The Republican Health Care Reform Plan
Created by TerranceDC on October 30th, 2009 at 9:47am PST
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Playlist Description:
The GOP Health Care Reform Plan, from their own mouths.
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Sen Coburn Tells Women Crying Over Health Care "Govt Is Not The Answer"
uploaded by News1News at youtube.com
Republican Senator Tom Coburn Tells Women Crying About Her Health Care Coverage At Town Hall: "Government Is Not The Answer" - 08/24/09
Grassley tells Iowan "go work for the federal government" for affordable insurance
uploaded by changethatworksiowa at youtube.com
Sen. Grassley held a town meeting in Waukon Iowa on June 30, 2009. A constituent shared his family's personal struggle with the burden of high health care costs and asked the Senator why he couldn't get quality, affordable health insurance like Senators get. Senator Grassley advised his constituent to "go work for the federal government" if he wanted quality insurance.
Kyl: I Don't Need Maternity Care In My Health Insurance - Stabenow: Your Mom Probably Did!
uploaded by tpmtv at youtube.com
more at cspan.org, September 25, 2009
Rep. Gingrey Laughs Off 14,000 Americans Losing Their Health Insurance Every Day
uploaded by MediaMattersAction at youtube.com
Learn more at http://MediaMattersAction.org
Sen McCain Asked Why Republicans Never Reformed Health Care
uploaded by News1News at youtube.com
Republican Senator John McCain Grilled Why Republicans Never Reformed Health Care When They Were In Power [At Health Care Town Hall] - 08/25/09
Zach Wamp whomped by Tamron Hall on Health Care Rights (HQ)
uploaded by dawgnpony at youtube.com
There is a laundry list of things so very wrong with what Republican Representative Zach Wamp says in this interview with MSNBC's Tamron Hall. Aired: 03/05/09.
Mini Bar Bio: When elected to the House in 1994, Wamp pledged to serve just twelve years (six terms), meaning that he would leave the House in 2007. However, shortly after winning reelection to a sixth term in 2004, Wamp announced he would run again in 2006, citing his status as Tennessee's only member of the powerful Appropriations Committee. The pledge was "a mistake" he told the Associated Press in 2004.
In 2003, after a customary fifteen minute electronic vote was held open for nearly three hours by Republican leaders, Rep. Zach Wamp (R-TN) switched his original nay vote to aye and gave the Republicans a majority of one that they needed to pass the Prescription Drug Act.
On January 5, 2009, Wamp announced that he will be running for Governor of Tennessee in the Republican primaries.
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