Perriello backs health reform bill to mixed feedback

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U.S. Rep. Tom Perriello’s vote in favor of the sweeping health care reform package that narrowly passed the House of Representatives late Saturday is drawing cheers from his supporters and outrage from opponents.
Perriello — a Democrat from Ivy who held 21 town hall meetings over the summer to gather input on the bill — said in a statement that the measure was a “profound shift away from the status quo towards progress and better, cheaper health care for more Americans.”

The bill, he said, will make health care more affordable for the middle class, provide security for seniors and reduce the federal deficit.
“Whether for or against health care reform, most people in the district asked me to fight for deficit reduction, a fair shake for rural doctors, and no federal funding for abortions. I helped to score major victories on all three fronts,” Perriello said in the statement. “Today’s vote on health care legislation came down to a simple choice for me: do we sit back and let premiums skyrocket for middle-class families and small businesses, and watch the cost of prescription drugs bankrupt seniors and the cost of health care bankrupt the federal government? Or do we take this step today to support middle-class families and small businesses by encouraging competition to bring down premiums?
“The time to act is now, because Virginians deserve a competitive health care market,” he continued. “They deserve access to affordable health care, and they deserve better choices when purchasing insurance.”

Republicans roundly condemned Perriello’s vote.
“Congressman Perriello let us down today,” state Sen. Robert Hurt, a Chatham Republican who is seeking the GOP nomination against Perriello, said in a statement. “He held 21 different town hall meetings this summer where Central and Southside Virginians voiced their deeply held opposition to a government takeover of health care; instead of listening, he chose to ignore our concerns — putting his liberal beliefs and party loyalty ahead of what’s best for us.”
Hurt said the bill will harm struggling residents and damage the economy of the 5th District, which runs from Charlottesville to Danville.
“Make no mistake: This bill is a devastating blow to our economy at just the wrong time. With job losses continuing to mount, Congressman Perriello voted to raise taxes on small businesses,” Hurt said in the statement. “With seniors getting squeezed, he voted to slash Medicare benefits. With Virginians working harder for less, he voted to give taxpayer-funded health care benefits to illegal immigrants. Because of our congressman’s actions, one-sixth of our economy may be subject to government control. The consequences are monumental: premiums will rise even faster, bureaucrats will be in charge of health care decisions and the quality of patient care will suffer.”

Katie Wright, a Republican National Committee spokeswoman, echoed that sentiment in a statement.
“Tom Perriello voted to turn one-sixth of the U.S. economy over to government bureaucrats,” she said. “A vote for the Obama-Pelosi health care bill means higher taxes on Virginia’s families and small businesses, cuts to Medicare for Virginia’s seniors, and an increase in premiums when Virginia’s families go to the doctor. Congressman Perriello has pulled the classic Washington move — he says one thing to his constituents, but when he is back in Washington, he votes against their interests.”
Perriello said he successfully won inclusion of several ideas in the bill that were raised during his more than 100 hours of town hall meetings.
“Our work on this bill is not over,” he said in his statement. “As health care legislation advances through Congress, I will work with my colleagues in the Senate to push for better inter-state competition. But I am proud of the changes I fought for. After hearing from my constituents during over 100 hours of town hall meetings in August, and by continuing those conversations in the months since, I worked to include their ideas in the bill, pushing for legislation that now protects Medicare, ensures deficit neutrality, encourages wellness and preventive care and protects small businesses.”

Eric I. Cantor, the Charlottesville area’s other U.S. representative, joined all but one of his fellow Republicans in opposing the bill.
“People have a grave concern about what Washington is doing to them, not for them,” the No. 2 House Republican told the Richmond Times-Dispatch on Saturday, citing last week’s GOP gubernatorial election victories in Virginia and New Jersey.
Cantor’s 7th District includes the counties of Louisa, Madison and Orange.

Democratic Reps. Glenn Nye and Rick Boucher voted with the state’s five Republican representatives in opposing the legislation.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by Foehammer on November 13, 2009 at 4:29 pm

Salty, I watched that clip by Lou Dobbs, unbelievable. Obamasaid he wanted to bring “Change we can believe in”, what he really wants to do is “Change WHAT we believe in”

Flag Comment Posted by saltydog on November 13, 2009 at 7:50 am

homedelivery..

You think the health care plans are only for citizens? As written it is available to anyone here legally. So the next step is to grant amnesty. The bill is already in the works.

watch it and weep….

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ULHHJ62TLG8

Flag Comment Posted by homedelivery on November 13, 2009 at 7:25 am

saltydog,
Can’t believe you’d use such a blatantly cut and paste video to discredit the President’s words.  I heard what he originally said at that time and it had nothing to do with his intentions.  It had to do with the rationing going on now.
You comments about hospital inflation of costs in order to get reimbursement for noninsured/nonpaying patients makes the case for requiring that all citizens be covered by some basic form of insurance.  (Of course you do know that the insurance plans are available only to citizens right?)

Flag Comment Posted by saltydog on November 12, 2009 at 9:57 pm

gordie:No rationing?

watch this.. obamas own words…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhfbkMfPID0

Response to your responses: The reason they charge ten dollars for an aspirin is because they spend two million dollars per bed to build a hospital. When a patient does not pay the 10 dollars for the aspirin the hospital is not out ten dollars they are out 3 cents. They INFLATE the losses to get reimbursed by the federal government. They only lose money in big cities or places with huge illegals.

The reason I should have a say in the cost of the Hospital is because they receive federal reimbursment and tax credits. They also receive special treament.. right now a private doctor wants to oepn an MRI clinic and they won’t give him a license because he will take business away from Martha Jefferson and UVA. So I actually should have a legal say in what they do. If they want to give up the tax breaks and anti competitive protections that is different.

As far as opening a business goes this is an appropriate forum because the burden the government places on workers to redistibute wealth to non workers will sink the entire boat. The government is the one who has an obligation not to ruin the economy for some liberal wish list.

Flag Comment Posted by Gordie on November 12, 2009 at 2:16 pm

Please do not spread lies about Medicare being between me and my Doctor. Medicare, in my 7 years on it, has never told me or the doctor what I can or cannot have prescribed. If you have proof please prove it, otherwise don’t try your scare tactics on the public. That is very dishonest and shows just what type of an individual you are.

Ans. 1. because there are so many who do not pay their bills for health care. But you forgot why it costs $10 for an aspirin.

ans. 2. Just what business is it of yours or mine if a hospital wants to spend 2 mil on beds. I thought you wanted people and government out of the lives of business.

ans. 3. The fraud, maybe because there are more important issues on the table in the first 10 months of his presidentcy. Stop being an everything now person.

ans. 4. If you don’t know how to start a landscaping business maybe you should go to school and learn. This is not the place to teach people how to open a business.

Flag Comment Posted by saltydog on November 12, 2009 at 1:33 pm

As proposed a person who simply chooses not to work will recive free health care without deductibles while a 73 year old who worked for more than 50 years has to deal with parital coverage. He also has to be subject to government beaurucrats deciding what the value of his life is in dollars and cents and wheter or not he is in fact worth “saving” if they can only postpone the inevitable. The thing is we are all going to die so why should somone who has paid in for fifty years be denied medication to give him a few more months while a panhandling bum gets a free ride because of his birth certificate?

Why is no one asking the real questions:...

Why does an emergency Room charge 450 dollars to give someone a prescription for cortizone for a bee sting?

Why is Martha Jefferson building a hospital at a cost of over two million dollars a bed?????

Why has Obama not ALREADY started finding the fruad in the system to prove he can do it???

How the heck is anyone supposed to open a small business like a landscaper when the minimmum wage is 14.5k, healthcare is 7k workmens comp is 1k and people still only want to pay 35 bucks to get the grass cut?

This bill is a joke.

Flag Comment Posted by Gordie on November 11, 2009 at 9:10 am

Good Morning. Here is part of a message I received this morning.

-53,000 of our uninsured friends and neighbors will now be able to
afford health insurance.
-1,200 families will avoid bankruptcy due to health care costs.
-15,200 small businesses will have their health insurance costs reduced.
-Local hospitals and doctors will see a $48 million reduction in the
cost of uncompensated care.
-12,500 senior citizens will benefit from closing the prescription
drug donut hole.

And of course, no more denials for pre-existing conditions, no co-pays
for preventive care, and improved health care for children, all while
reducing the national deficit by $30 billion in the first 10 years.

Remember this is in the 5th District of VA, except for the $30 billion the first 10 years.

Flag Comment Posted by Foehammer on November 10, 2009 at 7:45 pm

Thanks Gordie, looks like we finally found something we agree on. Sometimes I comment when I probably shouldn’t, and sometimes I dont and regret it. You and I butt heads, we obviously practice different politics, but thats why they make more than one flavor of ice cream. But I am interested in keeping things civil on here. Not out to insult anyone, messes up your Karma…

Flag Comment Posted by Gordie on November 10, 2009 at 7:10 pm

foehammer you are correct about the religion statement.
May I add you sure have a habit of picking and choosing responses. But then that is your option.
Have a nice day.

Flag Comment Posted by Foehammer on November 10, 2009 at 10:59 am

All consevatives are not religious just as all liberals are not socialists.

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