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Re: The 7 Republican Senators to watch on the health care bill 

By: monkeytrots in POPE IV | Recommend this post (1)
Sat, 06 May 17 3:42 AM | 60 view(s)
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Msg. 25020 of 47202
(This msg. is a reply to 25000 by Decomposed)

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Interesting. Decided to reply to this one before even reading the text - and point out that Sen. Cruz should be added to the list. Imagine my surprise - he was already there.

Received an e-mail response to my previous letter opposing Ryan-Care - thanking me ... and, between the lines, indicating Sen. Cruz was not so happy with the previous bill.

The question is - do I encourage him to vote NO on the current non-repeal bill, or to vote for what appears to be the most we can get.

Think I will simply encourage him to vote his conscious - and support him either way he decides. What true REPRESENTATIVE government is all about - electing moral men to study these issues and decide what is best for the people they represent.

Including Sen. Cruz's response to previous below.

United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510

Dear ...monkeytrots... (edit),

Thank you for sharing your thoughts regarding the health care debate. Input from fellow Texans significantly informs my decision-making and empowers me to better represent the state.

Our nation continues to confront a large number of deeply troubling issues. Chief among those is the healthcare law many have come to know as “Obamacare.” Passed on a party-line vote over the consistent objections of the American people, the law is proving simply to be unworkable – as millions of Americans lose health coverage, despite the President’s repeated assurance that “if you like your plan, you can keep it.” Moreover, Obamacare is driving up the cost of health insurance and causing individuals and families to lose access to their doctors. Many Americans have been left with nowhere to turn, made worse by the law’s forcing employers to stop hiring or cut workers’ hours and pay. All of this is having a devastating impact on the economy, at a time when our first priority should be restoring economic growth.

The first bill I introduced in the Senate was the Obamacare Repeal Act (S. 177; 113th Congress). I later introduced legislation to defund the law and spent more than 21 hours on the Senate floor attempting to persuade Washington to listen to the American people and protect them before the law took effect. In December of 2015, I voted for the Restoring Americans’ Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act (H.R. 3762; 114th Congress), which would repeal significant portions of Obamacare, including several unfair mandates and job-killing taxes. I will continue to fight for repeal of this destructive law and for restoration of Americans’ insurance plans—with better access, choices, and affordability for all.

Thank you again for sharing your views with me. Please feel free to contact me in the future about any issue important to your family. It is an honor to serve you and the people of Texas.

For Liberty,

Signature

Senator Ted Cruz

Austin Office
300 E. 8th, Suite #961
Austin, TX 78701
Phone: (512) 916-5834

Dallas Office
3626 N. Hall St., Suite 410
Dallas, TX 75219
Phone: (214) 599-8749

Houston Office
808 Travis Street, Suite 1420
Houston, TX 77002
Phone: (713) 718-3057

San Antonio Office
9901 IH-10W, Suite 950
San Antonio, TX 78230
Phone: (210) 340-2885

Washington Office
404 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20510
Phone: (202) 224-5922




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The above is a reply to the following message:
The 7 Republican Senators to watch on the health care bill
By: Decomposed
in POPE IV
Fri, 05 May 17 8:48 PM
Msg. 25000 of 47202

May 5, 2017

The 7 Republican Senators to watch on the health care bill

Analysis by Chris Cillizza, CNN Editor-at-large
CNN.com

Washington (CNN)The American Health Care Act is out of the House. The action now moves to the Senate, where President Donald Trump's attempt to overhaul the health care system faces a far more perilous fate.

The focus will be almost entirely on the Republican side as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell tries to craft a bill that can win the votes of 50 of the 52 GOPers. (It's hard to see -- at least right now -- any Democrat voting for any sort of health care bill.)

Each one of those 52 is, obviously, important. But some are more important than others. Below is my list of the seven senators to watch, the people who are likely to not only be front and center on the bill over the next few weeks but could well hold its fate in their hands.

1. Lamar(!) Alexander

Alexander is important for three reasons: He's the chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee, he's from a state that would be heavily impacted by the changes made to the pre-existing conditions mandate in the House bill and he's someone well positioned, as a former member of party leadership, to bring warring factions within the GOP conference together.

"The Senate will now finish work on our bill, but will take the time to get it right," Alexander said in a statement released Thursday. And, as a smart GOP Senate insider pointed out to me, Republicans have been listening to Lamar on health care since the big 2010 meeting with then-President Obama at Blair House.

2, 3, 4. Susan Collins/Lisa Murkowski/Rob Portman

Each of these less ideologically driven senators have already voiced concerns over the House bill, most notably its provision to freeze Medicaid expansion funds in 2020. Murkowski, in particular, offered a decidedly circumspect view of what the House passed Thursday.

"I think you will see an effort coming out of the Senate that will be separate from what the House has done," she told the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner (amazing name!) on Thursday night. "Incorporating what aspects of the House bill remains to be seen."

Another complicating factor: Collins is currently considering a run for governor in 2018. Maine, under Gov. Paul LePage, rejected the federal Medicaid expansion and LePage has vetoed attempts by the Democratic legislature to opt into the system.

5. Ted Cruz

Remember that the Texas senator and runner-up in the 2016 presidential primary fight was the lead agitator in shutting the government down in 2013 over funding for Obamacare. This could be a return engagement for the still-ambitious Cruz, who may see an opportunity to further bolster his national credentials by positioning himself as the uncompromising voice of the base on the bill.

Is full repeal -- a total non-starter for a handful of Cruz's Republican colleagues -- the only path to success in his mind? "We've been promising the voters we'd repeal Obamacare for seven years, and I think if we fail to deliver on that, I think, the consequences would be catastrophic," Cruz told a San Antonio radio station Thursday.

6. Dean Heller

Heller is the only Republican Senator up for re-election in 2018 in a state -- Nevada -- that Hillary Clinton won in 2016. That means protecting him from any career-killing votes will be a priority for McConnell. "I will not support it in its current form in the Senate, and am confident that what the Senate considers and approves will be different from the House bill," Heller said of the bill after the House vote. He expressed significant concern with the freezing of Medicaid funds and the abolishing of the pre-existing conditions mandate.

7. Rand Paul

Paul, like Cruz, made a national name for himself with his opposition to the ACA. And he's shown a bit of a penchant for grandstanding already this year when he waited outside the closed doors of the room where House Republicans were writing the bill. Paul's position is made more complicated by his alliance with his home state colleague McConnell. How far is Paul willing to push? And how much influence -- if any -- does McConnell have over him?

http://www.cnn.com/2017/05/05/politics/senate-healthcare/index.html


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