Our jobs give people the opportunity to move from public health programs to private health coverage. |
that challenge isn't just limited to Wal-Mart. |
The American people know that catering to the special interests does nothing to help the 46 million uninsured individuals in this country. Now is the time for legislators across the country to work together to find real solutions to the health care challenges facing every state, every business and every working family. |
The government did not challenge the manner in which we disposed of hazardous-waste material once it arrived in the return center, but rather the transport of the material to the return center. |
The government does not challenge the manner in which we disposed of hazardous waste material ... but rather the transportation of it from stores. |
There are more than 786,000 uninsured people in the state of Maryland, and less than one-half of 1 percent works for Wal-Mart. |
These moves are consistent with the way we develop our people. |
These Washington, D.C., union leaders should let Americans decide where to shop and where to work. |
This certainly gives us pause to sit back and look at the situation. |
This desperate attack has more holes than a pasta strainer. This is another paid attack by union critics. |
This does nothing to accomplish this goal of providing everyone access to affordable health care insurance. |
This is just the latest negative attack from Washington union leaders. These bills will do nothing to address the enormous number of uninsured or control the soaring costs of health care. |
This legislation does nothing to accomplish that goal [of assuring everyone access to affordable health insurance]. This vote was never about health care. This was about partisan politics .... |
This matter is not about the accuracy of pricing. It concerns individually marking items on shelves with hand-stamped pricing stickers. We operate 3,600 Wal-Mart stores carrying hundreds of items. We can make more than 5,000 price changes in one week. So we're constantly working to adjust our prices. However, I can't speculate on what happened in this instance. |
This vote was never about health care. This was about partisan politics in the Maryland gubernatorial race. In allowing a bad bill to become a bad law, the General Assembly took a giant step backward and placed the special interests of Washington, D.C. union leaders ahead of the well being of the people they serve. And that's wrong. |