Nov.
26, 2003
--Congress passes
greatest expansion of government medicine since 1965.
--Shady dealings and
rule-bending on floor of Congress to force passage.
--Single-payer
supporters claiming victory for socialized medicine.
--SIGN PETITION to stop more socialized
medicine.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Senate voted today to pass the
new Medicare prescription drug plan, as well as other “reforms.” The House had passed it early Saturday
morning after an all-night session and some serious arm-twisting and
rule-bending.
The column posted below by
free-market champion, syndicated columnist Deroy Murdock, eloquently reflects
our objections to this biggest expansion of government programs since Lyndon
Johnson’s “Great Society,” and the shameful way in which it
passed.
SINGLE-PAYER PROPONENTS
CLAIMING MEDICARE VOTE SIGNALS SUPPORT FOR SOCIALIZED
MEDICINE
AAPS will continue to lobby in
Congress and work with the Administration to see that the Medical Savings
Accounts (now called “HSAs”) and the other free market reform demonstration
projects are given every chance to succeed.
But you can also register your alarm
in a constructive way ---
The single-payers supporters are
interpreting this Medicare expansion as a mandate for more government control of
medicine, and are using it to push for their ultimate agenda – total socialized
medicine in the United
States. They say that the only problem with
Medicare is that there isn’t enough of it!
They have already gathered more than
8,000 signatures of physicians who support socialized medicine and are
circulating the petition around Washington.
TAKE ACTION NOW – STOP
MORE EXPANSION OF GOVERNMENT MEDICINE
HELP US SHOW THAT THESE 8,000 ARE
THE MINORITY….
CLICK HERE TO SIGN
THE PETITION OPPOSING SOCIALIZED MEDICINE!
Join AAPS and sign our petition
opposing socialized medicine and government control. We particularly need physicians to sign
to counter the single-payer “spin” doctors who claim overwhelming support for a
Canadian-style managed mess.
Physicians: request petitions to place in your
hospital's medical lounge and distribute to your
colleagues!
HELP STOP THIS
TRAIN WRECK FROM GETTING ANY BIGGER.
SIGN THE PETITION
AGAINST SOCIALIZED MEDICINE TODAY!
Association of American
Physicians and Surgeons
1601 N. Tucson
Blvd. Suite
9
Tucson,
AZ
85716
(800)
635-1196
(520) 325-4230
Fax
www.aapsonline.org

November 24, 2003, 12:32
p.m.
Walk of
Shame
Republicans bungle Medicare and have their way with the
law
Deroy
Murdock is a columnist with the Scripps Howard News Service. The original
article is posted online at www.nationalreview.com/murdock/murdock200311241232.asp.
Imagine election
authorities in your town keeping the polls open for an extra two hours and 38
minutes until enough voters adopted a ballot measure that officials favored.
Outrage would erupt, and rightly so. Conservatives and free marketeers should be
similarly indignant about the way Republican House leaders extracted victory,
like impacted molars, from the jaws of defeat.
After three hours of
debate on the Medicare drug plan, the yeas and nays were ordered at
3:00 Saturday morning. "This
will be a 15-minute vote," presiding officer Rep. Richard "Doc" Hastings (R.,
Wash.) said with a slam of his gavel. While some House votes take just five
minutes, most last 15. They may linger for another two to three minutes to
accommodate stragglers who arrive tardily on the floor or to let party whips
quickly plead with potentially wayward members. This is roughly akin to driving
70 in a 65 mile-per-hour zone.
Saturday morning's action, however, more
closely resembled a drag race outside a retirement home.
I turned on
C-SPAN at around 5:30 A.M. expecting to learn how the
$409.8 billion proposal had fared. Instead, I learned that the vote was 216 yeas
to 218 nays. I was thrilled that 26 Republicans had agreed that this bill was
too much government (a universal entitlement) chasing too manageable a problem
(the 22 percent of seniors without drug coverage). All but about 15 Democrats
opposed the bill for not doing even more, thus dooming this proposal to defeat.
So why was the House still voting?
In an extraordinary move
which will fuel Democratic paranoia that Republicans break the rules to swipe
votes they cannot win, the House GOP leadership broke the rules to swipe a vote
they could not win.
"We won it fair and square," said House Democratic
leader Nancy Pelosi of California, "and they stole it by
hook and crook." Pelosi added in a statement that Republican conduct "brought
dishonor to this institution." She told Reuters: "I guess it's in their DNA.
They just can't play by the rules."
In this case, at least, Nancy Pelosi
is right.
GOP leaders stretched until 5:53 A.M. a vote that should have ended at 3:15
A.M. This extra time gave them,
Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson (who uncustomarily trolled
the House floor for votes) and eventually President Bush (who phoned from the
White House) an opportunity to turn GOP representatives C. L. "Butch" Otter of
Idaho and Arizona's Trent Franks from nays to yeas. Their flip-flops prompted
Ernest Istook (R., Ok.) to reverse himself while David Wu (D.,
Wash.) finally joined the
winning team. The final vote was 220 yeas to 215 nays.
For a party that
correctly spent the Clinton years and the Florida presidential-recount saga defending the rule of law,
GOP House leaders assaulted it as the nation slept. That they undermined House
procedures with this record-breaking vote — not to cut taxes or fund
counterterrorism (which would have been bad enough) but to inaugurate the
largest expansion in the federal welfare state since 1965 — should enrage
rank-and-file Republicans across America.
House Speaker
Dennis Hastert of Illinois, Majority Leader Tom DeLay of
Texas and other GOP leaders should be deeply ashamed of
themselves for exceeding the impropriety of former Democratic speaker Thomas
Foley of Washington. On August 19,
1994, he used a 73-minute vote to help fellow Democrats find
enough GOP votes to pass a Clinton-backed anti-crime measure. Rather than rise
above such shenanigans, top Republicans this weekend sunk to even lower levels
of contempt for the House's traditions and practices.
Beyond the
perpetrators of this abuse of power, conservatives and free-marketeers should be
disappointed by the 204 Republicans who ignored months of warnings about this
bill's excessive scope, costs, and complexity. If this bill is enacted, when the
grim predictions about it come to pass, these GOP lawmakers will not be to claim
they were not cautioned by pro-market commentators as well as scholars and
activists at the Heritage Foundation, Institute for Health Freedom, National
Taxpayers Union Foundation, Cato Institute, National Center for Public Policy
Research, and other organizations that still fight for limited government.
Finally, Americans who lean right should give a standing ovation to
several GOP members who defied the statist House leadership and attempted to
defeat this bill. Rep. Ron Paul, M.D. of Texas educated his colleagues on this proposal's shortcomings
through seminars in his office in the Cannon House Building (including one gathering I
addressed).
Rep. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania encouraged members, especially newer ones, to oppose
the Medicare bill. Late Friday night, Toomey, Mike Pence (R., Ind.) and John
Shadegg (R., Ariz.) sequestered some two dozen of these congressmen at Hunan
Dynasty, a Chinese restaurant on Capitol Hill, and later in the House gallery to
shield them from the heavy-handed leadership. In this battle, Toomey's
independence, tenacity and commitment to free-market principle demonstrated once
again why he deserves to replace faux-Republican Arlen Specter as the
Keystone State's United
States senator.
The 25
members who withstood tremendous pressure and stood with
America's taxpayers deserve individual recognition. They are
identified below. Interestingly, many are freshmen and sophomores. This
underscores the fact that lengthy tenure in Washington too often transforms
conservatives into free-spending socialists.
The Senate is considering
H.R. 1 and is expected to vote on it today, unless Senator Ted Kennedy's
filibuster succeeds. As massive as this bill is, it still is not fat enough to
impress the Massachusetts Democrat and many of his party colleagues. Americans
who believe in limited government should call their senators at 202-224-3121
[and voice their own opinion on the bill].
HONOR ROLL
These 25 GOP
representatives deserve the applause of free-marketeers for courageously
[rejecting the expansion of Big Government]:
Todd Akin of Missouri
Greshem Barrett of South Carolina
Dan Burton of Indiana
Steve Chabot
of Ohio
John Culbertson of Texas
Jim DeMint of South Carolina
Jo Ann
Emerson of Missouri
Tom Feeney of Florida
Jeff Flake of Arizona
Scott Garrett of New Jersey
Gil Gutknecht of Minnesota
John
Hostettler of Indiana
Walter Jones of North Carolina
Jeff Miller of
Florida
Jerry Moran of Kansas
Marilyn Musgrave of Colorado
Charlie
Norwood of Georgia
Ron Paul of Texas
Mike Pence of Indiana
Jim Ryun
of Kansas
John Shadegg of Arizona
Nick Smith of Michigan
Tom
Tancredo of Colorado
Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania
Zack Wamp of Tennessee
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