http://www.onenewsnow.com/Politics/Default.aspx?id=776792
Jim Brown and Chad Groening - OneNewsNow - 11/20/2009 6:00:00 AM
A healthcare policy expert says there are details in the Senate healthcare bill that will frighten everyone.
Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nevada) has unveiled his more than
2,000-page healthcare bill with an estimated price tag of $849
billion. However, as Grace Marie Turner of the Galen Institute points
out, one of the reasons the bill was scored under President Obama's
$900 billion cost goal is because no one gets any benefit from the
program until 2014.
"So they start collecting taxes and fees now, and...the first ten years
of full implementation of this bill is $2.5 trillion, and that's only
the beginning," Turner explains. "So this does not in any way...meet
President Obama's budget specification. And there are all sorts of
tricks that they have pulled in this bill to try to pretend that it's
deficit-neutral."
Turner
says although the bill is a "carefully crafted" document designed to
garner as close to 60 votes as Senator Reid can, it contains lots of
new taxes and $500 billion in cuts to Medicare.
"They're assuming that Congress is going to have the will to make those
cuts, which they have no track record in doing -- which means they're
going to have to come back to taxpayers for more and more taxes to pay
for these alleged promises of accessible healthcare for more
Americans," Turner suggests.
She further says that many promises President Obama made to the
American people are broken in the Senate healthcare bill, including the
notion that "if you like your current health insurance you'll be able
to keep it." The Congressional Budget Office predicts that under the
Senate's proposal, millions of Americans will lose the employer-based
coverage they currently have.
Healthcare dubbed too pricy
A
Mississippi senator says with a $12 trillion debt and record job-loss
rate, the U.S. cannot afford the Democrats' healthcare plan.
At
a Capitol Hill rally, Senate Majority Leader Reid claimed Thursday that
the $849-billion, 10-year bill he unveiled hours earlier will save
lives, save money, and save Medicare. The Nevada Democrat claims the
bill is not just a milestone in a journey of a few months or a few
years, but rather, it culminates an effort that began over a half
century ago.
But Senator Roger Wicker (R-Mississippi) does not agree with Reid's assessment.
"It's a terribly expensive bill," states Wicker. "I don't know how they
can tout it as something that actually saves money; except that they're
using a few accounting gimmicks to maybe make it look better at first.
It raises taxes to a tune of half-a-trillion dollars." (Listen to audio report)
The GOP lawmaker says there is another huge problem with the Senate
bill as "it eliminates the so-called 'Stupak language' which was
negotiated in the House and was designed to ensure that no taxpayer
dollars go to fund abortion through these insurance plans." The
Mississippi senator points out that "that language is taken out."
Wicker is hopeful he can find at least one principled pro-life Democrat
who will help Republicans prevent the bill from going forward in its
present form. That one vote would be enough in the Democrat-led Senate.
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