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Obama praises Senate committee's health care vote
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 17 - 10 - 2009


President Barack Obama pushed back
against critics of his health care plan on Saturday with a
stern warning that absent reform, costs will continue to
rise and eventually devastate the U.S. economy, according to AP.
The administration is trying to build momentum for its top
domestic priority following a 14-9 vote this week by the
Senate Finance Committee for legislation that would extend
health care to millions of people who now aren't covered by
any insurance plan.
Democrats hailed the vote as a victory, in part because
the bill was supported by a Republican, Maine Sen. Olympia
Snowe. But the legislation faces considerable opposition
with the health insurance industry, labor unions and large
business organizations lining up against it for different
reasons.
«The history is clear: For decades rising health care
costs have unleashed havoc on families, businesses and the
economy,» the president said Saturday in his weekly radio
and Internet address. «And for decades, whenever we have
tried to reform the system, the insurance companies have
done everything in their considerable power to stop us.»
Earlier this week, the health insurance industry released
a study concluding that the Finance Committee bill _ one of
five competing House and Senate health care measures _
would raise premiums significantly for millions of people
who already have health coverage.
The report drew intense criticism from the White House,
congressional Democrats and other advocates of the bill who
deemed the study a last-ditch effort to sway public opinion
against the White House-backed measure.
Obama said he would not abide «those who would bend the
truth or break it to score political points and stop our
progress as a country.» He accused the industry of
«filling the airwaves with deceptive and dishonest ads,»
sending money and lobbyists to Capitol Hill and paying for
studies «designed to mislead the American people.»
The bills moving through Congress generally would require
most Americans to buy insurance, provide federal subsidies
to help lower-income people afford coverage and help small
businesses defray the cost of extending coverage to their
workers.
The measures would bar insurers from denying coverage
because of pre-existing medical conditions and limit their
ability to charge higher premiums based on age or family
size. Expanded coverage would be paid for by cutting
hundreds of billions of dollars from future Medicare
payments to health care providers. Higher taxes also are
included in the bills. Medicare is the government-run
program that provides health care coverage to the elderly.
The House and Senate bills also envision higher taxes _ an
income tax surcharge on million-dollar wage-earners in the
case of the House and a new excise levy on insurance
companies selling high-cost policies in the case of the
Senate Finance Committee bill.
Republican opponents say the bills will increase costs for
patients, further job losses and give the government more
of a say in who gets medical care, and what kind.
«Americans inherently know government interference drives
costs up, not down,» Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas, said in
the Republicans' weekly message. «The massive health care
plans being crafted behind closed doors in Washington will
ultimately allow the government to decide what doctors we
can see, what treatments the government thinks you deserve
and what medicines you can receive.»
Obama contended the price of not acting will be a
devastated U.S. economy because rising health care costs
will mean lower salaries and higher unemployment, lower
profits and larger numbers of people going without
insurance.
Obama said overhauling the system will provide the change
voters sought when they went to the polls last November.
«But it also now represents something more: whether or
not we as a nation are capable of tackling our toughest
challenges; if we can serve the national interest despite
the unrelenting efforts of the special interests; if we can
still do big things in America,» he said.


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