Posted on 06/26/2017 4:47:45 AM PDT by Kaslin
As the U.S. Senate tackles its version of repealing and replacing ObamaCare this week, the behind-the-scenes influence of physicians cannot be underestimated. From Senators John Barrasso (R-WY) Bill Cassidy (R-LA) and Rand Paul (R-KY) to Health and Human Services secretary Tom Price (R-GA) the Federal government can draw on expertise from its doctor base to zero-in on real world, medically-rooted solutions to the disaster known as Barack Obamas so-called Affordable Care Act.
But regardless of the current Senate bills success or failure, healthcare promises to be the preeminent issue in American politics for years to come. Which is why the 10-candidate August 15th GOP primary for the U.S. Senate seat in Alabama is commanding national attention. This is the seat left vacant by Jeff Sessions when President Trump appointed him U.S. Attorney General.
Incumbent Luther Big Luther Strange (appointed earlier this year by disgraced former governor Robert Bentley, who has since resigned from office) wants to hold onto the job. However, Strange faces challenges from many office-holders and familiar names includingbut not limited toGOP Rep. Mo Brooks of Huntsville and firebrand Roy Moore, former chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court.
But as the career politicians vie for position in the upcoming primary, a soft-spoken physician named Randy Brinson has been quietly honeycombing Alabama...campaigning at church picnics and public squares, sharing his vision of solutions that Alabamaand Americaneed for permanent resolution of the healthcare crisis.
Randy Brinson has never before sought public office, but this is no naïve Jimmy Stewart/Mr. Smith goes to Washington type: Brinson is President of the Christian Coalition in Alabama; has created countless jobs in his international business dealings and within his medical practice; helped open-up trade between organic coffee growers in Honduras and Alabama which had never been done before, and just returned from Zambia where he facilitated 28 projects which he says will deliver a face value of $9-billion to the Alabama economy.
If that sounds vaguely like another first-time office seeker elected in 2016, Brinson does not deny having the same appeal: he recently told The Birmingham News, "I'm like Donald Trump, a self-made man. I think I have good instincts and good policy experience where I know how to actually navigate things."
And while healthcare is the central focus of his campaign—Brinson insists America doesnt need a healthcare plan crafted by politicians and bureaucrats—he also has strong positions on hot-button issues from national security and government waste to defending religious freedom. He also promises to support President Trumps vision of a Supreme Court that does not legislate from the bench.
Hes been flying under-the-radar in the GOP primary run-up. That is all about to change.
His campaign website (www.VoteBrinson.com) is functional but about to be re-launched with stronger content including videos and photos of the candidate in action. And Brinson is increasingly comfortable bellying-up to traditional retail politics: this past weekend, he was spotted glad-handing at a local Peach Festival, met face-to-face with veterans to discuss their concerns, squeezed in Sunday church services and drove to Mobile to toss out the first ball in the AAA baseball Mobile Bay Bears vs. Tennessee Smokies game.
Bottom line: longshot novice campaigner Brinson is taking to politics like a fish to water. He tells SRN News in Washington: I have so far had the opportunity to win-on-policy the last 2 debates with the candidates, Roy Moore and Mo Brooks... both are career politicians, as is incumbent Luther Strange. Alabama needs to send a businessman to the U.S. Senate who actually has created jobs for the past 30 years.
And while Make America Great Again was already taken, Randy Brinsons campaign slogan resonates with the same pride: his bright red signs read Lets Put Alabama First!
Of course, conventional wisdom suggests Brinson winning the August 15th primary outright—or at least surviving to compete in a runoff between the top two candidates on September 26th in advance of the General Election on December 12th—remains a longshot.
But conventional wisdom suggested Hillary Clinton would be our 45th President and Democrat Jon Ossoff would win last weeks special election in Georgias 6th District. So it probably is wise not to count out Alabamas Donald Trump of Healthcare taking the oath as the states next U.S. Senator.
After all, Dr. Randy Brinson already has plenty of practice placing his hand on a Bible.
WE DONT WANT A REPLACEMENT!!
Unless we can get the nuke vote we cannot repeal Obamacare. So, you tell me what we can do. Something or nothing. And we still have to contend with all the extensions that were not part of the original bill. How do you get red of them? Very complicated.
And you’ve been fed the great GOP lie. When they were in power they sent up repeatedly clean repeal bills KNOWING Obama would not sign it. Kabuki theatre as a means to acquire your vote. Ryan said 80-90 % could be squashed through reconciliation and he was RIGHT. He said this because almost every provision in this bill can be tied to a budgetary item. They don’t want repeal they never did. They want your vote and more suckers to believe them
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