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Congressional candidates Walsh, Duckworth trade barbs in Illinois debate

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Voters, she said, “don’t want to be yelled at anymore. They want somebody to listen to them and get to work serving them in Washington instead of being the poster child of the tea party.”

At times, the shouts and boos from the audience were louder than the answers. Even the panelists asking questions for the debate, broadcast on several local radio stations, caught heat from people yelling “Where’s the question?” when queries went on too long or were confusing.

Walsh’s criticism of Duckworth’s tenure at the state Veterans Affairs agency partly appeared to be aimed at her apology for taking a state car to a 2008 campaign event for a Democratic congressional candidate. Walsh also cited a state audit that found money had not been properly reported. The agency said it was largely a bookkeeping error and the money was accounted for.

The Republican congressman also suggested Duckworth was only interested in having a debate about what to wear for her speech at the recent Democratic National Convention. Duckworth, who lost both legs in an Iraq war helicopter crash, replied, “I do sometimes look at the clothes that I wear, but you know, for most of my adult life, I’ve worn one color—it’s called camouflage.”

On the budget, Duckworth maintained that between increasing taxes on millionaires and cutting defense programs and waste in social programs, $2 trillion could be applied to the national debt.

But Walsh, who has backed the budget plans of House Republicans that include giving future retirees the option to receive a subsidy for health care instead of traditional Medicare, said the tax hike on the wealthy Duckworth backs wouldn’t pay for two days’ worth of government borrowing. “We have a government that does too much for too many of us,” he said.

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