Obama Ally Throws Cold Water On Health Care

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First Posted: 07-19-09 09:37 AM   |   Updated: 07-19-09 11:12 AM

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During the course of the presidential campaign, Gov. Brian Schweitzer (D-Mont.) was often rumored to be on then Sen. Barack Obama's vice presidential short list. At the Democratic National Convention he gave one of the most crowd-pleasing speeches -- a blue-collared take on Democratic politics with a healthy dose of acid-tongue pokes at Sen. John McCain's wealth.

Now, however, Schweitzer isn't doing the president any favors, becoming one of the highest-profiled Democrats outside of Washington to throw cold water on health care reform.

Appearing on C-SPAN Sunday morning, Schweitzer said that the legislation currently making its way through Congress would unfairly burden states by requiring them to pay for a portion of the expanded coverage at a time when budgets are tight and pushing for growth in Medicaid.

"I have a lot of concerns as a governor," Schweitzer said from the National Governors Association meeting in Biloxi, Mississippi. "Now, let me lay this out, there are only a few states that have a budget surplus, we are one them, we have about $400 million in cold hard cash in the bank. Very few states have got that. And we got there through good fiscal management. You can't put more things on your plate than you can afford to pay for. Now what is happening in Congress right now, things that disturb us as governors, is first they are looking at the rules and one of the proposals would be that the way we are going to pay for a portion of this health care is we will turn to the states and ask them to bond, to pay for some of the health care. They want to do some financial trickery, simply stated, we can't afford what we are doing today so we will get the states to borrow some money. Well we are not going to do that, because it is going to hurt our bond rating. We as states, we have as prizes our bond rating and this would tend to decrease our bond rating. By the way, the federal government, if Congress wants to have a health care program, then they need to pay for it. They can't dump it back on the states."

"The second problem we have is that one of the least effective programs in terms of health care, in the history of this country, is something called Medicaid," the Montana Democrat added. "About 20 percent of America is on a Medicaid program and they would like to shift it and grow it to somewhere around 25 or 30 percent. In Montana's case alone it would add 115 million dollars to our costs in our state, as our match. Now Medicaid is a system that isn't working, almost everyone agrees. But what Congress intends to do is increase the number [of people] on Medicaid so they could do it for the cheap. It is not working for anybody."

Fortunately for the Obama White House, Schweitzer ultimately won't have a vote on health care legislation. But his skepticism doesn't help the administration's argument that Washington is out of touch with the American public. And having a prominent ally express doubts publicly is not something the president wants right now. And it wouldn't be much of a shocker if Schweitzer were to get a call sometime this week from his former gubernatorial colleague, current Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. Or maybe even Obama himself.

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During the course of the presidential campaign, Gov. Brian Schweitzer (D-Mont.) was often rumored to be on then Sen. Barack Obama's vice presidential short list. At the Democratic National Convention ...
During the course of the presidential campaign, Gov. Brian Schweitzer (D-Mont.) was often rumored to be on then Sen. Barack Obama's vice presidential short list. At the Democratic National Convention ...
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- pesfb I'm a Fan of pesfb 6 fans permalink
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This is all smoke and fog. The truth is health care reform has been dead since the day the current "attempt" at it started. Obama went back on his word to "give the American public the same health care benefits enjoyed by members of Congress" and instead turned it over to the insurance companies and hospital and AMA lobbyists.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 07/19/2009
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Congress went back on that promise also.

Congress has exempted itself from being affected by the bill they are pushing. All federal employees are exempted from participation.

So I don't think this bill is good enough for me, either.

Fix the bill, or give us single payer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:05 PM on 07/19/2009
- pesfb I'm a Fan of pesfb 6 fans permalink
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Of course Congress exempted itself. They wouldn't want the menial benefits they are proposing to shaft us with.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:54 PM on 07/19/2009
- mitsie I'm a Fan of mitsie 57 fans permalink
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THAT IS NOT TRUE

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:26 PM on 07/19/2009
- Grannysue I'm a Fan of Grannysue 131 fans permalink
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Maybe if the slugs in Congress and the Senate had not raped the Medicare and Medicaid programs for years and years for all their other pet projects and leaving "I owe yous" in the so called lock box things wouldn't be as bad as they are in both those programs, but you won't hear any of them say anything about that. Funny there's plenty of money to bail out corporations, banks, run two wars and investigate how incests mate but never enough money for healthcare??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 07/19/2009
- Siobhan11 I'm a Fan of Siobhan11 12 fans permalink

Agrred.

I am just sick that we finally have what I thought of was going to be the right time and place for major health care reform, and the worst recession in 75 years might ruin it because of all the stimulus and bailout spending, I am not saying we shouldn't have had the stimulus. I just really can't believe this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 PM on 07/19/2009
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Don't forget the original ponzi scheme called Social Security.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:43 PM on 07/19/2009
- pesfb I'm a Fan of pesfb 6 fans permalink
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Social Security would have been in surplus today if jollyjowled Reagan hadn't stolen from it to pay for his tax cuts for the welthy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:56 PM on 07/19/2009
- LaurieAnn I'm a Fan of LaurieAnn 99 fans permalink
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Social Security is not a ponzi scheme. From the beginning it was set up that payouts to recipients came from those currently paying into the system. This information of how the social security system is funded has been public information from inception.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 AM on 07/20/2009
- nia122 I'm a Fan of nia122 25 fans permalink

THE HEADLINE IS MISLEADING

Gov. Schweitzer did not pour cold water on the entire bill. His concern was about medicaid costs to the states. He is in favor of a strong public health insurance option and he actually had praise for the single-payer Canadian system.

The entire story is misleading. The only good thing is that it is getting a dialogue on health going. The governor, however, is being maligned as is heatlhcare reform in this article.

the governor is correct, however, in favoring a single-payer system over a strong public health insurance opiton.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 07/19/2009

Here's one of the Canadian plans that Governor Schweitzer was praising:

http://www.health.gov.bc.ca/msp/infoben/premium.html

Can you imagine having "wall-to-wall" health CARE for LESS than $100 a month?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 07/19/2009
- dillydawg I'm a Fan of dillydawg 58 fans permalink
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Unfortunately lately many of Stein's article headlines have been misleading. Many not worth the read.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 07/19/2009
- drizzt396 I'm a Fan of drizzt396 4 fans permalink
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Yeah when did that start? I always thought he was one of the best journos on here...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:34 PM on 07/19/2009
- hulagirrrl I'm a Fan of hulagirrrl 39 fans permalink
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single payer paid by a sales tax that will pay for the program. Even in his state that should work. Sales taxes are coming, one way or another, so might as well let them be for health care coverage.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 07/19/2009
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Ah..first you need sales.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:43 PM on 07/19/2009
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This author is not the best HP has to offer.

The article and especially the heading are misleading in the extreme. He did not do any homework about this man.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:27 PM on 07/19/2009
- flurryup I'm a Fan of flurryup 2 fans permalink

Probably pi ssed he didn't get the v.p.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 07/19/2009
- Loki11467 I'm a Fan of Loki11467 8 fans permalink
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HE misses the point. Long term this is massive cost savings! MASSIVE! We think short term in this country. We don't care about our children and grandchildren or future generations. The baby boomers are not baby boomers. They are Generation ME MYSELF AND I. They screwed us and refuse to let go.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:25 PM on 07/19/2009
- drizzt396 I'm a Fan of drizzt396 4 fans permalink
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You missed the point. He supports what is actually long-term cost savings. CONGRESS is ignoring that in an effort to put as much of the bill on the states as possible.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:33 PM on 07/19/2009

This sort of thing is why the States had representation in the Senate... until the 17th amendment made Senator an elected official. Taxation without representation? How many other programs does this apply to?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:25 PM on 07/19/2009
- drizzt396 I'm a Fan of drizzt396 4 fans permalink
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...huh? direct election of senators is a good thing. it took it out of the hands of the landowner-dominated state legislatur­es...

last time I checked Senators are still elected only by those in their state...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:32 PM on 07/19/2009
- platanoman I'm a Fan of platanoman 28 fans permalink
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It's not that hard governing a state with 900k peeps. Here in the Bronx, we have 1.3 million.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:24 PM on 07/19/2009
- drizzt396 I'm a Fan of drizzt396 4 fans permalink
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It's not that hard governing an area that's only a few square miles. Here in Montana, we have millions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:30 PM on 07/19/2009

I am one of your unemployed constituent's here in Montana Schweitzer, now, spend that 400 mil on giving me a job since no one else in this valley has any.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:23 PM on 07/19/2009
- drizzt396 I'm a Fan of drizzt396 4 fans permalink
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Sounds like 'root-speak to me. No to zoning, yes let's expand the airport so the stock farm members can fit their gulfstreams, government sucks but while you're at it Brian give me a job because everyone's so dirt-poor and paranoid down here that no one'll hire me cuz they think terrorists are going to take out the local economy...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:29 PM on 07/19/2009
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He is a sitting governor who simply only cares about the interest about his own state, Montana. It has so few people that health care reform don't benefit them much as it benefit other states. The mass of uninsured poor people generally live in the cities, and the farmers like ones in Montana are rich enough to buy their own health care.

But public health is a federal issue and warrants federal policymaking. Mr. Schweizer's provincial interest cannot be used to object to a good federal reform. I am generally for states making their own policy, but when it comes to health care, everyone deserves good coverage and some states need to see the long-term national benefit of health care reform and look beyond its own short-term financial conerns.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 07/19/2009
- awaitingmd I'm a Fan of awaitingmd 5 fans permalink
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thank you for your post. i do have a nagging question, why do so many states have this independent nation mentality? why do they act like they are not part of the union in certain issues but seek the help of the union in other issues? its just amazing and same time depressing. i think we still have a long way to go with being that shining beacon...r­ight now we cant even be a light tower.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 07/19/2009
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I wouldn't say it is "independent nation" mentality, as the threat of secession is long gone. But it is an American tradition that the states have a certain realm of autonomy to experiment with new projects (labs of democracy) and compete with each other. In many issues, that is a good aspect of governance. But everything can get too far, when this impetus of autonomy shakes the foundation of the union or harms our common solution to overarching problems (defense, transportation, and now it is health care reform), it should be reined in. 50 years ago some Southern states try to use states' rights to defend racial segregation, and the federal government rightly compelled them to desegregate. On the other hand, good use of states' autonomy include making policies on education, social institutions and family, etc.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:58 PM on 07/19/2009
- drizzt396 I'm a Fan of drizzt396 4 fans permalink
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A) every human being has this 'independent nation' mentality. it starts first when you identify with your family. then your block. then your 'hood. then your city. then your county. then your state. then your nation. etc. it's certainly not something unique to american states. someone needs to read Once and Future King...

B) "The mass of uninsured poor people generally live in the cities, and the farmers like ones in Montana are rich enough to buy their own health care."

YOU NEED TO DO SOME RESEARCH. When I moved to the state we had the lowest median income. I'm positive that we're still in the lowest five. Rural states are the POOREST states. As for farmers, those that aren't the six corporations that control over 90% of the nation's food require federal subsidies simply to break even, if that. They aren't making mad profits out here--all the money they have is tied up in their land and livelihood.

C) Read the other comments. Our governor is pro-single payer. He likes Canada's health plan. Do you know how Canada got a single payer system? THE PROVINCES INITIATED IT. And if the Kucinich amendment to the house bill becomes law, Montana'll be one of the first states with single payer health care. Then you'll be thanking Schweitzer for his 'provincial' attitudes that eventually become contagious and swept through the nation.

Oh well, I don't begrudge you your idiocy. Urban sprawl has a tendency to create sheep.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:27 PM on 07/19/2009
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Indeed I have noticed the comments about Mr. Schweitzer supporting single-payer, but it was AFTER I made my comment, so I wasn't deliberately distorting in any way. If I made a mistake, I apologize and retract what I said about Montana. If he truly support single-payer, I applaude him strongly, as strong as I have supported him in 2006.

But the basis of my assertion is true, if you discount the specifics. There are states that are unwilling to implement federal health care reform, remember that in Arizona a bill is introducted to block enforcement of the prospective federal plan? Before you talk about my "idiocy", I am telling you that I support state autonomy more than 80% of the HuffPo readers. I believe that teaching creationis­m-evolutio­n issue should be up to the states, and I was and am still very opposed to No Child Left Behind. But health care affects people's lives directly, it's a paramount issue to our entire nation and cannot be overlooked.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:57 PM on 07/19/2009

I don't know the merits of what he's saying, but it's a good reminder not to rush to support any bill just because it has a public option. The public options in the House and Senate bills are, IMO, not what most people had in mind and come with some serious strings attached. I don't want some bad legislation to be signed just to meet some artificial deadline set by Congress or the administration so they can congratulate themselves. If we're going to fix this, let's really fix it - and not dismiss any and all criticism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:21 PM on 07/19/2009
- ChelseaC I'm a Fan of ChelseaC 156 fans permalink
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Do you notice how he's saying Medicaid isn't working (which is true) but this DINO leaves out the fact that by and large MEDICARE is working.

You need to read between the lines with these *on the take* Dems.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:15 PM on 07/19/2009
- Whinger I'm a Fan of Whinger 46 fans permalink
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Fair weather friends are a dime a dozen!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 07/19/2009

He's not an ally. Wait until he starts to trash the energy bill.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 07/19/2009
- drizzt396 I'm a Fan of drizzt396 4 fans permalink
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On health care he's not an ally because he's more left of the federal government, which is far more in thrall to the insurance industry than the states.

On energy he won't be an ally because he has this irrational love for coal that gets him reelected all the time in purple-lib mt.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:38 PM on 07/19/2009
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