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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Road Walker who wrote (523893)10/27/2009 2:23:14 PM
From: longnshort2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1579686
 
Ark. senator says she still opposes public option
Oct 27 01:28 PM US/Eastern
By ANDREW DeMILLO

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - U.S. Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., said Tuesday she still can't support a government-funded insurance option, a day after legislation was unveiled that would give states the choice of whether to participate in the program.

"Creating another government-funded option is not where we're going. We don't need to go there," Lincoln told members of the Arkansas Farm Bureau during a video conference. "A government-funded option is something that I think is not the way to go."

A day earlier, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced legislation that would give millions of Americans the option of purchasing government-run insurance coverage. Reid said individual states would have the choice of opting out of the program.

Lincoln has said she is against a government-run insurance option and voted for a proposal before the Senate Finance Committee that did not include one. Lincoln is among a few moderate Democrats in the Senate whose support is viewed as key to the health care overhaul.

She didn't specifically say she'd vote against Reid's proposal, but she said she'd prefer a program that would include insurance offered by a nonprofit group instead of the government.

"A nonprofit entity out there providing that could really do the same thing, but it wouldn't leave the taxpayer holding the tab," Lincoln said.

The bureau, which advocates and lobbies on behalf of the state's farmers, asked Lincoln to speak with its members about the health care overhaul and legislation aimed at curbing climate change. The bureau held video conferences with members at 12 sites around Arkansas for the two-hour forum with Lincoln.

Randy Veach, the bureau's president, said the group had asked her to oppose the public option.

Lincoln said her opposition to the public option stems from concerns she has about the cost of setting up such a program and whether it would create an "imbalance" in the private insurance market.

"Creating an environment where private industry can compete is going to be important," she said.

Lincoln also said she's worried about the impact that allowing states to opt out of the government-sponsored insurance program would have on the health reforms.

"If you have to opt in, then it takes a while to create that pool, that mass of people, so if states are opting in it takes a while for states to create that critical mass of people that brings down the cost," she said. "But opting out is a problem, too, because again you have to wait until legislatures meet and other things like that."

Lincoln faces a tough re-election fight as she seeks a third term next year, with seven Republicans seeking the GOP nomination to challenge her. Also considering a run is Marianna farmer Stanley Reed, a former president of the Farm Bureau who said he may seek the GOP Senate nomination.



To: Road Walker who wrote (523893)10/27/2009 2:24:37 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Respond to of 1579686
 
RW, > Don't you ever get bored with your cynical posturing? I do.

Is that why you jumped on board the Obama bandwagon? Tired of being cynical? Need something, anything to believe in?

Let me know when Obama actually demonstrates some real leadership. Other than to wage war against FOXNews.

Tenchusatsu