Americans for Prosperity Asks Moore: ‘Will you work for Kansas or Nancy Pelosi?’


Kansas tired of increased spending, deficit, and unemployment


A new television ad starting today in Kansas’ 3rd congressional district urges citizens to contact Rep. Stephene Moore(D) and ask her if she works for Missouri or Nancy Pelosi. To view the ad, click here.

The ad states that Stephene Moore supports the “votes and positions” her husband has taken. And since Dennis Moore and Pelosi took over Congress, “spending has skyrocketed, the deficit has tripled, and nearly 100,000 Kansans are unemployed.”

“Moore said she would pass … a new energy tax that could cost a Kansas family thousands,” the ad says, citing the cap-and-trade bill which has been working its way through Congress. “Ask Stephene Moore: will she work for Kansas ... or Nancy Pelosi?

The $147,188 ad buy will run on network and cable channels in the district starting today and continuing through August 11. It is part of Americans for Prosperity’s November Is Coming initiative – providing citizens a mechanism to tell their legislators if they vote for freedom-killing legislation, like cap-and-trade or one of the endless bailouts, then citizens will vote against them in November.

“Rep. Moore has to know she’s going to be held accountable for her votes,” said Derrick Sontag, state director of Americans for Prosperity-Kansas. “Her decisions are already killing jobs and raising taxes, and the Kansas economy can’t afford it.”

More than 371,000 Americans have signed the November Is Coming petition at www.NovemberIsComing.com telling their elected officials that “If you vote Yes to big government programs or any other freedom-killing legislation, I will vote NO on you in the next election.” The petition goes on to say that the citizen signing the petition will vote against the elected official: 

“If you voted yes to the government takeover of health care; vote yes to cap-and-trade energy taxes or fail to stop any related EPA regulation; vote yes to any more bailouts; or fail to stop any attempts to regulate the Internet.”