Friday, October 2, 2009

Rep. Paul Broun (R-GA). says that constituent who has major depression should go to the emergency room



















Rep. Paul Broun (R-GA). says that constituent who has major depression should go to the emergency room

One of the most radical opponents of health care reform is Rep. Paul Broun (R-GA). He has said that a public option would “kill people.” Last Tuesday, Broun was confronted by a constituent at a health care town hall who explained that he has has gone into debt because he can’t afford insurance for his major depressive disorder. In response to his constituent’s story, Broun said that “people who have depression, who have chronic diseases in this country…can always get care in this country by going to the emergency room.” That comment prompted boos from the crowd. Towards the end of Broun’s answer, a constituent yelled, “That’s why we need a public option!” which brought cheers from the audience.

Watchdogs: Health industry giving more to Congress than thought
A joint study by two political watchdog groups has found that Sen. Max Baucus -- the Montana Democrat who authored the principal health care reform bill being debated in the Senate -- was a major recipient of "contribution clusters" from lobbyists linked to health care groups.

The study, from the Center for Responsive Politics and the Sunlight Foundation, says members of Congress working on health care reform are receiving more money from the health industry than people realize.

This is because private lobbyists are donating to politicians who have already received donations from the groups those lobbyists represent, a practice the watchdogs describe as "contribution clusters."

The "never-before-seen" numbers, as the Sunlight Foundation describes them, show that Baucus collected contributions from 37 outside lobbyists representing PhRMA, the pharmaceutical industry’s chief trade association, and 36 lobbyists who listed biotech firm Amgen as their client.

In all, 11 major health and insurance firms had their contributions to Baucus boosted through extra donations from 10 or more of their outside lobbyists.
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On Tuesday night, the Senate Finance Committee, which Baucus heads, voted down two proposals for a government-run public option for health care.

Baucus is third on the list for "contribution clusters" from the health industry, behind Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), in second place, and Arizona Sen. John McCain, who came in first -- though, as the study noted, McCain's donations were likely inflated by his presidential campaign last year.