Endangered House Democrat Brad Ellsworth of Indiana, now running for the Senate in Indiana, justified his vote for the health-care bill by declaring:
In addition to meeting my pro-life principles, the plan reduces costs, improves access to affordable insurance options, covers pre-existing conditions, and does not add one penny to the deficit.
Now that it has passed, we learn that it doesn’t do this at all:
Economic experts at the Health and Human Services Department concluded in a report issued Thursday that the health care remake . . . falls short of the president’s twin goal of controlling runaway costs, raising projected spending by about 1 percent over 10 years. That increase could get bigger, since Medicare cuts in the law may be unrealistic and unsustainable, the report warned.
(Daniel Foster lays out the ‘duh’ factor.)
Ellsworth and a whole lot of other House Democrats voted against their constituents, and dramatically endangered their chances for reelection, all because they put their faith in the notion that the bill would reduce spending.
Endangered House Democrat Baron Hill justified his vote for the health-care bill by declaring:
This reform version covers more uninsured Americans than the respective House and Senate bills, while also reducing the deficit more effectively. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office reported that the revised bill reduces the deficit by one hundred and thirty eight billion dollars during the first ten years of the program, and reduces the deficit by more than one trillion dollars in the second ten years, effectively making it the biggest deficit reduction legislation since 1993.
Endangered House Democrat John Boccieri justified his vote for the health-care bill by declaring:
This bill may not be perfect but it strikes the proper balance of reducing costs, increasing consumer choices and lowering the staggering deficit from runaway health care spending.
Endangered House Democrat . . . eh, you’re catching the drift.
Charlie Wilson of Ohio:
I have seen the CBO score and the reconciliation changes for myself. This bill will not add a dime to the deficit.
Suzanne Kosmas of Florida:
The bill before us now represents the single largest deficit reduction in over a decade, saving nearly $140 billion in the first 10 years and over $1.2 trillion in the decade to follow. This legislation provides truly fiscally responsible reform, and it contains the strongest measures ever enacted to help eliminate waste, fraud and abuse in the system, to rein in skyrocketing health care costs, and to stabilize Medicare while preserving benefits.
Melissa Bean of Illinois:
As a fiscal conservative, it was important to me that this legislation benefit not just our physical health, but also our fiscal health. The final legislation approved today delivers the most significant deficit reduction in more than a decade, cutting our federal deficit by $1.3 trillion over 20 years.
Bill Owens of New York:
After studying all the facts, I was presented with a simple choice: Do nothing and further burden our families and entrepreneurs, and allow our costs to spiral out of control, or take the first steps to reform our system in a way that will pay for itself and help America pull itself out of the recession.
Chris Carney of Pennsylvania:
This bill takes critical steps toward providing quality, affordable health care while reducing the cost burden on our hardworking families and small businesses. It does so in a fiscally responsible manner, reducing the deficit by an estimated $138 billion over the first 10 years and an additional $1.2 trillion in the following decade.
In short, just about every vulnerable House Democrat justified their vote by saying the bill would reduce costs and reduce the deficit, and now the Department of Health and Human Services finds that pledge has . . . well, reached its expiration date.
That the Health Care bill is not anywhere near deficit neutral is of no surprise to these Democrats.
It was the best excuse they could come up with. After all if they told the truth that Nancy Pelosi would make sure they got terrible committee assignments, no reelection help and well funded primary challengers they would look even more pathetic then they do now.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIt's important that today's installment of the almost-daily stream of bad news about Obamacare comes from the very bureaucracy that will administer much of it.
Let me also say I am very disappointed I was not the first to post a comment in this new format!
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse@Tim Williams
And YOU thought they were incompetent bureaucrats!
I too am disappointed that there wasn't more fanfare devoted to the commenting feature.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIt is the same pattern all the time. Every democrat, especially Obama, ran to the right as a candidate. If they told the truth of their intentions about their radical agenda, they would never have won those elections in 2008. If they told the truth, which they knew all the time about this bill, ditto. And if they didn't know, they are incompetent and should be fired for that.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseI hope the American people remember this in November.
Here is a primitive video made in someone's house. These are seniors who never were active politically in their lives and are now so angry that they had to speak out. They are tea partiers. Don't they look scary and racist and dangerous? The song was written because this woman was so angry, she felt she had to do something. All over America this is what is going on and if Bill Clinton wants to demonize these millions, he's going to have a big surprise. Remember when it was patriotic to stand up to your president, when it was Bush we were protesting?
I wish this could be the tea party's anthem. The very fact that it is not slick is what recommends it. This is America.
External Link
Here are the lyrics:
Seniors speaking out; I guess it's time to shout, 'cause nobody's listenin' in Washington, D.C.
We e-mail, we call, we gather in the Mall. Still nobody's listenin' in Washington, D.C.
Taxing folks beyond fair, cap and trade, Obamacare. And nobody's listenin' in Washington, D.C.
Seniors speaking out; I guess it's time to shout. "Cause nobody's listenin' in Washington, D.C.
Czars, S.E.I.U. Are you asking, "Who?" Still nobody's listenin' in Washington, D.C.
Congress, senators, too, the people versus you, 'cause nobody's listenin' in Washington, D.C.
Elections in November, we will all remember, that no-one was listenin' in Washington, D.C!
Copyright by Elaine S. Dubin.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseDo social democrats actually have anything to say beyond regurgitating their party's talking points?
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThese are the Chris Van Hollen (D, Md) Social Democratic Party talking points! They can be found on the House Democratic website and they are basically regurgitations of all the lies that they used to pass Obamacare.
I think their plan is to simply keep repeating these idiotic notions until people get tired of arguing with them. It's like when I talk to my 5-year old and try to reason to him - all he does is hold is ground no matter what and keeps repeating what he wants to believe.
In the internet age of politics it is now impossible for politicians to lie without being caught. They will continue to do so and the only thing we, as concerned citizens, can do is eduacte ourselves, talk with our friends and family about our concerns and then VOTE IN NOVEMBER.
November will only be a route if our side stays engaged and energized. A big Obama shock & awe campaign is starting to turn on (he's already moved $50M from Organizing for America to the DNC). Hold your line and keep up the fight, it's going to be a rough one!
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseAnyone with a brain and a calculator knew this was a budget busting disaster. To put it as gently as possible, clearly these members of Congress didn't have calculators.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseEven if this were a good bill, and I don't believe that, all these politicians voted counter to the will of their constituents. It's time for them to find other employment.
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