In a conference call with reporters, Gov. Martin O’Malley (D-MD) and
Gov. Duval Patrick (D-MA) praised Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling on the
Affordable Care Act and addressed the Republicans’ lack of an
alternative plan. O’Malley went so far as to say of Republicans that
they’re only in favor of government intervention in health care when it
takes away women’s rights.
The Maryland governor excoriated the GOP for attacking the Court’s
ruling while offering nothing in the way of an alternative to the ACA.
He also attacked their hypocrisy in objecting to government involvement
in health care while simultaneously implementing hundreds of new
restrictive anti-abortion laws in state houses across the country.
“The only health care mandate they can embrace are transvaginal probes for women,” he said.
Both
Democrats stressed the fact that while Republicans may raise strenuous
objections to the president’s signature piece of domestic legislation
and attack it as (in the hyperbolic words of Rush Limbaugh), “the
largest tax increase in the history of the world,” they have offered
nothing in the way of alternatives, and would opt to stay with the
status quo, which, O’Malley said, “everyone knows is broken.”
Gov. Patrick of Massachusetts spoke about the successes he has seen
in that state resulting from an individual mandate on health care.
Coverage rates for children have risen to 98.7 percent. Costs, he said,
have come down. While the plan was not perfect when it was implemented
in 2006 by current Republican candidate for president, then-Governor
Mitt Romney (R-MA), Patrick said that revisions and amendments to the
original legislation have provided a working model for what the nation
as a whole would see under full implementation of the ACA.
Patrick addressed attacks on the individual mandate that call it and
the potential non-compliance fines a tax. “Don’t believe the hype that
the other side is selling,” he said, “This is a penalty. It’s about
dealing with the freeloaders.”
Whatever the Republicans are calling the ACA, a giant tax increase or
further proof of the president’s socialist agenda, Patrick said that at
least it’s an attempt to get costs in line and make our society more
just and equitable. “By whatever name,” he said of the president’s
plan, “it’s a solution.”
No comments:
Post a Comment