For Democrats, Health Reform Isn't About Fixing The System, Says Gregg
Thursday, March 11, 2010 at 3:36PM
Staff in Congress, Healthcare reform, News/Commentary, Sen. Judd Gregg, chingyu Wang, medicare, reconciliation
By Chingyu Wang
Talk Radio News Service
Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.) said Thursday that, for Democrats, policy has taken a backseat to politics in the ongoing debate over health care reform.
"This dialogue right now is no longer about substance, it's no longer about the purposes, it's just about 'I need to win because I need to win, because I need to win,'" said Gregg. "They see a loss as being a loss of credibility, it's no longer about the policy or the effectiveness or really about health care."
By metaphorically referring to the nation as a defibrillator, Gregg said on Thursday that his biggest concern over healthcare reform is the $500 billion worth of cuts to Medicare Democrats are proposing, which in his view is significant to the economy.
Medicare's $38 trillion fund "is the power source for defibrillator when we have this fiscal cardiac arrest as a nation," said Gregg. "And if you use it up now to create new entitlements...you know we're going to aggravate the cardiac arrest. Then the defibrillator has no energy."
Gregg added, however, that Medicare spending should "absolutely" be adjusted to make it solvent.
On the possibility of Democrats using reconciliation to pass reform, Gregg labeled it as a tool by which the Democrats can "buy the votes to pass the big bill."
"Reconciliation, by its definition, [means] you have to change a law," said Gregg. "You can't reconcile a bill that is not passed."
"It was never created for the purposes of doing policy."
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