[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 73 (Wednesday, May 25, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3289-S3290]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MEDICARE
Mr. REID. Madam President, for weeks Americans old and young have
been speaking out against the Republican plan to kill Medicare. It is
not just Democrats. Republicans have been speaking out against it too.
Newt Gingrich called it a radical plan and ``right-wing social
engineering.'' Several Republican Senators have similarly spoken out,
calling it what it really is, a plan that would shatter a cornerstone
of our society and break our promise to the elderly and to the sick.
Last night, though, the most important voices were heard. American
voters had their first chance to do something about it. They went to
the polls and resoundingly rejected that plan and the candidate who ran
on that plan's promise to dismantle Medicare.
In a special congressional election in upstate New York, the
Republican plan to kill Medicare was the No. 1 issue. It was the No. 2
issue. It was the No. 3 issue. It is what the voters most cared about
and were most scared about, as well they should be.
Here is what it would do: It would turn over seniors' health to
profit-hungry insurance companies. It would let bureaucrats decide what
tests and treatments seniors get. It would ask seniors to pay more for
their health care in exchange for fewer benefits. That is a bad deal
all around.
What is telling is not just that the voters rejected this plan, it is
that the Republican candidate pushing the Republican plan to kill
Medicare was rejected in a very Republican district.
[[Page S3290]]
The district, which stretches from Buffalo to Rochester, has been in
Republican hands for four decades. It produced influential Republicans
such as Jack Kemp, whom I served in Congress with. He served in the
Cabinet. He ran on the Presidential ticket as a vice presidential
candidate.
Last night's special election was held to replace a Republican
Congressman who won that seat by a 3-to-1 margin. John McCain won the
district in 2008. George W. Bush won the district 4 years earlier. Last
year's Republican candidate for Governor in New York lost in a
landslide. But he won big in that district. That is how conservative it
is.
Democrats in Congress and even some candid Republicans know the
Republican plan to kill Medicare is irresponsible and indefensible.
Last night voters showed the country and the Congress that they know it
too.
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