John Boehner ridicules Obamacare...
http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/101933-boehner-ridicules-obamas-healthcare-town-hall-as-pr-gimmick

Boehner Ridicules Obama's Healthcare Town Hall as PR Gimmick
By Michael O'Brien - 06/08/10 10:39 AM ET
House GOP leader John Boehner (Ohio) went on the offensive on Tuesday against an event in which President Barack Obama will promote his signature healthcare reform law to seniors.
Boehner ridiculed an online town hall the president will hold later this morning as little more than a "glitzy PR campaign" to repackage the healthcare bill Obama signed into law in March.
"Out-of-touch Washington Democrats’ problem isn’t the sales pitch for ObamaCare – the problem is ObamaCare itself," Boehner said. "The American people don’t want the higher taxes, higher costs, Medicare cuts, and payoffs to Washington special interests. No glitzy PR campaigns are going to change that.”
The White House has been promoting the online town hall at a Senior Center in Maryland as an opportunity to convey the benefits to elderly Americans contained within the healthcare bill. Chief among these benefits was the bill's closing of the "donut hole" in seniors' prescription drug coverage, including a $250 rebate check that the president will promote this morning.
But Boehner and his Senate counterpart, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), lambasted the rebate and Democrats' healthcare reform efforts as a hole.
"The centerpiece of today’s event is a $250 dollar rebate check that the administration will pass out to the fraction of seniors on Medicare who qualifies for it," McConnell said Tuesday morning on the Senate floor. "What the administration won’t mention at today’s event, however, is that for every senior who gets a check, more than three other seniors will see an increase in their prescription drug insurance premiums."
The "pre-buttal" to the administration's town hall comes against a backdrop in which Republicans believe it will be to their advantage to stress the unpopular aspects of healthcare reform to voters in the midterm elections. Boehner has previously said that repealing parts of the healthcare law and replacing them with GOP alternatives would be a top priority if Republicans take back control of Congress this fall.
But Obama's own pollster is arguing that those pledges could backfire, writing in a memo to Democrats last week that voters are "becoming increasingly comfortable with the law" as "misinformation" about the bill recedes.
But Boehner's office marshaled polls and news clips arguing the unpopularity of the reform law and its impact on Obama and Democrats' popularity, setting the stage for a contentious election year battle over the president's signature first-term accomplishment.

Boehner Ridicules Obama's Healthcare Town Hall as PR Gimmick
By Michael O'Brien - 06/08/10 10:39 AM ET
House GOP leader John Boehner (Ohio) went on the offensive on Tuesday against an event in which President Barack Obama will promote his signature healthcare reform law to seniors.
Boehner ridiculed an online town hall the president will hold later this morning as little more than a "glitzy PR campaign" to repackage the healthcare bill Obama signed into law in March.
"Out-of-touch Washington Democrats’ problem isn’t the sales pitch for ObamaCare – the problem is ObamaCare itself," Boehner said. "The American people don’t want the higher taxes, higher costs, Medicare cuts, and payoffs to Washington special interests. No glitzy PR campaigns are going to change that.”
The White House has been promoting the online town hall at a Senior Center in Maryland as an opportunity to convey the benefits to elderly Americans contained within the healthcare bill. Chief among these benefits was the bill's closing of the "donut hole" in seniors' prescription drug coverage, including a $250 rebate check that the president will promote this morning.
But Boehner and his Senate counterpart, Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), lambasted the rebate and Democrats' healthcare reform efforts as a hole.
"The centerpiece of today’s event is a $250 dollar rebate check that the administration will pass out to the fraction of seniors on Medicare who qualifies for it," McConnell said Tuesday morning on the Senate floor. "What the administration won’t mention at today’s event, however, is that for every senior who gets a check, more than three other seniors will see an increase in their prescription drug insurance premiums."
The "pre-buttal" to the administration's town hall comes against a backdrop in which Republicans believe it will be to their advantage to stress the unpopular aspects of healthcare reform to voters in the midterm elections. Boehner has previously said that repealing parts of the healthcare law and replacing them with GOP alternatives would be a top priority if Republicans take back control of Congress this fall.
But Obama's own pollster is arguing that those pledges could backfire, writing in a memo to Democrats last week that voters are "becoming increasingly comfortable with the law" as "misinformation" about the bill recedes.
But Boehner's office marshaled polls and news clips arguing the unpopularity of the reform law and its impact on Obama and Democrats' popularity, setting the stage for a contentious election year battle over the president's signature first-term accomplishment.




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