April 14, 2008
Tracey Brooks Leads all Candidates in Money Raised
from Donors
Raising over $175,000 in Just Seven Weeks
Fundraising Strength, Important Local
Endorsements, Labor Union Support, Volunteer Efforts and District Tours all add to Campaign Momentum
Congressional candidate Tracey Brooks today announced raising
over $175,000 in just seven weeks, with all of her first quarter contributions designated
for the Democratic primary. As of April 1, her campaign had over $152,000 cash
on hand.
“The outpouring of donations from people across the Capital
Region over the last seven weeks has been tremendous. We received nearly 550
donations from 455 individual donors,” said Brooks. “Our campaign is funded and
supported by the people and our financial strength is matched only by our
endorsements from important local leaders and unions, and the more than 500
grassroots and community volunteers who have joined our campaign team. One thing
is clear: We have the momentum!”
The campaign also touted its online fundraising success,
bringing in over $46,000 from 204 online donors, considerably more than any
other announced or unannounced campaign to replace Congressman Michael McNulty.
Brooks said: “From the day we announced, we said our
campaign would combine a tech-savvy approach to generating more interest and
new voters with an old-fashioned grassroots effort. We’ve done that on the
internet and in communities across all seven counties of the District.”
The campaign noted that 86 percent of the money raised came
from donors who live and/or work in the District, while over 80 percent of
donors live and/or work in the District.
Tracey Brooks is seeking the Democratic nomination for the
21st Congressional seat currently held by Democratic Congressman Mike McNulty
who last year announced his intention to retire from Congress. Brooks has
received several major local endorsements including Congressman McNulty’s
father Jack McNulty, his sister Green Island Mayor Ellen McNulty Ryan who also
serves as the Brooks campaign Chairwoman, Albany Mayor Jerry Jennings, Cohoes
Mayor John McDonald and numerous local elected and Democratic Party officials.
Brooks recently received the full endorsement of EMILY’s
List, the nation’s largest political action committee and financial resource
for women running for elected office. Brooks also has the backing of the Women
Under Forty PAC and several local labor unions including the Bricklayers &
Allied Craftworkers (BAC) Union Local #2 NYS and the Amalgamated Transit Union
Local 1321.
As a lifelong resident of the Albany area and the Capital
Region Director for Senator Hillary Clinton for the last three years, Brooks
enters the race with working knowledge of the problems facing middle-class
families in the Capital Region and experience in finding solutions to them. To
learn more about Tracey Brooks, please visit www.traceybrooks.com.
April 13, 2008
Tracey Brooks
Discusses the Impact of Rising Food and Gas Prices
Brooks Talks with
Residents and Small Business Owners about Real Solutions to the Economic
Problems Facing Local Families
Congressional Candidate Tracey Brooks today met with local
residents and small business owners to discuss the impact of rising food and
gas prices on household budgets across the Capital Region.
“We need to ease the squeeze on our local middle-class,”
said Brooks, a Democratic candidate in the 21st Congressional
District. “From working families trying to make ends meet, to seniors living on
fixed incomes, to individuals just trying to make it on their own, we can’t
afford to wait any longer as seven years of Bush Administration policies have
left us with out-of-control prices for gas and basic commodities that make it more
difficult for most Americans to keep up, let alone get ahead.”
Brooks noted that local gas prices are creeping towards
$4.00 per gallon, home heating and cooling costs are going through the roof,
our local unemployment rate is now higher than the state average, and our local
median annual household income is just over $40,000.
“What we’re seeing in the Capital Region and across the
nation is the direct result of so many failed policies of the Bush
administration,” said Brooks. “During the Bush years, the price of gas has more
than doubled, health care premiums have gone up over 40 percent, home heating
costs went up nearly 25 percent this year alone, while the inflation-adjusted
income of a typical American household has fallen by $962 or 2 percent.”
Brooks continued: “The average middle-class family in the 21st
Congressional District makes much less than $50,000 per year and cannot relate
to the fat cats who still throw money around and fiddle while the economy
burns. They cannot understand how the Bush Administration can spend $10 billion
a month on an unpopular war, while people are struggling at home, can’t afford
health insurance, and can’t even put food on their table. We need change in
Washington and we need to re-focus on the right priorities, right now, before
it’s too late.”
While calling for a short-term stimulus package, Tracey
Brooks has a three part plan for long-term growth. First, diversify our local
economy and create new jobs. Second, support our growing technology industry,
generating good jobs for today and better jobs for tomorrow. Third, encourage
the development of alternative energy technologies; creating jobs that lessen
our dependence on foreign oil and put our country on the road to energy
independence.
As the Capital Region Director for Senator Hillary Clinton
for the last three years, Brooks worked with local companies to add jobs, local
unions to protect those jobs, and local families to help them make ends meet. To
learn more about Tracey Brooks, please visit www.traceybrooks.com.
April 2, 2008
Gloria Steinem and Tracey Brooks Call for Equal
Pay Ms. Steinem
says we need to elect candidates like Tracey Brooks
Tracey Brooks today met with legendary feminist activist and
author Gloria Steinem at the State Capitol to advocate for pay equity for women.
“We won't truly have a democracy until Congress looks a lot
more like the country,” said Ms. Steinem. “We need to elect Congressional
candidates like Tracey Brooks -- smart, experienced, hard working and devoted
to voting as if everyone mattered.”
Ms. Steinem spoke at the Legislative Office
Building and then held a
town hall meeting sponsored by the Capital District Area Labor Federation,
AFL-CIO, and the New York State Pay Equity Coalition (NYSPEC). NYSPEC is
advocating for passage of the New York State Fair Pay Act (A.2712), which would
ensure equal pay for equal work.
“There is no excuse why equal work does not result in equal
pay,” said Tracey Brooks. “That is why I’m proud to stand with Gloria Steinem,
the Capital District Area Labor Federation, NYSPEC and others who believe that
forty years after the Equal Pay Act, women should not still be paid 77 percent
of what their male counterparts make. That's just unacceptable.”
Ms. Steinem went on to say that “jobs have too often been
valued by the supposed social value of the doer rather than the importance of
the job. In this bill, we have a very
important opportunity to set things right.”
Tracey Brooks received the full endorsement of EMILY’s List,
the nation’s largest political action committee and financial resource for
women running for elected office. Brooks has also been endorsed by the Women
Under Forty Political Action Committee (WUFPAC), a nonpartisan political action
committee that supports women forty years of age and under running for federal
public office.
As a lifelong resident of the Albany area and the Capital Region Director
for Senator Hillary Clinton for the last three
years, Brooks enters the race with working knowledge of the problems facing the
region and experience in finding solutions to them.
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