy for those who struggle with gender confusion, instead of offering kids help, your department is planning to punish schools who attempt to protect girls' privacy and support female athletics," Miller said during an Education and Labor Committee hearing. "Our school administration and teachers have better things to do than to enforce the Biden administration's extreme gender ideology."
Miller began her term in Congress on Jan. 3.