Senate Debate
Begins on Reid Health Care
Restructuring Bill
Part Two of Three
Yesterday
afternoon, the Senate began
debating Major Leader Harry
Reid's Health Care restructuring
bill known formally as the
"Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act." Two
amendments were raised for
debate, but not voted on.
The first,
offered by Sen. Barbara Mikulski
(D-Md), seeks to reinsert a
"Women's Preventive Care"
provision that was dropped when
Senate leadership merged the
health and Finance committees'
health bills. The other
amendment was offered by Sen.
John McCain (R-Az.). It was a
motion to recommit the bill to
the Senate Finance Committee in
order to remove the massive
Medicare cuts that are made in
the bill in order to fund the
restructuring effort.
Sen. McCain,
in defense of his amendment made
the following statement:
"Slashing
Medicare by nearly $500 billion,
one-half a trillion dollars, to
create a new Federal health care
entitlement is not health care
reform. These reductions include
$120 billion to the Medicare
Advantage program, $150 billion
to providers including
hospitals, hospice, and nursing
homes, and $23 billion in
unspecified decreases to be
determined by an 'Independent
Medicare Advisory board.' Simply
put, these Medicare cuts will
impact seniors' access to
quality care. This is a price
that Americans should not be
asked to pay."
Votes on
amendments are expected this
afternoon as debate continues.
Part Three
Part One |