
With Scott Brown (R-MA) positioned to be the guy who can kill health care reform, it's worth taking a look at just what he's said about the issue. Because when it comes right down to it, his reasons for opposing the bill have been so varied and inconsistent that you start to wonder whether even he knows why he's against it. It must be a tricky dance, given that he's running to assume Ted Kennedy's Senate seat in the bluest of blue states. But with Kennedy's signature priority in the balance, you'd think he'd have a solid reason for wanting to bury it.
He doesn't.
Conservatives and Republicans are pouring millions of dollars and thousands of man-hours into a dark horse Senate election in bright-blue Massachusetts because they think that's their last, best hope to kill health care reform. They're not even shy about it. In a fundraising letter, former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney told voters "If he is successful, Scott will be the crucial 41st vote against President Obama's healthcare bill when it comes back to the Senate for final passage." And he who plays the piper calls the tune. "I would be proud to be the 41st vote, and go back to the drawing board," Brown boasted in his final debate with Democrat Martha Coakley.
But for all his bluster, there remains no small amount of confusion about why Brown wants to kill the bill. Or at least this bill.
"The health care bill that's being proposed in Washington is broken," Brown said during Monday's debate. "The back-room deals, Nebraska, Louisiana, we all know about it. We need to start over." He's talking about measures in the bill (federal Medicaid dollars for Nebraska, disaster aide for Louisiana) that helped Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid pass the Senate health care bill. But those deals were trivial compared to the scope of the reform measures on the table. Surely his objections must be deeper than that, right?
Wrong.
"We have insurance here in Massachusetts. We have some of the best doctors, nurses and hospitals in the country, that's why people come here," Brown said.
Massachusetts does indeed have universal insurance--but that's because in 2006, Romney spearheaded and signed a health care reform bill in Massachusetts, that made health insurance a requirement; just like the Democrats are trying to do right now. And, as you might've guessed, as state Senator, Brown voted for it.
Which makes statements like these all the more puzzling: "I'd like to send them back to the drawing board, because I believe people should have insurance, not this particular bill because it's not good for the country."
So what's good for Massachusetts is not good for the country, then?
Wrong again! Turns out, it's not even good for Massachusetts!
"Not only is this bill going to be bad for the state, my job is to be the senator from Massachusetts," Brown said. I'm not going to be subsidizing for the next three, five years, pick a number, subsidizing what other states have failed to do."
What we appear to be seeing is a Senate candidate raising big bucks on a pledge to kill his rival party's health care bill. He just doesn't seem to know why.
Schmed
January 13, 2010 1:14 PM
And he who plays the piper calls the tune.
Well, I would think that he who pays the piper calls the tune, but I guess some pipers are fairly independent these days.
So what's good for Massachusetts is not good for the country, then?
It would be helpful to the understanding of your point here if you could compare the similarities and differences between Massachutts' universal coverage and the coverage being reconciled (nothing is yet certain) in Congress right now.
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inokeah
January 13, 2010 1:32 PM
The pipers are being kicked to the curb, as 'Weekly Standard' reporter John McCormack was yesterday by one of AT Martha Coakley thugs for asking a question about her statement about the terrorist in Afghanistan. This is not behavior that the late senator would be proud of.
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skeptic1205
January 13, 2010 1:50 PM
Actually I don't see anything inconsistent. Massachusetts wouldn't benefit as much as they'd pay for health care reform because they already have such generous programs. The states that have only bare bones minimum Medicaid programs like Texas would benefit the most from the expanded coverage which would be paid for 95% by federal tax dollars (coming disproportionately from big blue states like MA, but note blue state Congresspeople are trying to work out a deal where their states wouldn't be penalized for generosity). I don't agree with that justification for voting against health care reform but it's not inconsistent with knee-jerk ideological opposition to federal mandates from conservatives and it's not all that surprising that it's resonating with a segment of white Independents.
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jsdc007
January 13, 2010 3:44 PM in reply to skeptic1205
Actually, resdients of big blue states like MA would also be getting federal dollars. Just because you have a state program doesn't mean that a federal program can't co-exist. We all know why Scott Brown voted for Romneycare. It's because it was a GOP bill. The same with so-called fiscal hawks in the Senate who all voted for the 2003 GOP Medicare expansion bill, an unfunded mandate that cost the country nearly $1.2 trillion. It's blind ideological politics from the current crop of Republicans.
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dem4life
January 13, 2010 1:58 PM
Scott brown is a waste of time look at what ROMNEY did.
Penalty on taxes
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Viva!America!
January 13, 2010 2:11 PM
Even if Coakley wins, the media will still call it a loss for Dems.
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AJM
January 13, 2010 2:29 PM
Brown is just a pretty face.
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ilovebacon
January 14, 2010 10:32 AM in reply to AJM
gay magnet.
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