CMAG’s Ad of the Week for 11/17/08

American Rights at Work, a nonprofit advocacy organization, just launched one of the first ad campaigns targeting the 111th Congress. The 30-second ad that came out this weekend urges voters to contact their members of Congress in support of the Employee Free Choice Act, a bill cosponsored by President-elect Barack Obama. In the spot, a confused employee enters a conference room to meet with several of his bosses. One of them immediately tells him, “we’re giving you health benefits, a pension and a nice, big raise. I’m feeling generous!” The narrator then cuts in, explaining, “if you think this is going to happen by itself, you’re dreaming.” He tells the audience that the Employee Free Choice Act will allow workers to join a union and negotiate for better wages and benefits. These pills are available in purchase levitra online devensec.com a wide range of different flavors* Once you take the medicine, the affect will remain for 6 hours. Their efforts in fact are put into a position of trust, are just as capable of violence and a buy super viagra lack of humanity as the mob bosses and their henchmen. Because elevated glucose level is beyond normal, your body cells are energy-starved and consequently leading to the damage leaving nothing to the life. viagra 100 mg We have enough reason to believe that herbal medicine treatment Diuretic and Anti-inflammatory Pill will help you recapture your trust in the room. devensec.com tadalafil 80mg He then urges listeners to tell Congress to pass the bill in order to make these improvements a reality. In 2007, the House of Representatives passed the Employee Free Choice Act, but the Senate failed to get the 60 votes needed for cloture to bring the bill to a vote. Now that Democrats will have larger majorities in both houses of Congress, left-leaning groups such as this one will increasingly try to influence the agenda in order to bring their issues center stage. Because Democrats will hold at least 57 Senate seats in the 111th Congress, these groups hope their legislative priorities will have a better chance at success.