Senator Rand Paul is my VIP for
this week, and he may just be the most important member of the U.S. Senate. It
seems that Paul is the only person in Congress that remembers their promises.
He recently posted an article outlining his reasons for not voting for the
Senate healthcare bill.
I miss the old days, when Republicans
stood for repealing Obamacare. Republicans across the country and every member
of my caucus campaigned on repeal – often declaring they would tear out
Obamacare “root and branch”! …
The Senate Obamacare bill does not
repeal Obamacare. I want to repeat that so everyone realizes why I’ll vote “no”
as it stands now.
Paul states clearly that he will not
vote for the Senate bill as it is written because it does not repeal Obamacare.
He calls the bill “Obamacare-lite” and says it does nothing to improve health care.
The Senate Obamacare bill does not
repeal Obamacare. Not even close.
In fact, the Senate GOP bill codifies
and likely expands many aspects of Obamacare.
The Senate Obamacare-lite bill codifies
a federal entitlement to insurance. With the Senate GOP bill, Republicans, for
the first time, will signal that they favor a key aspect of Obamacare – federal
taxpayer funding of private insurance purchases.
The bill will transfer billions of
dollars to people who will then transfer billions of dollars to insurance
companies….
The Senate Obamacare-lite bill does what
the Democrats forgot to do – appropriate billions for Obamacare’s cost-sharing
reductions, aka subsidies. Really? Republicans are going to fund Obamacare
subsidies that the Democrats forgot to fund?
Doesn’t sound much like repeal to me.
One might even argue it’s worse than Obamacare-lite because it actually creates
a giant superfund to bail out the insurance companies – something even the
Democrats feared to do.
According to Paul, the Republicans
are trying to make Obamacare even worse, rather than repeal it completely and
then replace it with something better. The insurance companies surely must be
exerting some pressure on Congress to get this type of treatment! It is
definitely not the program that Americans are demanding.
I was first elected in the heady days of
the Tea Party Tidal Wave, when tens of thousands of citizens gathered on the
central city lawn to protest Big Government, Big Debt, and a government
takeover of health care.
This citizenry won in four elections.
Each time, the GOP establishment told conservatives, “We can’t repeal Obamacare
until we have all three branches of
government.” Finally, in 2016, that came
to pass. Republicans now control all three branches of government.
And . . . the best that is offered is
Obamacare-lite: keeping the Obamacare subsidies, keeping some of the Obamacare
taxes, creating a giant insurance bailout superfund, and keeping most of the
Obamacare regulations.
Senator Paul
may be joined by Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) in opposing the bill. So far, Lee has
not committed himself one way or the other. Hopefully, he will stand with Paul
and save Americans from Obamacare-lite. Maybe, just maybe, both of them will
remember their campaign promises to repeal Obamacare.
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