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New York Special Election: Medicare Will Be Issue Of 2012

New York Special Election: Medicare Will Be Issue Of 2012.

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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

New York Special Election: Medicare Will Be Issue Of 2012

WASHINGTON -- The 2012 election found its defining issue on Tuesday night, with an insurgent Democrat upsetting a well-financed Republican in a deeply red district in New York state.

The GOP paved the way for the Democrat’s victory by voting earlier this year to end the current Medicare program that guarantees health coverage to seniors and replace it with a voucher system that provides premium support for the elderly to purchase private health insurance.

"Kathy Hochul’s victory tonight is a tribute to Democrats’ commitment to preserve and strengthen Medicare, create jobs and grow our economy. And it sends a clear message that will echo nationwide: Republicans will be held accountable for their vote to end Medicare," Pelosi said in a statement after the election.



Jef Pollock, Hochul’s pollster, told HuffPost that the numbers showed the Democrat winning among seniors and independents, two groups that broke heavily for Republicans in 2010.
"This race was won, in a significant way, because of the disastrous decision by the GOP to dismantle Medicare as we know it," he said. "Kathy Hochul was a great candidate. And credit is due to her for running a great race as well as credit to the campaign for making Medicare a central issue -- that's why Hochul was winning 74 percent of the voters who said that Medicare was the most important issue to them in the most recent Siena poll conducted just a few days ago," he said.

Steve Murphy, Hochul’s media consultant, argued that his candidate persuaded voters she was concerned about the deficit without needing to cut Medicare. "A Democrat in a competitive district can win on the Ryan budget and Medicare issue as long as they first demonstrate to voters that they are tough on spending and serious about the problem of rising deficits," he suggested. "Five of our seven ads had a strong fiscal component, not just Medicare."
Democrats highlighted the serious money the Republicans put into the election. “Today, the Republican plan to end Medicare cost Republicans $3.4 million and a seat in Congress. And this is only the first seat," said Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.), head of the Democrats' House campaign arm.

House Republicans pinned blame for Corwin's loss on a quirky third-party candidate, Jack Davis, who ran under the Tea Party despite an eclectic and sometimes liberal political past. “Republican Jane Corwin ran a hard-fought campaign against two well-funded Democrats, including one masquerading under the Tea Party name," said Rep. Pete Sessions (R-Texas), head of the House GOP campaign operation. "Obviously, each side would rather win a special election than lose, but to predict the future based on the results of this unusual race is naive and risky."
At home, Republicans have faced hostile town halls with seniors questioning how they'll be able to purchase private insurance with a voucher that doesn't rise at the rate of health care costs. At a recent town hall, a constituent of Rep. Rob Woodall (R-Ga.) raised a practical obstacle to obtaining coverage in the private market within the confines of an employer-based health insurance system: What happens when you retire?

"The private corporation that I retired from does not give medical benefits to retirees," the woman told the congressman in video captured a local Patch reporter in Dacula, Ga.
"Hear yourself, ma'am. Hear yourself," Woodall told the woman. "You want the government to take care of you, because your employer decided not to take care of you. My question is, 'When do I decide I'm going to take care of me?'"

Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) pounced on the remark, telling the Washington Post that it typifies Republican ideology.


Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/05/24/new-york-special-election-medicare-2012_n_866582.html

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