FL Governor flips on Obamacare

Star

Gold Member
Apr 5, 2009
2,532
614
190
.


Rick Scott: I cannot, in good conscience, deny the uninsured access to care"






Rick Scott Agrees To Expand Medicaid Program In Florida


Jeffery Young
02/20/2013

Before he was Florida's governor, Rick Scott sank $5 million of his own fortune into trying to kill President Barack Obama's health care reform agenda. On Wednesday, Scott, a Republican, completed a major turnaround when he announced his state would take part in a key element of Obama's plan to enroll more poor people in Medicaid.

Florida will expand its Medicaid program to anyone who earns up to 133 percent of the federal poverty level, which is $15,282 for a single person this year, Scott said Wednesday afternoon during a news conference in Tallahassee. Scott is now the seventh Republican governor to back the Medicaid expansion made possible by Obamacare. In addition to Florida, 22 states and the District of Columbia plan to broaden Medicaid.
"I want every Floridian to have access to high-quality health care they can afford," Scott said.

The governor proposes Florida expand Medicaid under Obama's health care reform law for at least the next three years, when the federal government will pay the full cost of enrolling newly eligible people. "While the federal government is committed to paying 100 percent of the cost of new people in Medicaid, I cannot, in good conscience, deny the uninsured access to care," Scott said.

Under the health care reform law, the federal government covers all the expenses for insuring newly eligible people from 2014 through 2016. That share declines over several years until it reaches 90 percent in 2022 and beyond. Nevertheless, 13 Republican governors already have rejected the Medicaid expansion. Many of those governors are Scott's neighbors in southern states from North Carolina to Texas.

Expanding Medicaid would enable Florida to make a dent in its large uninsured population. One-fifth of Floridians, or about 3.8 million people, had no health insurance in 2011, according to census data compiled by the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Only California and Texas had more uninsured residents. Florida's 20 percent "uninsurance" rate is tied for the fourth-worst and trails Texas, Nevada and New Mexico. The GOP governors of Nevada and New Mexico also support the Medicaid expansion while Republican Texas Gov. Rick Perry remains opposed.

.
 
Of course he did. Scott has one of the lowest approval rates in the nation and a re-election campaign to begin.

Making his base mad is strategic....not. LOL

Regards from Rosie
 
Of course he did. Scott has one of the lowest approval rates in the nation and a re-election campaign to begin.

Making his base mad is strategic....not. LOL

Regards from Rosie


Agreed -- the only way Scott and others like him can win an election in today's political environment is to change, i.e. adopt left-center/left policies.


Does the Republican party have popular support on any issue right now?
.
 
I would hope that a lot more Republican governors would be smart and change their heavy handed approach to Medicaid.

This obstruction has gone on long enough. Time to justify their existence in office.
 
I would hope that a lot more Republican governors would be smart and change their heavy handed approach to Medicaid.

This obstruction has gone on long enough. Time to justify their existence in office.

well yeah, they can all pluck the monies off their magic money trees Obama gave them
 
I thought it was called he EVOLVED?

or only Obama and Democrats can do that?


Rick Scott's flip-flop on Obamacare -

Rick Scott founds Conservatives for Patients' Rights (CPR) in February 2009 using $5-$20 million of his own money as seed money.


March 5, 2009: "The free market does everything better than the government does it. Every time the government gets involved, costs go up, access goes down."
-- on FOX News Channel (via Media Matters for America)


Oct 25, 2010: "Obamacare is going to be horrible for patients. It's going to be horrible for taxpayers. It's probably the biggest job killer ever." -- during gubernatorial debate with Democratic nominee Alex Sink, via Examiner.com

Nov. 18, 2011:"It's not the law of the land. I don't believe it will ever be the law of the land." -- quoted by the Associated Press

July 1, 2012: "ince Florida is legally allowed to opt out, that's the right decision for our citizens." -- governor's office press release


Feb. 20, 2013: "This country is the greatest in the world and it's greatest largely because of how we value the weakest among us. Quality health care shoud be accessible and affordable for all Floridians. It shouldn't depend on your zip code or your tax bracket. No mother or father should despair over whether they have access to high-quality health care for their sick child.




Yikes, ("This country is the greatest in the world and it's greatest largely because of how we value the weakest among us.") is Rick Scott now a bona fide socialist?
.
 
Yikes, ("This country is the greatest in the world and it's greatest largely because of how we value the weakest among us.") is Rick Scott now a bona fide socialist?
.

I'm pretty sure that most Americans would agree with that statement of his
 

Forum List

Back
Top