News Releases

ALG: Dueling Obamacare Carve Outs

Oct. 15, 2013, Fairfax, VA—Americans for Limited Government President Nathan Mehrens today issued the following statement in response to competing House and Senate proposals to pass a continuing resolution, raise the debt ceiling, and to fund Obamacare: “There is now no disagreement between House and Senate leadership, between Republicans and…

Oct. 15, 2013, Fairfax, VA—Americans for Limited Government President Nathan Mehrens today issued the following statement in response to competing House and Senate proposals to pass a continuing resolution, raise the debt ceiling, and to fund Obamacare:

“There is now no disagreement between House and Senate leadership, between Republicans and Democrats, on the most critical issue facing the nation, and that is funding Obamacare.

“On the Senate side, Republican leaders have signed off on not only funding Obamacare, but exempting labor unions from some of its harmful provisions. Meanwhile, House Republican leaders similarly have agreed to allow funding for Obamacare to take effect, and to bail out General Electric and other corporate interests who are faced with the onerous medical device tax.

“The only apparent difference of opinion is which special interest should get an exemption from the health care law. When both houses are through negotiating, they’ll likely agree that both big labor and General Electric should be exempted. This comes atop big businesses getting a one-year delay on the employer mandate, members of Congress and their staffs getting a lifetime exemption from the law from the Obama administration, and other labor unions who also got a four-year waiver from the so-called Cadillac insurance plan tax.

“Apparently, when all is said and done, everyone except for the American people will have an Obamacare waiver.

“These carve outs for special interests once again prove why we need to get rid of health care law in full. Rather than playing the traditional D.C. carve out game, House Republicans need to go back to square one and demand that everyone be treated the same by defunding the entire law.”

(Editor’s Note: The above communication is a news release from an advocacy organization and does not necessarily reflect the editorial position of FITSNews.com. To submit your letter, news release, email blast, media advisory or issues statement for publication, click here).

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2 comments

Smirks October 16, 2013 at 9:36 am

Just pass a clean CR that changes nothing. You’ll force the unions to take it as-is, and really, the medical device tax is not that big of a deal. By repealing it, you are adding $29 billion to the deficit over the next ten years. Then again, Republicans sure didn’t seem to mind Medicare part D being unfunded.

http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=3684

Stop wasting time debating Obamacare, end the shutdown, resolve the debt ceiling issue, and get back to pushing for spending cuts like you should be doing. Instead, they push for the debt ceiling “crisis” to be shoved out another six weeks to try and gain more bargaining chips to piss away on pointless anti-ACA bullshit and Republicans saying they should force another shutdown in December/January over the contraceptives mandate.

They don’t want a balanced budget. They don’t want to compromise. They don’t even want to govern.

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Tom October 16, 2013 at 10:41 am

“So many people I run into who are normal people — and I hate to use that term — they just can’t understand what’s going on. On this one they can’t even see both sides. They just think Republicans are crazy. That’s it. They see no justification for any of this.” – Representative Peter King (R).
I guess that sums up my feelings.

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