Posted on 02/24/2011 5:49:09 PM PST by Free ThinkerNY
Mitt Romney rejected Mike Huckabee's call for him to admit that the "RomneyCare" health care program failed, instead saying he's "proud" of "getting everyone covered" when he was governor of Massachusetts.
"Mitt Romney is proud of what he accomplished for Massachusetts in getting everyone covered, Romneys spokesman, Eric Fehrnstrom, told the Boston Globe, in the first direct response Team Mitt made to Huckabee's criticism of the health plan in his new book.
Fehrnstrom also put daylight between the Romney health care bill and President Obama's reform package, which is unpopular among voters and is the subject of several lawsuits by different states.
What's important now is to return to the states the power to determine their own healthcare solutions by repealing Obamacare," Fehrnstrom added. "A one-size-fits-all plan for the entire nation just doesn't work.
The comments came after POLITICO reported that a chapter in Huckabee's new book, "A Simple Government," devotes two full pages to trashing RomneyCare and tethering it tightly to ObamaCare.
"Ever since the debate over (the national) program began, its been compared to RomneyCare, the failed statewide health-care program implemented by none other than my fellow GOP member Mitt Romney when he was governor of Massachusetts, Huckabee says in the book.
Any critical assessment of this program will show that it failed
and yet the Obama administration decided to emulate it in its pursuit of a national health-care program.
(Excerpt) Read more at politico.com ...
SCREW Mitt!
Let’s hope they take each other out like last time....but this time hopefully a conservative will benefit from these clowns going after each other.
Mitt Romney.
Working hard to become the John McCain of 2012!
At least he owns up to what he belives. That won't get him my support, but at least he admits it.
believes (note to self, read before posting)
Mitt Romney.
At least he is not as big a loser as Mitch Daniels.
Myth got ‘everyone covered’ alright. The question is....covered in what?
Mitt just sank his own 2012 ship
Mitt just sank his own 2012 ship
What we need is a few people from Mass, to tell us first hand how it
has effected their lives.
Any takers here?
The hospital, Boston Medical Center, faces a $38 million deficit for the fiscal year ending in September, its first loss in five years. The suit says the hospital will lose more than $100 million next year because the state has lowered Medicaid reimbursement rates and stopped paying Boston Medical reasonable costs for treating other poor patients.
We filed this suit more in sorrow than in anger, said Elaine Ullian, the hospitals chief executive. We believe in health care reform to the bottom of our toes, but it was never, ever supposed to be financed on the backs of the poor, and thats what has happened in Massachusetts.
The central charge in the suit is that the state has siphoned money away from Boston Medical to help pay the considerable cost of insuring all but a small percentage of residents. Three years after the laws passage, Massachusetts has the countrys lowest percentage of uninsured residents: 2.6 percent, compared with a national average of 15 percent.
Low-income residents, who have benefited most from expanded access to health care, receive state-subsidized insurance, one of the most expensive aspects of the state plan. But rapidly rising costs and the battered economy have caused more problems than the state and supporters of the 2006 law including Boston Medical anticipated.
According to the suit, Massachusetts is now reimbursing Boston Medical only 64 cents for every dollar it spends treating the poor. About 10 percent of the hospitals patients are uninsured down from about 20 percent before the laws passage in 2006. But many more are on Medicaid or Commonwealth Care, the state-subsidized insurance program for low-income residents.
One of the states reimbursement rates to Boston Medical, dropped from $12, 476 in 2008 to $9,323 by 2009, the suit says.
Wendy E. Parmet, a professor at the Northeastern University School of Law, said the suit was a step in a wider minuet as state lawmakers, health care providers and other stakeholders try to figure out how to make the new law work in the long term.
I think its going to be a very hard lawsuit for them to prevail on, Professor Parmet said of the hospital. I think theyre trying to bring another weapon into what is essentially, in many ways, a political and economic battle going on in the state about how to pay for health care, and making sure their voice gets heard.
The suit comes as Congress looks to Massachusetts as a potential model for overhauling the nations health care system. Even before the suit, the states fiscal crisis had cast doubts on the laws sustainability.
To help close a growing deficit, the Democratic-controlled Legislature eliminated coverage for some 30,000 legal immigrants in the new state budget. Gov. Deval Patrick, a Democrat, is seeking to restore about half of the $130 million cut, but lawmakers have expressed reluctance, saying that doing so would require cuts to other important programs.
State officials expressed surprise at the lawsuit, saying that Boston Medical received $1.5 billion in state funds in the past year and should not be seeking more in the midst of a fiscal crisis.
At a time when everyone funded and served by state government is being asked to do more with less, B.M.C. has been treated no differently, said Dr. JudyAnn Bigby, the state secretary of health and human services, in a prepared statement. We are confident that the administrations actions in this area comply with all applicable law and will be upheld.
State officials have suggested that Boston Medical could reduce costs by operating more efficiently. The state has also pointed out that the hospital has reserves of about $190 million, but Tom Traylor, the hospitals vice president of federal and state programs, said the reserves could only sustain the hospital for about a year.
The magnitude of the loss here cant be solved on the program-cutting or expense-cutting side, Mr. Traylor said. Professor Parmet said the hospitals dissatisfaction with the new law should be a warning to Congress that insurance alone doesnt solve the problems of the health care system. In fact, she said, it might exacerbate the financial problems of safety-net hospitals in the short term.
THANKS MITT!
I agree. At least it’s not a flip-flop. Maybe Mitt is tired of flip-flopping. Anyway, it’s a small consolation that he’s “owning up” to what he believes. I don’t like him anyway, don’t want him anyhow, and I won’t vote for him ever.
Go away, Mitt.
I will admit this; Mitt has a better hair club membership that Mitch does.
RomneyCare is all anyone really has to know about Romney but it ain’t the only thing.
When your the only one with leprosy...u got to try and sell your alligator skin look as the rave of the future...
You just HAVE to let him be President. He has wanted to be President since he was three years old. It's the only thing he's ever really wanted.
**RINO ROBOT ALERT**
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