Posted on 07/01/2012 10:17:07 AM PDT by Sub-Driver
Schumer: Repeal will cost GOP in election By Meghashyam Mali - 07/01/12 12:05 PM ET
Sen. Charles Schumer on Sunday warned Republicans that they would suffer at the polls if they continued to push for a repeal of the presidents healthcare reform bill.
If Republicans make that their number one issue, the repeal of healthcare, they are certainly going to lose the election, in the House and the Senate and the presidency, said Schumer on CBSs Face the Nation.
Bottom line is most Americans are not for repeal. If you look at all the polls, a little more than a third are for repeal, he said.
Congressional Republicans and GOP presidential candidate have vowed to undo the law, after the Supreme Court upheld much if the Affordable Care Act in a 4-4 ruling Thursday.
A House vote on repeal is expectd on July 11 and Sen. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Sunday that senators will need only 51 votes under reconciliation to repeal the health law after the high court said a central provision, the individual mandate, was constitutional under Congresss taxing powers.
Schumer though cautioned Republicans that calling for full repeal would kill many popular provisions in the bill, including many that GOP lawmakers backed.
The bill overall people do not want repealed, insisted Schumer.
House Speaker John Boehner on Sunday said he supported full repeal despite the presence of some good measures in the legislation. He promised that lawmakers would take up those individual provisions through a step-by-step approach, but only after the full law was voided.
Also appearing on CBS, Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) reiterated GOP criticisms of the bill, saying it was fundamentally flawed and did little to address the real issues with healthcare.
The disease is healthcare costs too much and with the Affordable Care Act its going to cost a whole lot more, said Coburn. Now the estimate with the Supreme Court ruling is about $1.9 trillion.
We have to fix the problems not the symptoms and youre hearing all this politics about it, what we should have is real access and real care for people without an insurance company or the government between the patient and the physican. Weve not done that with this bill and a lot of the programs that are out there today dont do it and we need to change healthcare in America, but what weve done is make the problem worse not better, he added.
The Oklahoma senator also defended his statement made last week to a local state newspaper that the healthcare reform bill would Sovietize medicine in the U.S.
Asked about those remarks, Coburn responded, that means that the bureaucrats and politicians are in charge of your healthcare and thats exactly what this has done. Theres not going to be individual choice.
Schumer said that GOP lawmakers should shift their attention from healthcare to passing measures to help boost the economy.
"The number one thing people want us to focus on is jobs, the economy, increase middle class paychecks, Schumer said. The GOP is in a box, the Tea Party is pulling them over to talk about repeal, thats only six or seven in the polls. The economy, jobs, paychecks number one.
The way we get back to Congress its going to be a great contrast, he said. They are going to vote on repeal of healthcare, litigating a battle thats been going on for four years that the American people want us to move on and we are going to put forward a small business jobs tax cut.
Schumer also took a shot at GOP claims that the healthcare bill was a tax increase. Mitt Romneys in a total pickle here. He prescribed this. This was his bill, said Schumer, referring to the healthcare reform package Romney signed as governor of Massachusetts. Speaker Boehner is saying its a tax increase are they going to say that Mitt Romney passed the biggest tax increase in Massachusetts? Forget about it.
Democrats have rebuffed Romney's criticisms of the president's healthcare plan, by claiming the reforms he implemented in Massachusetts were a blueprint for the administration. Romney though has said that he never intended those measures to be implemented nationally.
The world’s largest fool, next to his pal Barney End Frank, speaks. It takes me a long day to determine which liberal in Sodom on the Potamac is the largest fool. This slug, Obama, Frank, Hillary, Reed, there are just so many candidates!!!
Statements such as Schumer’s show you how FAR out of touch with the people most of these lifetime politicians really are.
To: Schumer
Fr: MkJessup
STFU you slimy little mealy-mouthed bottom feeder. You need to be circumcised except in your case it would result in your having to be decapitated.
On the other hand, is there a downside to that?
Chucky and the rest of the libs and the media all try to be br’er Rabbit. “Don’t throw me in that briar patch!”
The GOP will suffer more if they do not push repeal.
bwa ha haha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha! Oh, Chuckles the Schmuckles. You’re one hilarious dill hole.
I guess he doesn’t remember 2010.
Moreover, Romney didn't campaign on universal health coverage when he ran for Governor. He was more or less coerced into taking action when the Federal Government threatened to cut $385 million of Medicaid funding if the state did not reduce the number of uninsured recipients of health care services.
How does Chucky Schumer think Mitt Romney was supposed to do that? Throw the uninsured healthcare recipients out into the streets?
Given the recent Supreme Court ruling on the unconstitutionality of cutting Medicaid funds to states that opt out of Medicaid expansion, I have to wonder if such a threat as the one I just mentioned was likewise unconstitutional.
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