McCain health care reform puts decisions in the hands of families, not the government
Sen. John McCain’s presidential campaign held a press conference call to discuss his remarks on health care reform delivered earlier today in Tampa, Florida. Doug Holz-Eakin, senior policy adviser, and Carly Fiorina, RNC Victory 2008 chair, described the health care plan and its goals and proposed outcomes.
Holz-Eakin said McCain wanted to create a plan with better health care at a lower cost, where insurance can move with someone from job to job, and that addressed the fears of people with pre-existing conditions. He said McCain looked, and will continue looking, at experiments by states to find successful health care programs, and he plans to work with Congress to provide funding.
Fiorina said the plan is designed to put patients in control of their health care, rather than doctors, hospitals or the government. She said it allows patients to choose and purchase health insurance from anywhere in the country, and that the competition and choice will drive down costs. She emphasized the transparency of McCain’s plan, and its focus on making sure costs cover treatment and not simply tests and procedures. She said the plan also focuses on prevention and wellness, since many diseases that contribute to the costs of health care are preventable and treatable conditions. She also said McCain believes in drug competition, and that everyone must be covered.
Fiorina said the fundamental difference between McCain’s health care plan and the plans proposed by Sen. Hillary Clinton and Sen. Barack Obama is that McCain’s plan puts the choice, power, and decision of insurance in the hands of families, while Clinton and Obama propose putting the federal government in charge of health care. She also said McCain’s plan depends on the powers of the free market, which will drive the costs down.
Categories
Related
- McCain campaign tries to “straight talk” their health care policy
- McCain presidential campaign conference call describes the focus of his health care reform
- Working families stand to struggle under McCain’s health care plans
- Team McCain fires back on Obama’s remarks
- McCain campaign addresses housing crisis response
Latest Audio
Happening Now - TRNS on Twitter
- @jackrice: U.S. Capitol, 2009 [pic] http://ff.im/-b7yEP -- 5 hours ago
- @jackrice: U.S. House Passes Abortion Amendment to Health Insurance Reform. http://ff.im/-b7uae -- 5 hours ago
- @jackrice: House Erupts in Applause with 218 Votes. http://ff.im/-b7uad -- 5 hours ago
- @jackrice: Will Health Insurance Reform Happen? http://ff.im/-b7uaf -- 5 hours ago
- @jackrice: House Passes Health Insurance Bill. http://ff.im/-b7uac -- 5 hours ago
- @jackrice: House Passes Health Insurance Bill. http://bit.ly/1r7S1d -- 6 hours ago
- @jackrice: House Erupts in Applause with 218 Votes. http://bit.ly/MoW0j -- 6 hours ago
- @jackrice: Will Health Insurance Reform Happen? http://bit.ly/3IZrk9 -- 7 hours ago
- @jackrice: House of Reps is voting on history. For once, voting for health insurance reform is vote for the people. This is about patriotism. -- 7 hours ago
- @jackrice: I'm listening to the soundtrack of Kill Bill, Vol.1. Damn, this thing is great. -- 12 hours ago




