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Blunt speaks out against Obama's transportation measure

Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., takes to the Senate floor today to speak against President Barack Obama's $50 million transportation measure.
(UPI/Bill Greenblatt)
Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., takes to the Senate floor today to speak against President Barack Obama's $50 million transportation measure.

Missouri Republican Senator Roy Blunt took to the Senate floor today to speak out against President Barack Obama’s proposed transportation measure.

Obama has been pressing Congress to pass the transportation part of his stalled jobs bill that provides $50 million for roads and bridges.

The Senate is expected to vote today on whether to take up the measure. Blunt says the bill is a waste of time and will not pass.

“We need a transportation bill that lets the transportation network begin to plan for the future, rather than continue to have these short-term, Washington-driven, solutions that clearly are getting us nowhere," said Blunt during a weekly conference call with reporters. 

Senate Republicans blocked action on the larger bill over objections to Obama’s request for more federal spending and a tax on millionaires to help pay for it.