Posts Tagged ‘Domestic Policy’

Senators Deny Insurance Company Money Sways Them

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

As politicos left the Sunday morning talkshows this week, I asked about money in politics, specifically, from insurance and finance and if politicians were not doing the bidding of Wall Street in the healthcare debate.

Snowe: “Nothing to do with the contributions I receive”

I asked Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine), if the problem — as the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee has argued — isn’t the “public option” — but the private option. I questioned her about Aetna and New York Life Insurance being among her largest contributors as she opposes an enhanced Medicare-for-all (or single payer) program — as well as even a mere public option: “I do what’s best for my constituency and the American people, it has nothing to do with the contributions I receive” the senator said.
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Dr. Crawford asks Sec. Sebelius why Single Payer is off the Table

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Write up at SinglePayerAction.

John McCain Questioned about Wall Street Money

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

Transcript:

Sam Husseini: “Senator, your five biggest funders are PACs and others related with Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan. Given the huge Wall Street bail-outs, why shouldn’t concerned Americans conclude that Wall Street has basically bought off not just you, but a large chunk of congress?”

John McCain: “Well let me just point out that it is clear that then candidate Obama got measurably more contributions than I did from Wall Street and hedge fund people. That’s just a matter of fact. In fact, I was disappointed that I didn’t get more financial support from [laughs] organizations that I thought fundamentally shared many of my principles. So the fact is that’s a very small percentage of the amount of money that I received, and I was one of the first who criticized the excesses of Wall Street. I, and others, were the ones that after an Inspector General’s report called for the regulation and bringing under control Fannie and Freddie who were the catalysts for the catastrophe that took place. We recognized it, we urged action, and unfortunately that action was not taken.”

Schwarzenegger dismisses single-payer healthcare

Sunday, February 25th, 2007

Dismissing the idea of a single payer health care system in his state, via the specter of an imagined inefficient government bureaucracy, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger spoke of a health care system where all citizens were “insured.” His vision seemed to keep firmly in place a private layer of industry between citizens and health care services that one might think could be obsoleted or diminished by an state mandated system.

As he left for his car, The Washington Stakeout’s Sam Husseini asked the governor if he believed there was “such a thing as a business bureaucracy,” to which Schwarzenegger responded “oh yeah” — but there was no opportunity to further explore the governor’s thoughts, or see what he knew about the examples and lessons learned in Canada.

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