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Barack Obama: Putting The Health Care Needs Of Kids First

U.S. House Votes To Expand Children's Health Care

The U.S. House of Representatives today passed critical legislation that would expand health care coverage to another 5 million uninsured American children.  House Republicans fought the legislation and President Bush has promised a veto. 

Their major objection:  the program is paid for by increasing taxes on tobacco.

Republicans in the House and in the White House clearly place more importance on big tobacco than on the lives and health of our nation's children. 

The Washington Post reports:

The House (today) approved legislation vastly expanding a federal health insurance program for the children of the working poor, shrugging off a fresh veto threat from President Bush and the fierce opposition of House Republicans.

The Senate, where the legislation has strong bipartisan support, is expected to follow suit as early as (Thursday), voting on a more modest version of the program and probably setting up a showdown between congressional supporters and the White House, which says the measures are far too expansive.

The legislation would launch the most significant growth in federal health care in a decade, and Democrats hope it will fortify their members as they head home soon for the summer recess amid voter perceptions that they have accomplished little since taking control of Congress.

"This is the children's hour," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) declared... "We are able to meet our moral obligation to our children."

The 225 to 204 vote in the House -- largely along party lines -- came after hours of delaying tactics, strident rhetoric and trench warfare from Republicans who called the bill the first step toward "socialized medicine," financed by an unfair tobacco tax increase and cuts to managed-care companies in Medicare.

But in the end, the Democrats had weapons that were just too powerful -- a promise to insure 5 million more children who otherwise would have no access to health care, adding to the 6 million children already covered -- and the backing of Republican and Democratic governors, the American Medical Association, AARP, the March of Dimes, the Catholic Health Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and even cyclist Lance Armstrong. And the prospects are good in the Senate, where a key Republican, Orrin Hatch (Utah), said, "It's difficult for me to understand how anyone wouldn't want to do this."   

House Republicans tried to scare senior citizens into opposing the bill but that effort failed:

House Minority Leader John A. Boehner (Ohio), pointing to the cuts to Medicare managed-care plans, dashed off a letter to AARP, calling for the powerful seniors lobby to retract its endorsement and halt its full-throttle campaign for its passage.

But John Rother, AARP's policy director, responded that funding for Medicare physician reimbursements and free medical screenings more than makes up for any difficulties managed-care companies might face when they reap the same reimbursement rates as the core Medicare program.

President Bush has spoken out often against the bill:

...Bush opposes such a major expansion of the program. In an interview with The Washington Post last month, he said, "When you expand eligibility . . . you're really beginning to open up an avenue for people to switch from private insurance to the government."

The House bill would enlarge the State Children's Health Insurance Program, or SCHIP, by $47 billion over five years to provide coverage to the additional 5 million children.

As the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities reports, Bush's argument is bogus.

What can't be argued is that millions of children in our nation go without medical care and need this legislation.  It is also clear that House Republicans and George W. Bush don't give a damn and will do everything in their power to keep children from getting the care they deserve.

Related Post: George W. Bush: Putting Tobacco Companies Before Kids   

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